Which, as you might say, is "already a difficult question." Because there are no features in the world, general or otherwise. In perception, sure. But the real problem lies with the general. What is a general anything? Ans.: why just no thing at all, but an idea about some things.As I understand it metaphysics is the study of the most general features of the world — Manuel
I know none of this is helpful, but it does leave the problem of definition. But I would have you say not what metaphysics is, because that is problematic, and as well there are more substantial definitions, but nothing remotely like you've described. Instead, you decide. After all, your discussion. And when you've said, then the rest of us can pick at it, making it strong if it's any good. — tim wood
SO the question arrises, yes, OK, but which is it really - neurones or intent?
And that might be the metaphysical knot - the view that one description must have primacy.
And the strategy, the way of doing metaphysics, would be to probe deeply into any alternative solution to see if it does reduce mind to matter, or matter to mind.
So there's a start. — Banno
...manifest reality... — Manuel
But your mind does not have a mass. So it is not a form of matter....another piece of matter, my mind... — Manuel
I try to avoid using "just" — Manuel
This topic was prompted by another poster: to state it simply are there legitimate metaphysical questions as opposed to problems related to language use?
That is, is the long history of metaphysics one in which, by analysis of language use alone, we may dissolve such problems? — Manuel
It's not so much that there are no metaphysical issues, as that the problems we call metaphysical are characterised by conceptual confusions, and hence the path to dealing with them is in conceptual analysis with an eye to untying the knot of confusion — Banno
I try to avoid using "just"
— Manuel
It's a good indicator of something fishy going on. — Banno
The “Surely” Klaxon
A “Klaxon” is a loud, electric horn—such as a car horn—an urgent warning. In this point, Dennett asks us to treat the word “surely” as a rhetorical warning sign that an author of an argumentative essay has stated an “ill-examined ‘truism’” without offering sufficient reason or evidence, hoping the reader will quickly agree and move on. While this is not always the case, writes Dennett, such verbiage often signals a weak point in an argument, since these words would not be necessary if the author, and reader, really could be “sure.” — Dennett: seven tools for critical thinking
it's other purpose is to discuss the right way to do metaphysics — Banno
1) One is "the problem of solipsism". See Witty's "Private Language Argument". Another is "the problem of induction" (i.e. causal relations, causality). See Popper's The Logic of Scientific Discovery.All I ask is for two things: 1) what metaphysical problems do you think can be resolved by analyzing our language and 2) which metaphysical questions are actually substantive? — Manuel
All I ask is for two things: 1) what metaphysical problems do you think can be resolved by analyzing our language and 2) which metaphysical questions are actually substantive? — Manuel
It looks like a false dichotomy. A metaphysical problem could perhaps be *both* substantive *and* resolvable by analysing our language. — Cuthbert
It should thus not come as a surprise that there could be a specifically feminist metaphysics, where the question of prime importance is to what extent the central concepts and categories of metaphysics, in terms of which we make sense of our reality, could be value laden in ways that are particularly gendered.
In this way, feminist theorists have asked whether and, if so, to what extent our frameworks for understanding the world are distorting in ways that privilege men or masculinity. What, if anything, is eclipsed if we adopt an Aristotelian framework of substance and essence, or a Cartesian framework of immaterial souls present in material bodies ?
— SEP: Feminist Metaphysics
So what's that, then? A clear and obvious reality? A reality that is taken for granted, or is at hand, perhaps?
If we drop the word "manifest", what would change? There would presumably still be taxies. I don't see that we need "manifest reality" in order to will one's arm to move to hail a cab. The wording just doesn't obviously help. — Banno
But your mind does not have a mass. So it is not a form of matter. — Banno
It's a good indicator of something fishy going on. — Banno
Instead, you decide. After all, your discussion. And when you've said, then the rest of us can pick at it, making it strong if it's any good. — tim wood
I can only think of What necessarily is not real, or an impossible object / world (i.e. membership rule/s for the Null Set)? A question (re: my apophatic conception) of negative ontology. — 180 Proof
I was intrigued to discover that there is a 'Feminist Metaphysics'. — Amity
Ah, the internet. In less than a minute I can learn not only something new - that at first sounds like a disturbing effluvium from orifices to remain unnamed - but also what it is where it comes from and from Youtube videos how to make it - no effluvent orifices required.the purple flurps — T Clark
I prefer to define the term "metaphysics" to describe the subject matter of Aristotle's second volume of his post-iron-age encyclopedia of knowledge -- but not as it was later interpreted by Catholic theologians. Volume 1, now referred to as "The Physics", was describing the material world as known by direct observation of Nature (Science). Then, volume 2, now known as "The Metaphysics", analyzed the immaterial aspects of the world (human nature), as known by rational inference (Philosophy).All I ask is for two things: 1) what metaphysical problems do you think can be resolved by analyzing our language and 2) which metaphysical questions are actually substantive? — Manuel
The point of me asking for a person to give an example of a metaphysical problem dissolving through language use and one which does not is simply to see if people are willing to point to one example in which analysis or clear use of words can put a problem to the side tends to show that philosophy of language can be useful. — Manuel
Fricker (2007) argues that there is a distinctive kind of injustice that has to do with the inability to properly understand and communicate important aspects of one’s social experience: she calls this hermeneutical injustice. According to Fricker, people in a position of marginalization are prevented from creating concepts, terms and other representational resources that could be used in order to conceptualize and understand their own experiences, especially those having to do with being in that position of marginalization. People in a position of power will tend to create concepts and linguistic representations that help to conceptualize the experiences and phenomena that matter to them, rather than the experiences and phenomena that matter the most to people in a position of marginalization — SEP: Feminist philosophy of language
Feminists like Spender and Catherine MacKinnon (1989) argue that male power over language has allowed them to create reality. This is partly due to the fact that our categorizations of reality inevitably depend on our social perspective: “there is no ungendered reality or ungendered perspective” (MacKinnon 1989: 114). Haslanger (1995) discusses this argument in detail. — As above
I will be honest and admit that the 'another poster' is he whom this present member is in the habit of addressing with the perpendicular pronoun. — Banno
For example, the Quarks that are supposed to be the building blocks of sub-atomic matter, "have never been observed empirically" (Science), but are inferred theoretically (Philosophy). Hence, I would say that Quarks & other hypothetical particles are meta-physical — Gnomon
Yet not all of them have any "substantive" effect on the material world, but may have "significant" effects on the human Mind (memes). Metaphysical questions are not resolved by practical experimentation, but only by philosophical argumentation, or mathematical calculation. — Gnomon
I had severe mental cramps when I briefly studied that many years ago. Fodor's L.O.T. Language of Thought ! I have avoided it just as much as metaphysics. Until now. — Amity
As related to metaphysical questions and concepts of identity and self in social experience. What our categorisations of reality are based on. — Amity
people in a position of marginalization are prevented from creating concepts, terms and other representational resources that could be used in order to conceptualize and understand their own experiences, especially those having to do with being in that position of marginalization — SEP: Feminist philosophy of language
If that's all there was to it, the problem would have dissolved a long time ago. It is an inquiry into how two seemingly unrelated domains, matter and thought, are related. This is about as unlinguistic a metaphysical question as you can get. — hypericin
There is simply no ontology which dictates the boundaries of words. These boundaries are ultimately human contrivances. — hypericin
Wittgenstein says this nicely: "A picture held us captive. And we could not get outside it, for it lay in our language and language seemed to repeat it to us inexorably." This can be interpreted in many ways, I take it to mean that we should avoid being held captive if we do not proceed with the way we are phrasing and/or thinking about a question. — Manuel
Austin's Philosophical Papers.
Also,
How not to be a chucklehead — Banno
Given the critical role of language and definitions in ordinary discourse, I am not surprised that the context and usage of words can play such a critical role in managing apparent contradictions and ambiguities in narratives involving metaphysics.
Can you recommend an easy to understand essay or paper exploring the process you used above? I tried reading Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations but it is beyond me. — Tom Storm
My bolds.When the French philosopher Gabriel Marcel announced impressively to one of Oxford’s philosophical clubs that human freedom was the ‘ontological counterweight to death’, Austin invited him to explain what he meant.
The request, made with his characteristic courtesy, was followed up repeatedly with appeals for further clarification.
Marcel ended up saying he meant that the fact we are going to die makes all our earthly doings ultimately futile, but we carry on in full awareness of this by investing some things with value by an exercise of free will. Was this true? Maybe, maybe not, but at least that question could now be intelligibly posed. — Aeon essay on J.L. Austin
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