What do you think physicalism says about reality? — Marchesk
Can this dualist account for the causal basis of the apparent interaction between mind and world in physicalist fashion? — apokrisis
This proposed dichotomy between the mind and the world is a false one. Rather the dichotomy is between the mind and the physical, with both making up the world. — Michael
Also, what counts as a physicalist fashion? Presumably a fashion that is both self-organising and closed for causality? Well, that's the question I asked of you. Is the dualist claiming that the mental is either not self-organising or not closed for causailty? — Michael
So again, what is the causal connection? — apokrisis
I confess that I can't make substance dualism a coherent metaphysical position for you. And if you can't manage it on your own, then I suggest you simply abandon it as a bad job.
Your switching it to a dichotomy of mind and the physical suggests you are stuck in the mode of thinking of Being in terms of two imcompatible kinds of "stuff" or substance
And thus it appears does physicalism. It welcomes light, quanta, emotions, qualia, consciousness, all types of forces including dark forces and dark matter under its umbrella. If we sense it, if we feel it, if it is conjectured, if it is needed for mathematical equations, if it is anything other than God or angels it is welcome. — Rich
I don't know what you mean by this question. How would you make sense of the causal connection between one physical thing and another? — Michael
If you define the physical as "self-organising and closed for causation" then you must understand the claim "the mind isn't physical" to mean "the mind isn't both self-organising and closed for causation". I'm just asking you to confirm that this is what you understand the dualist to be saying. — Michael
So I'm struggling to see the relevance of the question. — apokrisis
Therefore the two views are not necessarily in competition. — Michael
Your disagreement, then, would seem to be simply a terminological dispute. Whereas you use the term "physical" to refer to everything that is self-organising and closed for causation, the dualist uses the term "physical" to refer to just some of the things that are self-organising and closed for causation, with "mental" referring to the rest and something like "real" referring to both. — Michael
Well they are. One is coherent, and the other incoherent (according to the position I have taken on physicalist explanation). — apokrisis
So at the moment you haven't explained how your physicalism differs from their dualism. — Michael
But if you want to now flesh out the views of this mysterious "they" who can offer a counterfactual account of how their notion of the mental is "self-organising and closed for causation", then I'm all ears. What do "they" mean exactly when they say that (if it is ever in fact actually said). — apokrisis
I don't know if they understand the mental to be self-organising and closed for causation. But that's not relevant to my question. — Michael
Again, given that you define the physical as being self-organising and closed for causation, it must then follow that you understand the dualist's claim "the mind isn't physical" to be the claim "the mind isn't self-organising and closed for causation". — Michael
I just wanted you to clarify this. You don't seem to have given me an answer. — Michael
I've already explained why it doesn't have to follow in just the same why that it makes no real difference if unicorns shit or don't shit.
Do you take a firm position on unicorn dung? Perhaps you can run me through the irrefutable train of logic that demands that imaginary shitting is something imaginary beasts must do. — apokrisis
What am I missing? It seems pretty simple. — Michael
I'll state what I think it means. Everything that exists is physical. Even though we experience the world through varying levels of abstraction that we don't consider physical, such as societies or mind, at the ontological level, it's all just particles, forces, fields and what they constitute. — Marchesk
a table is purely physical. It's components, structure, and function are 100% physical. — Marchesk
As such, all fields of science are in principle reducible to a complete physics, even if such a thing is impossible for us to accomplish.
What do you think physicalism says about reality? — Marchesk
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