I also see no reason to assume that being requires a substratum. I don't think it is even a coherent concept.
It's not that being has a substratum, the theories posit that objects have a substratum — Count Timothy von Icarus
Not including it opens your metaphysics up to a broad side of attacks that show your theory can't account for numerically different entities with identical properties. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Are you claiming that Hegel made the Heideggerian distinction? He distinguishes between pure being and determinate beings. Pure being is not. — Fooloso4
For Hegel 'Concept' 'Begriff' has both an overarching sense of the movement or working out of spirit and concepts as in the concepts of mathematics or physics. It is this latter sense that both enables and impedes knowledge. For example, QM does not fit within the division of the concepts of 'wave' and 'particle'. Here thinking had to change to get more in line with being, that is, with what is. — Fooloso4
nature before humans existed — 180 Proof
What do you mean by 'pure being is not'?
In fact 'being' is prety quickly 'aufgehoben' into becoming in Hegel's Logik. — Tobias
Hegel does not thematize the Heideggerian distinction. — Tobias
Being is not the same as 'beings', — Tobias
I o not see why 'thinking' has to change. — Tobias
We think differently about things — Tobias
However, the jump from we think about things differently now and that is because they correspond now to what we think about them and not then, is a leap of faith. — Tobias
You found your answer. — Fooloso4
But you make the distinction:
Being is not the same as 'beings',
— Tobias — Fooloso4
Here is why:
We think differently about things — Fooloso4
Thinking without what is thought is an empty concept — Fooloso4
We did not think about QM at all until the 20th century. We did not know that the quantum world existed. Our thinking is changing in order to understand what is still inadequately understood about what is going on at the quantum level. Old concepts, old ways of thinking don't work at this level. — Fooloso4
Trivial — Tobias
Well, Hegel tries to articulate thinking, thinking itself. — Tobias
Suddenly the way we thin changed because of nuclear weapons? — Tobias
Really? Can there be thinking without something that is thought? Even if thinking about something there is still an object of thought, that which is thought. — Fooloso4
Do you mean thinking thinking itself or thinking itself? If the former then there is something thought, some object of thought, that is, thinking itself. If the latter then it refers to the activity of thinking rather than the activity. We do not walk by examining walking. — Fooloso4
Splitting the nucleus of an atom was the result of several scientific discoveries. It was the result of the development of scientific thought, of changes in thought. — Fooloso4
Natural selection which humans discovered had given rise to humans et al before and acid rain as a by-product of human industrial activities after. Sure, the distinctions "before" and "after" are thoughts but, in this case, they are also corroborated by other-than-"thought" – they are not just mere ghostly "ideas" or dreams or hallucinations. The distinction between 'a map of Europe' and 'a map of Middle Earth' is a distinction with a referential difference; the latter lacks a factual referent and the former has a factual referent.What characteristics did nature before humans have and which did it acquire only [u[after[/u] humans came on the scene? — Tobias
"After we came out of the church, we stood talking for some time together of Bishop Berkeley's ingenious sophistry to prove the non-existence of matter, and that every thing in the universe is merely ideal. I observed, that though we are satisfied his doctrine is not true, it is impossible to refute it. I never shall forget the alacrity with which Johnson answered, striking his foot with mighty force against a large stone, till he rebounded from it, "I refute it thus!"
Johnson was clearly appealing to the felt concreteness of the stone to suggest that it could not be just a figment of imagination. Indeed, the felt concreteness of the world is probably the main reason why people intuitively reject the notion that reality unfolds in consciousness. If a truck hits you, you will hurt, even if you are an idealist.
However, notice that appeals to concreteness, solidity, palpability and any other quality that we have come to associate with things outside consciousness are still appeals to phenomenality. After all, concreteness, solidity and palpability are qualities of experience. What else? A stone allegedly outside consciousness, in and by itself, is entirely abstract and has no qualities. If anything, by pointing to the felt concreteness of the stone Johnson was implicitly suggesting the primacy of experience over abstraction, which is eminently idealist.
We have come to automatically interpret the felt concreteness of the world as evidence that the world is outside consciousness. But this is an unexamined artifact of subliminal thought-models. Our only access to the world is through sense perception, which is itself phenomenal. The notion that there is a world outside and independent of the phenomenal is an explanatory model, not an empirical fact. No phenomenal quality can be construed as direct evidence for something outside phenomenality.
I've pointed this out previously as the crux of my objection to the formulation "thinking = being". I'd appreciate a reply to what I've actually written and argued if you're going to reply to me, Count.1. Thought presupposes being.
2. Being does not presuppose thought; however, — Count Timothy von Icarus
Thought can be discussed in the same way, without a reference to thinking something concrete. — Tobias
Yes, the former, but what is than being thought is equally empty, the same emptiness you object to. — Tobias
we think while we examine thinking. — Tobias
The activity of thinking is still qualitatively the same. — Tobias
It uses the same concepts, just applies them differently. — Tobias
It uses identity, difference affirmation, denial etc. — Tobias
Or do you think there is some qualitative jump, now not with QM but the emergence of the scientific method? — Tobias
11. Spirit has broken with the previous world of its existence and its ways of thinking ... just as with a child, who after a long silent period of nourishment draws his first breath and shatters the gradualness of only quantitative growth ... This gradual process of dissolution, which has not altered the physiognomy of the whole, is interrupted by the break of day, which in a flash and at a single stroke brings to view the structure of the new world.
12: Yet this newness is no more completely actual than is the newborn child, and it is essential to bear this in mind. Its immediacy, or its concept, is the first to come on the scene.
In the same way, science, the crowning glory of a spiritual world, is not completed in its initial stages. The beginning of a new spirit is the outcome of a widespread revolution in the diversity of forms of cultural formation ... — Preface to the Phenomenology
So being without thought is unprovable and unverifiable. — Count Timothy von Icarus
proof and verifiability are not necessary conditions for being.
But clearly being is contingent on some things existing, as if absolutely nothing exists, there is no being. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But if the claim doesn't flow from logic then it needs empircle support, but empircle support in the absence of experience is definitionally impossible. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Now, arguably, being without thought is inconceivable ... — Count Timothy von Icarus
By definition, being without conception can't be conceived. That would be the crux. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, being is contingent on being?
Again, question begging. There are no claims in the absence of thought.
Right, conceivability necessitates though
Conceivability marks a limit of human thought. It does not mark a limit of what is.
Prima Facie Vs. Ideal Conceivability
1. S is prima facie conceivable for a subject when S is conceivable for that subject on first appearances. That is, after some consideration the subject finds that S passes the tests that are criterial for conceivability. For example, one substantive notion of conceivability (a version of negative conceivability) holds that S is conceivable if no contradiction is detectable in the hypothesis expressed by S. Under this notion, S will be prima facie conceivable for a subject when that subject cannot (after consideration) detect any contradiction in the hypothesis expressed by S.
2. The notion of ideal rational reflection remains to be clarified. One could try to define ideal conceivability in terms of the capacities of an ideal reasoner — a reasoner free of all contingent cognitive limitations. Using this notion, we could say that S is ideally conceivable if an ideal reasoner would find it to pass the relevant tests (if an ideal reasoner could not rule out the hypothesis expressed by S a priori, for example). A strategy like this is taken by Menzies (1998). One trouble is that it is not obvious that an ideal reasoner is possible or coherent. For example, it may be that for every possible reasoner, there is a more sophisticated possible reasoner.
3. Alternatively, one can dispense with the notion of an ideal reasoner, and simply invoke the notion of undefeatability be better reasoning. Given this notion, we can say that S is ideally conceivable when there is a possible subject for whom S is prima facie conceivable, with justification that is undefeatable by better reasoning. The idea is that when prima facie conceivability falls short of ideal conceivability, then the claim that the relevant tests are passed will either be unjustified, or the justification will be defeatable by further reasoning. For ideal conceivability, one needs justification that cannot be rationally defeated.
Because if being is just being, pure, undifferentiated oneness, undefinable relative to anything except for its not being non-being (which has no trait), then it's not clear it is anything different from nothing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is why I say uncritical metaphysics has become a problem for physicalism, because in very many versions the God's eye view is posited, even as God may be denied. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So does this lead one logically to identifying fundamental being with vagueness?
Hard to imagine. But the logic of this seems clear enough.
This is certainly true up to a point. But a quantum gravity theory of everything would have to be background independent, and so a model of an immanent point of view rather than a transcendent one.
The Copenhagen Interpertation is not "unpopular because it offends intuitions"; it's just patently incoherent because the observer cannot be "conscious" of the planck-scale events, only of the measurements indicated ex post facto by his experimental apparatus, and therefore, "consciousness" does not "cause the wavefunction collapse". Idealism (antirealism) is not implied as New Agers et al like to daydream. The physical interactions of physical systems (e.g. apparatus & photon) decoheres quantum states.Conciousness Causes Collapse is highly unpopular, but it's unpopular because it offends intuitions, not because it can be empircally undermined. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I need to get back to Boehme and Schelling. :up:That's why I think, Boehme, while extremely mystical and esoteric, hits on an essential feature of reality. Definition requires difference. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm not sure what the fundemental dichotomies would be. ... Order - chaos seems like it may be essential one. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Haven't heard this. Why is this so? — Count Timothy von Icarus
How does it deal with the apparent experimental confirmation of contextuality (i.e. the same thing observed can occur at different times for different observers). — Count Timothy von Icarus
The physical interactions of physical systems (e.g. apparatus & photon) decoheres quantum states.
So, you need things, plural, for being. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Propositions about things are not the things they are propositions about. — Count Timothy von Icarus
... isn't question begging unless you are claiming that the proffered proposition "I claim there is being in the absence of thought," is identical with the reality of being without thought. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Maybe some terminology would help here. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Quite literally something that is impossible to totally pin down because you will never make a purely physical observation, you will only make ones occurring in subjective experience, which is why consciousness causes collapse can live on. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Again, question begging. There are no claims in the absence of thought
Any recommendations on Pierce in terms of a starting point for a deeper read? — Count Timothy von Icarus
The lens of symmetry is something I should look in to more. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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