Which tool do we use without requiring us to trust and use our senses? — creativesoul
Which thought can we have without using our senses? — creativesoul
So, you separate the intellect from the senses by virtue of positing a mind(presumably of God) and then tell me that my claim that senses precede intellect needs justification? — creativesoul
Which tool do we use without requiring us to trust and use our senses? Which thought can we have without using our senses? — creativesoul
I don't see how these questions are relevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
You claimed that we ought not trust our senses but rather our intellect. I claimed it was impossible. — creativesoul
My claim is supported by the evidence. — creativesoul
Plato's is supported by logical possibility alone. — creativesoul
a fallacious argument called "begging the question", — Metaphysician Undercover
A conclusion produced by valid logic, is a necessary conclusion, — Metaphysician Undercover
I've not given any argument. Answer the questions. — creativesoul
So all valid conclusions are necessary in your view? Seems our notions of "necessary" differ. — creativesoul
Logical consequence is necessary and formal, by way of examples that explain with formal proof and models of interpretation. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_consequence
I really didn't understand your use of "tool" — Metaphysician Undercover
In fact, in the Platonic tradition, we use the intellect to question, doubt what appears to us through sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
You mentioned how we have exceeded our innate capabilities, or words to that effect. — creativesoul
The intellect is existentially dependent upon physiological sensory perception(biological 'machinery'). — creativesoul
So, the intellect orders the parts that it later doubts? — creativesoul
When A is existentially dependent upon B then B is necessary for the emergence of A. When something(A) is existentially dependent upon something else(B), the former(B) cannot precede the latter(A). — creativesoul
That would require that the intellect exist in its entirety prior to the parts that it arranges into order. — creativesoul
I've no reason whatsoever to believe that the intellect is even capable of remaining intact(in it's entirety) in the complete absence of those structures. — creativesoul
Whereas there is no evidence to the contrary. — creativesoul
All things begin simply and grow in their complexity. — creativesoul
I really didn't understand your use of "tool". — Metaphysician Undercover
You guys are exhibiting inconsistencies between comments. — Mww
I didn’t get from your comments, that you hold the senses are existentially dependent upon an intellect, or that the intellect orders the individual parts, that is to say, the biological structures, of the senses. — Mww
That there is no intellect without the physiological structures sufficient for it, is given, but that structure is the brain and ancilliary connectivity, not mechanistic sensory devices. — Mww
The biological structures, which include the senses, must be ordered in such a way so as to fulfill each one's purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
The argument is that it can only be an intellect which creates this biological order, the order which is necessary for these parts to serve their various purposes. — Metaphysician Undercover
this places an intellect as prior to the brain, and impossible that the intellect is a product of, or dependent on, the brain. — Metaphysician Undercover
True enough, but couldn’t that be conditioned by natural evolution? — Mww
Again, true enough, but that kind of intelligence isn’t human, nor could it be, and human intelligence is the only one we have non-contradictory grounds to discuss. — Mww
Pick an explanation, I guess, run with it ‘til you trip over it. Metaphysical reductionism can only go so far before it defeats itself, right? — Mww
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