I am using the term 'philosopher' to refer to someone who is employed to teach philosophy in a university and who has a track record of publishing in philosophy in peer review journals. — Bartricks
Now, is the principle of the conservation of energy compatible with the dualism? — Bartricks
Ok, so you admit, you are just defining the term to suit your purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Before we can proceed with this inquiry, we must determine the truths and falsities concerning what "conservation of energy", and "dualism" mean. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't believe that you cannot grasp what I am telling you, — Metaphysician Undercover
One cannot directly measure the energy of something, and I don't see why you can't understand this. — Metaphysician Undercover
except a clear indication that you do not understand the principles involved. — Metaphysician Undercover
Am I coming across as so extremely intelligent that I appear to be God or something like that? — Metaphysician Undercover
No. Why would it?
The conservation of energy principle concerns the behaviour of the material world.
The point I have made is that dualism - interactionist dualism - does not violate it. — Bartricks
how did I admit that? — Bartricks
I am using the term to refer to someone who is extremely good at philosophy. — Bartricks
You think that's not clear in the OP? The conservation of energy principle says that the level of energy in the material world will remain constant. Resist the temptation to say that you think the principle is false- that's philosophically inept. — Bartricks
Dualism, as explained in the OP, is the view that our minds are immaterial things that are causally interacting with the material world (the latter is interactionism - strictly speaking one could be a dualist and deny it - but by hypothesis that is not the case with the kind of dualism under consideration). — Bartricks
But how? First, note that the evidence that the principle of the conservation of energy is true is empirical evidence and no empirical evidence will ever conflict with dualism.
Second, in order for the principle of the conservation of energy to be violated, some energy would need either to disappear or be introduced into the picture by the addition of event B. But event B does not do this. We have no more or less energy in the system than if one supposed A caused C directly. Thus, there is no violation of the principle. — Bartricks
No Bartricks, before focusing on whether A is compatible with B, we need to determine what A and B mean. And this is a matter of truth, otherwise one will define A and B so that they either are, or are not compatible with each other, according to one's preference. In other words, one will make fictitious definitions of A and B to make them either compatible or not. And that is a pointless exercise. So we ought to proceed with determining the truth about A and B. — Metaphysician Undercover
The belief that those thermodynamic principles are true are the foundation from which we have standardised and built virtually all newtonian physical laws and formulas. — Benj96
How did we gain such predictive power, knowledge and technology based off something fundamentally incorrect? — Benj96
What you have argued for based on the falsity of thermodynamics laws is rationally consistent throughout your argument and well composed. But it is confined to Materialism - We can only infer the existence of energy from measurement/ calculation of other physical things. — Benj96
However what I argued, that you don't need to measure energy to know it's there - and I gave a first person account to prove that - I don't touch fire coz it's hot as. — Benj96
You don't touch the fire because it's hot. This in no way implies that there is energy there. You need a premise which relates being hot to being energy, in order to conclude that being hot implies energy. — Metaphysician Undercover
A and B = false — universeness
But as I've explained to you, energy is really just a product of our calculations, not something existing independently. — Metaphysician Undercover
Science does not know what energy materialistically IS. — universeness
I a cough out the word dualism/relativism again here. Because I think dualism trumps two opposimg monism. — Benj96
Energy is equivalent to matter. "E=M" (x c^2) The only difference is a function of light speed. — Benj96
E=MC squared, we don't know what E or M physically IS. We can't see the feathers and the gold. — universeness
A+B and A and B. One is a calculation and the other is a propositional logic question.
I don't see the value is equating + with 'and.' — universeness
We do know what M physically is because it's matter (it quite literally by definition "physically is". — Benj96
The underlined part above puts me into deadlock. To know what mass is, I have to know what energy is and to know what energy is I have to know what mass is, — universeness
Not neccesarily.
One and two equals three. Two pieces of eight of pie and six pieces of the same eight equals a whole pie. — Benj96
. I know that + and 'and' are conflated together in many ways. — universeness
The whole set of immaterial can also be made discrete as it is a (whole set of things). And thus my Duality proposal is set on that basis. — Benj96
You used a definition of "philosopher" which is not consistent with anything printed that I've ever seen. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's definitely not clear in the op. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue, lil D-K troll, is whether the principle of the conservation of energy is COMPATIBLE with 'five-sided triangles' or 'conscious atoms' or "angels dancing on pinheads' like yours. :roll:The issue is whether the principle of the conservation of energy is COMPATIBLE withdualism. — Bartricks
My premise is "Ouch that f*@king hurt.
Physicist why did it hurt?"
Physicist :" because it contains a lot of kinetic energy (heat)"
Me: Ah okay so hot (subjective/my experience of heat) =energy, and that energy is being transferred to my hand by "kinesis" (movement)?"
Physicist:" yes that's right, movement from molecule to molecule. Which you can measure with your hand or an instrument.
Enter Metaphysician: "you can't imply that reasoning. You need a premise. — Benj96
If you don't believe it go put your hand in the fire and measure it yourself. Tell me what you feel. — Benj96
Or don't, and we can just assume that energy is hot as a decent conclusion. And things with more energy in them are hotter (furnaces, nuclear bombs, sun, supernovae etc). — Benj96
Am I correct in assuming that at this stage in the argument your only motivation is to prove me wrong? — Benj96
Are you stating this as a scientific fact? and if you are, can you give me references from experts in the field who have stated this as fact or are you just offering the statement above as a valid/convenient way to 'envisage or personally perceive' what energy is. — universeness
Perhaps we really would have to be able to 'see' a photon to better know what energy IS. — universeness
Would you agree that energy is material as opposed to immaterial? — universeness
For you, if you think that the energy conservation laws are fundamentally incorrect then are you forced to also suggest that something must exist 'outside' of this universe or do you envisage some other way for energy to become 'non-existent' rather than 'changed form.' — universeness
Yes it is, it is just that, like most, you don't read the OP carefully - you just see 'conservation of energy principle' and think 'I can say something about that' and then you say it, regardless of whether it is relevant to the argument. — Bartricks
Is this sufficient as a reply to your issue of compatibility? — Metaphysician Undercover
All you have to do is take a look at what energy is, and you'll see that it is not something directly measured. The quantity of energy which is said to be attributed to any object or any specific location, is always the product of a calculation — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that energy is material as opposed to immaterial?
— universeness
No, I would obviously not agree to that. Since energy is never sensed, it is only the product of a calculation, it must be immaterial, as a conception only. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I think there is necessarily a beyond the universe. This is because "the universe" is a materialist conception, based on all that is material, and sensible. But we can understand, through the concept of energy, that there is necessarily an immateril aspect of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
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