This is a real warning: when manipulating the universe around you - even if you do it successfully - you have not the slightest clue what you are really interacting with. — FalseIdentity
In this sense logic must be a prison that precludes us from seeing a lot of stuff around us. — FalseIdentity
When we do deductive logic we literally try to reduce options so that the truth (aka prey) can't escape anymore and only one option is left. — FalseIdentity
What does it mean to say that my practical reasonings are efforts to get the objectively right answer about what I should do, rather than manifestations of biologically selected dispositions that have no more objective validity than a taste for sugar? The idea of a harmony between thought and reality is no help here, because realism about practical reasons and ethics is not a thesis about the natural order at all, but a purely normative claim. It seems that the response to evolutionary naturalism in this domain must be almost purely negative. All one can say is that justification for actions is to be sought in the content of practical reasoning, and that evolutionary explanation of our dispositions to accept such arguments may undermine our confidence in them but cannot provide a justification for accepting them. So if evolutionary naturalism is the whole story about what we take to be practical reasoning, then there really is no such thing. — Thomas Nagel
A new discovery in the science of evolution has shown that a logic developed through evolution will never seek to understand the truth, it just learns to maipulate it's environment without a deeper understanding of what it is manipulating: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYp5XuGYqqY&t=997s
This is a real warning: when manipulating the universe around you - even if you do it successfully - you have not the slightest clue what you are really interacting with. (I strongly reccomend watching the video in the link to understand this better) — FalseIdentity
So my first complaint is that logic pretends to be something that it is not (a universal key to truth - this it is clearly not). — FalseIdentity
My second complaint relates to the discovery that logic is developed mainly for hunting and is hence predatory in nature — FalseIdentity
2. Understand things that are not relevant to survival such as what is "the good". — FalseIdentity
1. Understand truths that can not be chased and exploited in a physical sense (which come to mind?) — FalseIdentity
Are there any thought shools that attack logic? Is Nirvana for example a state beyond logic? — FalseIdentity
Did you mention at some point you were potentially doing further study on transcendental arguments and the evolutionary arguments against naturalism? Any quick essays you can suggest? — Tom Storm
The reason [Dennett] imputes to the human creatures depicted in his book [Breaking the Spell] 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. — Leon Wieseltier, The God Genome
...we may be sorrrounded by objects, but even while cognizing them, reason is the origin of something that is neither reducible to, nor derives from them, in any sense. In other words, reason generates a cognition, and a cognition regarding nature is above nature. In a cognition, reason transcends nature in one of two ways: by rising above our natural cognition and making, for example, universal and necessarily claims in theoretical and practical matters not determined b nature, or by assuming an impersonal objective perspective that remains irreducible to the individual 'I'. — The Powers of Pure Reason - Kant and the Idea of Cosmic Philosophy, Alfredo Ferrarin
A new discovery in the science of evolution has shown that a logic developed through evolution will never seek to understand the truth, it just learns to maipulate it's environment without a deeper understanding of what it is manipulating — FalseIdentity
Thanks that is exactly what I was looking for! Apparently when the Jains say that "no single, specific statement can describe the nature of existence and the absolute truth." this is similar to: the truth can't be cornered (to one option). I am sorry that the video is not to your liking, I found the story about that australian beetle very funny. There is as well a video which goes into more detail of how the mathemtical proof is actually done, but it is very long and less entertaining. — FalseIdentity
An evolved predatory logic must be by it's nature remain incapable to:
1. Understand truths that can not be chased and exploited in a physical sense (which come to mind?)
2. Understand things that are not relevant to survival such as what is "the good".
In this sense logic must be a prison that precludes us from seeing a lot of stuff around us.
A further flaw is that you can only maintaint logic thinking by killing other life forms (either by killing them directly or by eating their food away).
Are there any thought shools that attack logic? Is Nirvana for example a state beyond logic? — FalseIdentity
I just remembered an moral argument that might help you with you question.An evolved predatory logic must be by it's nature remain incapable to:
1. Understand truths that can not be chased and exploited in a physical sense (which come to mind?)
2. Understand things that are not relevant to survival such as what is "the good".
In this sense logic must be a prison that precludes us from seeing a lot of stuff around us.
A further flaw is that you can only maintaint logic thinking by killing other life forms (either by killing them directly or by eating their food away).
Are there any thought shools that attack logic? Is Nirvana for example a state beyond logic? — FalseIdentity
Logic is based upon a gentlemen's agreement regarding it's three fundamental principles. — James Riley
The principles of identity/non-contradiction/excluded middle are not some optional gentlemen's agreement but necessary properties of reality — litewave
without which there would be no gentlemen in the first place. — litewave
Or there would but there wouldn't, if that makes sense. — litewave
We can already see how the principle of excluded middle and of identity fail in quantum mechanics — FalseIdentity
I am currently reading Steven Pinkers' new book, Rationality. And his first step was to discuss the complementary roles of Rationality (Logic) and Irrationality (Intuition). Each is appropriate in some contexts and not in others. Ironically, the stumbling block for Intuition is Probability : conjecturing about future events and outcomes. Intuition reaches its assessment quickly, but is subject to gaps in knowledge & experience that result in erroneously biased projections. Calculating likelihood comes easily to intuition, but all too often goes astray due to Cognitive Illusions.↪Gnomon
I approve of good intuition as an argument in this context :) It could be from a place beyond logic. However I would love to think more about how this place could look like and why it is protected against logic. — FalseIdentity
They are optional if you are not talking about reality. — James Riley
Ah, ok. In that case you are talking about nothing because a thing that is not identical to itself is nothing. — litewave
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.