ver tells the water which way to go as a mark on the landscape. No need to over-think it. — apokrisis
A river tells the water which way to go as a mark on the landscape — apokrisis
There are fundamental reasons why physics and biology require different levels of models, the most obvious one is that physical theory is described by rate-dependent dynamical laws that have no memory, while evolution depends, at least to some degree, on control of dynamics by rate-independent memory structures. — Pattee
The epistemic cut is the same distinction between hardware and software and, to some extent, as the distinction between mind and body. Its necessity makes itself apparent whenever we have to design a complex artifact, to analyse its functioning, or to explain it to an audience. Doing so without ever mentioning subject/object, controller/controlled/, meter/measure distinctions, though perhaps possible in principle, would be absurdly difficult and would not qualify as proper understanding. The epistemic cut is thus similar to what Daniel Dennett (him again!) calls 'the intentional stance', i.e. the attribution of purposeful intentions to the subjects of an action as a powerful method for compressing our descriptions'
How can true certainty be produced by doubting? Thinking that one knows is not knowing. If we know anything at all we know it with absolute certainty. If there is to be any such knowledge, real knowledge which is truly distinct from mere belief, then it must be impervious to doubt, by mere definition. How could you ever know when your process of doubting is rightly ended? Certainly not by means of doubt! — John
Nothing I said is contrary to the idea that lack of knowledge precedes knowledge, or that less knowledge precedes greater knowledge. The point is that knowledge, if it is truly knowledge, cannot be subject to doubt. If it is merely belief, then of course that is a different matter. — John
So, your assertion that not-knowing is prior to knowing is irrelevant because it is not contrary to what I have been saying. I have been saying that once we have knowledge as opposed to mere belief, if we ever do have it, then that knowledge cannot be subject to doubt, and also that that knowledge cannot have originated in doubt, since doubt can only lead to more doubt, Perhaps you could explain how you think it is that the absolute certainty of knowledge could ever proceed from the state of doubt, and how it is that you could ever know from within your state of doubt, that all doubts have now finally been put to rest. — John
If by "synthesized," Sheldrake is referring to a man-made crystal, one hardly need appeal to morphic resonance to explain why it may take longer to synthesize it on the first occasion than on subsequent occasions. In science, as with most other areas of human endeavor, feats generally become easier with practice, and with the collective practice of the scientific community. It's not nature per se (in the sense of the laws or regularities which govern the behavior of naturalistic entities) which is changing, but only the investigators' expertise.Sheldrake says that 'nature forms habits' e.g. when a new crystal is synthesised for the first time, it takes much longer than on subsequent occasions when it is formed again. This is becuase the initial formation has started to form the 'habit'. I can't help but think this is related to Peirce's ideas of how regularities are initially formed out of "tychism" — Wayfarer
science, as with most other areas of human endeavor, feats generally become easier with practice, and with the collective practice of the scientific community. — Arkady
If you make a new compound and crystallize it, there won't be a morphic field for it the first time. Therefore, it may be very difficult to crystallize; you have to wait for a morphic field to emerge. The second time, however, even if you do this somewhere else in the world, there will be an influence from the first crystallization, and it should crystallize a bit more easily. The third time there will be an influence from the first and second, and so on. There will be a cumulative influence from previous crystals, so it should get easier and easier to crystallize the more often you crystallize it. And, in fact, this is exactly what does happen. Synthetic chemists find that new compounds are generally very difficult to crystallize. As time goes on, they generally get easier to crystallize all over the world. The conventional explanation is that this occurs because fragments of previous crystals are carried from laboratory to laboratory on beards of migrant chemists. When there have not been any migrant chemists, it is assumed that the fragments wafted through the atmosphere as microscopic dust particles.
Perhaps migrant chemists do carry fragments on their beards and perhaps dust particles do get blown around in the atmosphere. Nevertheless, if one measures the rate of crystallization under rigorously controlled conditions in sealed vessels in different parts of the world, one should still observe an accelerated rate of crystallization. This experiment has not yet been done.
You are failing to make a proper distinction between knowledge and belief. The certainty of knowledge consists in the absence of genuine doubt. Do you know how to drive a car? Is it possible you could be mistaken and that in fact you do not know how to drive a car? Do you know the street number of your house, your wife's name, that she is female, that she is human, what makes her happy and what annoys her, how many children you have, what kind of dog you have ? — John
There is no possibility of genuine doubt about any of these. — John
But all of this sort of imagining would be a bullshit kind of doubt; it has no real force (unless you are psychotic). — John
If you want to be consistent in saying that everything is subject to doubt, then you should not assert that humans have any knowledge at all, but only beliefs. To know something is to know it beyond doubt. To know something is to experience complete confidence. Anything you cannot have complete confidence in cannot be knowledge; it's that simple. — John
And you still haven't explained how, magically, the certainty of knowing that you say will be achieved through questioning absolutely everything, will somehow emerge out of your state of universal doubt. — John
None of your irrelevant objections carry any force at all for me. If you have a wife now you know you have a wife, and you know she is female ( if she is female of course), you know you can drive a car ( how well you can drive it is irrelevant), you know what your house number is now ( if it hasn't been changed) and so on. — John
Certainty is not derived form doubting; how could it be? If everything is doubtful then there can never be a situation in which everything will cease to be doubtful. I agree with you that anything we count as a belief may be doubted: and this goes for everything concerning the future, since we don't know at all what will happen. But when it comes to what has happened we can be as certain as we are of our own memories. For example you know you can drive a car, because you remember driving cars in the past, even this morning, say. — John
So your position is, I remain convinced, based on a conflation of belief with knowledge, and its great weakness is that you have no way of explaining how any certainty of knowing anything could come out of your standpoint of universal doubt. I believe your doubt like Descartes' is artificial; it is not genuine, heartfelt doubt, it is faux-doubt; and that is why I say it carries no force. — John
Your methodology of argumentation consists in distorting what your interlocutor has said, and then writing reams of objections based on this distortion. — John
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