• Gregory
    4.7k
    What? I'm not following that.Banno

    Well when we say that this weighs as much as that we are assuming that math really works in describing reality. Yet, is it really different when it comes to logic? The world has to make logical sense, such that this can weigh more and less than that at one time. The PoSR to me just means that we can makes sense of the world
  • Banno
    25k
    science has done very well with assuming that there is a cause and effect for every phenomena in natureShawn

    I think I've shown that this is not an assumption of science.

    Well, let's explore.

    PSR = everything in this world has a cause and effect

    Now this clearly falls into the logical category of haunted-universe doctrines. It can't be proved, because we are incapable of examining every instance of an effect. Nor can it be disproved, since if we come across an example of an effect for which we cannot find a cause, we might conclude not that there is no such cause but only that we have not yet found it.

    SO it's not an empirical notion.

    Is it a methodological notion? Does it tell us what we might do, is we are to act in a scientific fashion? In that case, isn't it too strong? We might indeed look for a cause for any event, but we cannot assume ahead of our investigations that there must be one... Nor need we assume that there must be a cause in order to look for a cause. It is open to us to look without such an expectation.

    Hence it seems to me that PSR is not needed for either science nor for logic.
    Banno
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    But, that is not to say that every phenomenon is purposeful.Michael Zwingli

    What would a purposeless thing look like?
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    I think I've shown that this is not an assumption of science.Banno

    Your right. I think I'm running in circles.

    Here is what I should have said:

    Is it a methodological notion? Does it tell us what we might do, is we are to act in a scientific fashion? In that case, isn't it too strong?Banno

    Yes, it's a methodological notion.

    Yes, it is too strong. So, what?
  • Banno
    25k
    Well when we say that this weighs as much as that we are assuming that math really works in describing reality.Gregory

    Do we? Isn't it rather that we find that it works rather than assume it?
    The world has to make logical sense,Gregory
    If it didn't, wouldn't we simply adopt a different logic?Of course the world makes logical sense - logic is just what we do to make sense of the world.

    Are you surprised when a Philips head screwdriver just happens to fit a Philips head screw?
  • Michael Zwingli
    416
    Many people do not. You hear people speaking of "my truth" or "it's true to me" all the time.Manuel
    A perfect example of this is the absurd and embarrassing Catholic phenomenon (I was raised Catholic, and was always embarrassed by this) of the various "apparitions of Mary" (you know...Our Lady of this, Our Lady of that). People fallaciously accepting the (drug induced? faith induced? is there a difference?) subjective experience of one or two individuals as proof that "Mary the mother of God" is visiting her blessings upon the world. At least to it's credit, the Vatican has been wise enough never to overtly endorse these absurdities.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    The argument for PSR is, as I understand it, that it is necessary to assume PSR in order to do science. My purpose is to question that argument.Banno

    I don"t know much about that application of the principle enough to differentiate present methods of science. I have read the Leibniz introduction of the idea as a model for understanding proposed theories.
    Is that a distinction without a difference for you?
  • Michael Zwingli
    416
    What would a purposeless thing look like?Gregory
    Like our universe, which has no purpose, but rather just happened.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Like our universe, which has no purpose, but rather just happened.Michael Zwingli

    That's a disconnection from God and truth
  • Michael Zwingli
    416
    That's a disconnection from God and truthGregory
    ? Please elaborate.
  • Banno
    25k
    So, what?Shawn
    Cool.
    So back to:
    I believe that with dispensing the Principle of Sufficient Reason, that science and logic so heavily rely on, one is committing oneself to the supernatural or creationism.Shawn

    So where does that leave you? We do not need PSR to do logic and science. Hence we are not committed to the supernatural or creationism?

    And back tot he OP: without PSR, can't we now dispense with god?
  • Manuel
    4.1k


    They've been toning it down as of late, it's more difficult to defend absurd claims in light of the evidence.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    ? Please elaborate.Michael Zwingli

    Well to speak from my own experience, thinking my inner life is only brain matter gives me a headache and I no longer associate with truth. The point of the PoSR is that truth, when realized, is in accord with reality. The world makes sense to me but if you are to say that world doesn't make sense and you are only matter, than you yourself would no longer make sense
  • Banno
    25k
    Seems to me that PSR is needed for Rationalists to do science - Spinoza and Leibniz, and presumably Descartes; but that Rationalism is no longer the basis of science.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Seems to me that PSR is needed for Rationalists to do science - Spinoza and Leibniz, and presumably Descartes; but that Rationalism is no longer the basis of science.Banno

    Then how do we have laws in science then? If I drop two balls at the same time and they fall at the same rate and do this again and again, the principle of sufficient reason says I now know a law. Does not Hume's problems become our own when you reject PSR in science?
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    So where does that leave you? We do not need PSR to do logic and science.Banno

    No, we do not.
    Hence we are not committed to the supernatural or creationism?Banno

    But, that's a conclusion that addresses the very human need to justify God's existence (according to physicists like Hawking).

    And back tot he OP: without PSR, can't we now dispense with god?Banno

    Ok, so your saying that the PoSR enables one to consider God as an actual existent in this world? Im somewhat different here and consider the PoSR and Spinoza's Nature as God as true (without the necessitarianism or hard determinism).
  • Banno
    25k
    Then how do we have laws in science then? If I drop two balls at the same time and they fall at the same rate and do this again and again, the principle of sufficient reason says I now know a law. Does not Hume's problems become our own when you reject PSR in science?Gregory

    We'd have to fill that out. We have: "If I drop two balls at the same time and they fall at the same rate and do this again and again"; what is added by including PSR? We have that the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8ms^-1. How does PSR help us here?
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    We'd have to fill that out. We have: "If I drop two balls at the same time and they fall at the same rate and do this again and again"; what is added by including PSR? We have that the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8ms^-1. How does PSR help us here?Banno

    Because the reason for what is happening is in our reach. Our minds are sufficient to sufficiently understand a sufficiently understandable world
  • Banno
    25k
    your saying that the PoSR enables one to consider God as an actual existent in this world?Shawn

    PSR is relied on by those who insist god is needed to explain all sorts of things. Drop PSR, drop those arguments.

    I don't see that PSR is needed for a pantheistic deity to be the case. That is, one might do away with PSR and still venerate the universe.
  • Banno
    25k
    Because the reason for what is happening is in our reach. Our minds are sufficient to sufficiently understand a sufficiently understandable worldGregory

    We need PSR to conclude this?

    I think it evident in every interaction I have. No, evident is the wrong word. It's manifest. The world is comprehensible.
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    PSR is relied on by those who insist god is needed to explain all sorts of things. Drop PSR, drop those arguments.Banno

    It would seem rational to do so. But, consider that the reasonableness of the PSR shouldn't be swiped aside. It's a very useful tool in how we should think, even if QM or physicalism stipulates that in every instance the PSR isn't necessarily true.
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    Doesn't anyone else think that the PSR dissuades one from superstition or supernatural phenomena like creationalisms conclusions?
  • Banno
    25k
    It's a very useful tool in how we should think,Shawn

    I disagree. I think I've shown that it is misleading. That's because it demands more than is needed.
  • PoeticUniverse
    1.3k
    This would be the beginning of the path to disprove God, that 'Nothing' cannot be, making the base something not to be an option but mandatory, it having no alternative or opposite; thus, no supernatural magic is required.PoeticUniverse

    The next step in the analysis would be to have to use the same principle of 'The Necessary Existent' for God having to be, as the mandatory Existent, again because there can be no opposite; thus the principle is sound!

    You can figure what's coming next… I'm stretching it out in the hope that responders will notice it amid so many other responses.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    We need PSR to conclude this?Banno

    We know existence can't come from non-existence without a power or some kind of action happening and nothingness cannot act. Nothingness is an empty category in our minds and is not anything at all. So the world either always existed or we can adopt Hawking's hypothesis (or something similar). But once we no longer believe in "something from nothing" the material world no longer makes any sense as a sole reality.

    The PSR is implied in the above
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    I disagree. I think I've shown that it is misleading.Banno

    So, the added scrutiny of believing that everything in the world has a cause and effect is not good for how one ought to reason?

    Let look at this historically. Never has anyone used the PSR in a manner that would legitimize God's existence, but rather to scrutinize it rationally.

    In essence, what's wrong with rationalism?
  • Michael Zwingli
    416
    than you yourself would no longer make senseGregory
    Hahaha, I think I've made less and less sense as time has gone by...

    The point of the PoSR is that truth, when realized, is in accord with reality.Gregory
    Though I agree that reality is the essence of truth, I don't see that as having much to do with the PoSR. The PoSR simply states that every aspect of the natural universe must have a cause underlying it's existence. I agree. The universe is composed of energy and matter, which are mutually interchangeable. Before our universe existed (disregarding that there may be other "universes" distant from ours), all was pure energy. For this energy to have existed, there must have been some happenstance or situation which caused it to exist. This, however, is in no way determinative of the existence of deity. In order for the fact of the original energy from whence our universe to show a deity, that energy must be shown to have been purposeful, rather than arbitrary, which it has not displayed.

    The world makes sense to me but if you are to say that world doesn't make sense and you are only matter, than you yourself would no longer make sense.Gregory
    I'm not sure what we're talking about in this sentence. "Making sense" is an entirely subjective perception.
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    That's because it demands more than is needed.Banno

    Isn't this question begging if you can't provide a better methodology?
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    that energy must be shown to have been purposeful, rather than arbitrary, which it has not displayed.Michael Zwingli

    Do you expect a monkey to come out of your computer right now? You don't because the world is understood by you to be rational
  • Shawn
    13.2k
    The next step in the analysis would be to have to use the same principle of 'The Necessary Existent' for God having to be, as the mandatory Existent, again because there can be no opposite; thus the principle is sound!PoeticUniverse

    But, ex nihilo and something from nothing doesn't have to be true, doesn't it, and we rely on the PSR through science to prove this!
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

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.