Deleted User
Gnomon
I have no formal philosophical training, and I read mostly the works of philosophical scientists, instead of professional philosophers. So I had to look-up the term "eliminative materialist". I think you should get a positive reception from many Materialist posters on TPF. And, although I am not a Materialist of any prefix, I can agree with Churchland's assertion (stating the obvious) that "beliefs are not ontologically real" Such mental states are, however, ontologically Ideal, in the sense that they exist as metaphysical*1 concepts not physical objects. I don't understand how anyone posting on a philosophy forum could deny the importance of immaterial*2 ideas to humans, and perhaps to some animals.Even though being an Eliminative Materialist didn't make me many friends. — GLEN willows
180 Proof
Yes.Isn't the result a different meaning of real that...is essentially meaningless? — GLEN willows
Joshs
Deleted User
Agent Smith
Love — Gnomon
Deleted User
L'éléphant
I think your understanding of what was said is incorrect. Direct experience doesn't just mean "seeing". We experience in all five senses. I can't see Mars from here, but the evidence produced by man on Mars should suffice to say, there have been experience of the planets.Without going into too many specific thinkers (though I could) ...is the prevailing attitude of Phil. of Sci. still Empiricist, to an absurd degree (IMO)? I have verbatim quotes from people like Van Fraasen to the affect that if we can't DIRECTLY experience objects, they are not "real" but just "convenient to use" including such pretty large non-real objects like planets. Or smaller stuff like atoms, electrons, quarks, etc. Because microscopes and telescopes only show us an image of the object, but nothing that can be deemed "real." — GLEN willows
Agent Smith
Deleted User
Deleted User
180 Proof
:fire:The non-materialist's impossible burden is to explain ... the difference betwixt the immaterial and nothing. Mayhaps that is what non-materialism is all about - a study of nothing!
3hReplyOptions — Agent Smith
"Whatever you want ..." :cool:Fool me, fool me all you want for a time will come when a false friend becomes a true friend.
Agent Smith
I got your point but twisted it for my own selfish reasons.
As for the rest - I'll take your word for it. Too many words to Google and I have a good true crime series going on Netflix - MY world — GLEN willows
Yohan
Agent Smith
Deleted User
Yohan
"But I don't expect we will get anywhere debating the topic." :smile: Don't mind at all.Interesting! Quite obviously you're using a different definition for nothing. We're allowed to do that. Create worlds of our own, with unique rules & objects, and whatnot. I wish I had the time to explore Yohan's universe, but looks like I'll have to do it on another day. Hope you don't mind. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
"But I don't expect we will get anywhere debating the topic." :smile: Don't mind at all. — Yohan
Deleted User
Agent Smith
[...]Without laughter there is no Tao. — Laozi
Agent Smith
"Whatever you want ..." :cool: — 180 Proof
Deleted User
Agent Smith
is God a Potato" — GLEN willows
It's stupid to be smart. — David H. Wolpert
science of philosophy — GLEN willows
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
Joshs
I also got a whiff of hardcore social constructionism of the "if we don't name things they don't exist" or "we create reality to match our theories" type. — GLEN willows
PhilosophyRunner
We don’t create reality to match our theories, we create theories to match our goal-driven social realities, and they can succeed or fail in this aim. — Joshs
Gnomon
Yes. Non-materialists are aware that such mundane non-sense as Love & other abstractions are physically nothing. But unlike cold-hearted materialists, they feel that immaterial non-things are meta-physically important. Sometimes more dear than Life itself, another nothing. :wink:The non-materialist's impossible burden is to explain ... the difference betwixt the immaterial and nothing. Mayhaps that is what non-materialism is all about - a study of nothing! — Agent Smith
Mikie
Alkis Piskas
There are more reasons. And, in most cases, the major reason for not undesranding a subject is that one does not undestand or misunderstands and ignores (omits to clear up) one or more words --esp. key ones-- used in the subject."if you don't understand something, it could be because it's complicated, or because it's just wrong." — GLEN willows
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