I would like to know peoples' opinions about how to approach reason itself. What kind of a faculty is it? Is it mainly good? Is it mainly reliable? What are we to make of it? Thanks — Gregory
I would like to know peoples' opinions about how to approach reason itself. What kind of a faculty is it? Is it mainly good? Is it mainly reliable? What are we to make of it? Thanks — Gregory
Reason evolved, just like our intellect and other physical traits, because it is useful for survival and reproduction. — Pinprick
Dennett does not believe in reason. He will be outraged to hear this, since he regards himself as a giant of rationalism. But the reason he imputes to the human creatures depicted in his book is merely a creaturely reason. Dennett's natural history does not deny reason, it animalizes reason. It portrays reason in service to natural selection, and as a product of natural selection. But if reason is a product of natural selection, then how much confidence can we have in a rational argument for natural selection? The power of reason is owed to the independence of reason, and to nothing else. (In this respect, rationalism is closer to mysticism than it is to materialism.) Evolutionary biology cannot invoke the power of reason even as it destroys it.
I would say it's unavoidable that we must use reason at least to a certain extent and in some way. — Gregory
What kind of a faculty is it? — Gregory
We find, then, after the dust of inquiry settles.....reason, not the faculty but rather, the method, is that which seeks for the unconditioned, the irreducible, in effect some semblance of certainty, and thereby that which minimizes the opportunities for rules to oppose each other. — Mww
Perhaps from people who are selling provisions?I read a lot more about the 'provisional nature of science'. — Wayfarer
Hmm. How best to proceed? Maybe this way: what is "them"?the laws of logic, natural numbers, and so on? They did not come into being as a consequence of evolution. What came in to being was the capacity to understand them. — Wayfarer
Is it mainly good? Is it mainly reliable? — Gregory
The capacity to reason evolved, plainly. But what of the 'furniture of reason' itself - the laws of logic, natural numbers, and so on? They did not come into being as a consequence of evolution. What came in to being was the capacity to understand them. — Wayfarer
Do you think there's much awareness of 'the unconditioned, the irreducible', in most current philosophical discourse? I read a lot more about the 'provisional nature of science'. The idea of 'the unconditioned' seems to me to have been dropped, on the whole. — Wayfarer
Where in nature is number or reason? — tim wood
the world itself works irrespective of the presence or absence of reason. — tim wood
There are other cases of universals in evolution, that always have something mathematical about them: — Olivier5
Do you think there's much awareness of 'the unconditioned, the irreducible', in most current philosophical discourse? — Wayfarer
And here I make no argument, nor disagree even a whit. But that "if" begs the whole question. I invite, and challenge, you to think prior to the "if." Indeed prior to all ifs, because there are no ifs other than what we propose.if math is to be considered real — Wayfarer
I had in mind as irreducible, Aristotle’s logical laws, Kant’s categories, Rene’s sum. — Mww
Far as I know, numbers such as we humans understand them are simply those understandings of ours that we understand as such for our purposes.] — tim wood
You might object that if they have no existence themselves, is there something, anything, underlying giving them ground out of which they emerge? I think not. Because to think in terms of any order, is to provide that order, and just that is ruled out. — tim wood
1. Intelligible objects must be independent of particular minds because they are common to all who think. In coming to grasp them, an individual mind does not alter them in any way; it cannot convert them into its exclusive possessions or transform them into parts of itself. Moreover, the mind discovers them rather than forming or constructing them, and its grasp of them can be more or less adequate. Augustine concludes from these observations that intelligible objects cannot be part of reason's own nature or be produced by reason out of itself. They must exist independently of individual human minds.
And if no reason?I say that they are real, as constitutive elements of reason. — Wayfarer
I completely disagree. What individuals do is exactly try to own them, and they, we, I, find that in the in the contest the best we can do is agree on aspects - just those particulars that require some agreement to be efficacious. And on the rest keep to our own queer constructions.In coming to grasp them, an individual mind does not alter them in any way; it cannot convert them into its exclusive possessions or transform them into parts of itself.
But I think the original concept of 'the unconditioned' is broader than that. — Wayfarer
So the 'unconditioned' was the source of 'the conditioned' - this was the concept of To Hen, the One of Plotinus, which morphed over time into the 'Divine Intellect'. — Wayfarer
”....Augustine concludes from these observations that intelligible objects cannot be part of reason's own nature or be produced by reason out of itself. They must exist independently of individual human minds....”
Again, I understand that this type of Platonist reasoning is generally out of favour, but it seems intuitively sound to me. — Wayfarer
Maybe are certain ways things have to be in order to exist. So, perhaps, as order appears, then it is incipiently mathematical, because there is repetition, and repitition is countable. Just thinking out loud. — Wayfarer
Of course. No argument. Now break out of it. Me, you, we have our ways. No me, no you, no ways. "Ah," you say, "but the world is such a way, and we discover it as it is!" I answer, "As it is for us in our ability to make sense of what we sense and perceive and think, and this gets a certain amount of our work done that we want to get done."About which you could say nothing, were you not to employ the very laws of logic which you now say are merely contingent. — Wayfarer
So the life forms that emerged throughout evolution took certain shapes because those shapes were ECONOMICAL in terms of emergence — Olivier5
“2”, “II” and “द्वौ” are each intelligible objects subsumed under and representative of the unconditional “quantity”. — Mww
what if we do merge with the One (or rather, wake up to it) and find that everything we thought was true (math, ect) has really been wrong and the real truth is the opposite of all we were once so sure of? It makes you wonder what reason can demonstrate in the Aristotelian sense. — Gregory
I also wanted to add that Buddhists' anatta (atta is Pali for atman, which is Sanskrit) may be consistent with Hinduism. — Gregory
Maybe we actually form logic from our experience of the world. — Gregory
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.