But within the mind-independent world, where is the information within A that it is part of the same pattern as B but not the same pattern as D. — RussellA
In the mind-independent world there exists an interface between different behaviours (of groups of particles - i.e., rock and water); the existence of the interface requires a distinction between the groups of particles that form the interface (or there would not be an interface); this distinction materializes in the behaviour of the particles that make up the interacting surfaces. — Daniel
not only are patterns instantiated in nature, but nature is also receptive to patterns — Pantagruel
One of my problems with the ontological existence of patterns in a mind-independent world, and the relations between their parts, is where exactly do they exist.
When looking at the image, we know that A and B are part of one pattern and D and E are part of a different pattern.
But within the mind-independent world, where is the information within A that it is part of the same pattern as B but not the same pattern as D. If there is no such information, then within the mind-independent world, patterns, and the relations between their parts, cannot have an ontological existence.
One could say that patterns and relations have an abstract existence, in that they exist but outside of time and space. This leaves the problem of how do we know about something that exists outside of time and space. I could say that I believe that unicorns exist in the world but outside of time and space, but as I have no knowledge of anything outside of time and space, my belief would be completely unjustifiable.
One could say that the force experienced by A due to B is sufficient to argue that as A and B are related by a force, this is sufficient to show that A and B are part of the same pattern. However, even though A may experience a force, there is no information within the force that can determine the source of the force, whether originating from B or D. This means that there is no information within the force experienced by A that can determine one pattern from another.
Question: Sentient beings observe patterns in a mind-independent world, but for patterns to ontologically exist in a mind-independent world, there must be information within A that relates it to B but not D. Where is this information? — RussellA
Do the rings of a tree give us information or just facts and from there it takes an intelligence to make the facts meaningful information. — Athena
Yet, within the mind-independent world of molecules A, D, etc, excluding any external observer, no single part can have any information within itself about its behaviour, as behaviour is an external property of a part. — RussellA
Well I wouldn't say "absence of matter" is a "thing that exists" so I didn't include it in the system, but that's not to say I don't believe there are no places where there is no matter.
Maybe it's hypocritical of me to believe that a pattern is a "thing that exists" but an absence isn't. Hmm... — khaled
I would say the main issue is that it needs to be ‘a thing that exists’ in order to feature in the system. Ontology doesn’t preclude being sans ‘thing’ness. If pattern or arrangement subsists (which relates to your earlier discussion with RussellA), then so too does absence - of matter and of pattern. — Possibility
That's an expanding set of 'things' and openended as far as qualities.What you'd find discussed in a physics or chemistry book. — khaled
But within science you don't rule out things. You find a negative result about X, but it is conceded that future research may demonstrate Xs existence. You don't say, well that sounds like a thing that requires dualism or even rule out dualism. If, later, the consensus is that X exists, regardless of its qualities or lacks thereof, it is included in what is considered real."mental stuff" as dualists and idealists have it. — khaled
That's an expanding set of 'things' and openended as far as qualities. — Bylaw
But within science you don't rule out things. — Bylaw
If, later, the consensus is that X exists, regardless of its qualities or lacks thereof, it is included in what is considered real. — Bylaw
And what are these "laws of nature" exactly in your view? Given that you do not believe patterns exist ontologically. — khaled
I would say a mind requires variation to exist and not the other way around, for there must be variation before a mind capable of distinguishing variation exists (specially when such a mind collects information by detecting changes in the environment through the senses of its body). If there is variation and there is "stuff" then there are patterns automatically. — Daniel
That is certainly ruled out if you take a monist stand. But to me at least science is a methodology, not a stand on ontology.Yes. But any dualist you find will insist that there is mental stuff on top of this set of things as a whole seperate set of things. That's what's ruled out. — khaled
He showed that the solar system was heliocentric. No one has shown that the universe cannot be dualist or that any phenomenon that for some reason a physicalist or a dualist or anyone else thinks is not physical (a term that has no meaning or an expanding meaning) that doesn't mean we can rule out the phenomenon. We can of course say there is insufficient or no evidence at this time. But we have no grounds to rule it out based on substance (in the philosophical sense). I mean right now there a millions of neutrinos coursing through out bodies hitting nothing. There are massless particles. There are thing in superposition. In addition there are many things that we now know are real that we ruled out given then current models. I see no reason to not be agnostic on such things.Yes you do, when they contradict what you find. Galileo ruled out the geocentric system for example. Mental stuff (if it has any agency) will contradict conservation of energy. — khaled
That's fine. I don't think anyone here needs to see things from a scientific point of view. But sometimes it seems like a good starting point in these kinds of dialogue since often the position you seemed to have that I first responded is one that is often batched with science.And also this is thephilosophyforum not thescienceforum. I don't intend to strictly adhere to the scientific method. — khaled
that sounds like you might be a dualist, or....? What belief would you have to scrap`?Sure and if scientists find "consciousness" or "emotion" as some sort of matter then I'll scrap my beliefs on the spot. Until then, this is how I make sense of things. — khaled
that sounds like you might be a dualist, or....? What belief would you have to scrap`? — Bylaw
No one has shown that the universe cannot be dualist — Bylaw
We can of course say there is insufficient or no evidence at this time. But we have no grounds to rule it out based on substance (in the philosophical sense). — Bylaw
But sometimes it seems like a good starting point in these kinds of dialogue since often the position you seemed to have that I first responded is one that is often batched with science. — Bylaw
In the context, I am correct. Gallileo found evidence that the solar system is heliocentric not geocentric. That's a different kind of situation from ruling out that some substance or entity cannot exist, which is what we were talking about. He found evidence for how things are organized and heleocentrism fit the evidence better, the patterns in the things that were known. He didn't so something that parallels, say, ruling out the existence of ghosts or telekinesis or that some facet of mind is a different substance. It was not that kind of ruling out. As far as the law of conservation of energy, this has not been proved, it's just we have never found a counterexample. There is nothing in scientific methodology that means if we find evidence that there may be changes in convervation of energy, we should simply ignore it, because this cannot be the case. But more importantly you are doing deduction that may or may not be sound. You think that if there is mental stuff and this is of a different substance than matter then this must necessarily violate conservation of energy. Perhaps you are correct, perhaps not. If we went back hundred and fifty years many of the processes and things discovered under quantum mechanics would have been ruled out due to deduction. Something is either a wave or a particle. Things have to be in one place. No two things can be in the same place at the same time. And other seemingly deducible or self-evident truths have turned out not to be true. Further there IS controversy about whether the law of conservation of energy is a law. This relates to the Big Bang and quantum phenomena also.Sure and I have done nothing unscientific here. You said that scientists don't rule anything out, but that's clearly false, — khaled
Except for its Material foundation, your ontology sounds similar to mine, which I call Enformationism*1 : everything in the world is a form of Generic Information (EnFormAction). You might think of it as an update of Aristotle's hylomorphism (matter + form), except that it is a monistic concept in that Enformation is the essence (defining pattern) of everything, both Matter & Mind. "Information" is simply meaningful patterns in both matter & minds.I will now present my ontological view for everyone to have fun tearing down. I don't know if this ontology has a name already but if it does please tell me.
It is a dualist ontology, but not substance (ew), or property dualism. I believe that what exists is matter, and patterns of matter. — khaled
Well, this seems to be a critique to basically every ontological system, and one that's easily fixable by including "absence" in whatever ontological system is missing it, so I don't believe it's exactly a problem with mine specifically or that it's a hard problem to fix.
I think this needs a separate op talking about whether "absence exists". — khaled
Perhaps you are correct, perhaps not. — Bylaw
If this was supposed to be taken as on a par with conclusions held generally in consensus in science, that would be unscientific. — Bylaw
I will now present my ontological view for everyone to have fun tearing down. — khaled
As far as the law of conservation of energy, this has not been proved, it's just we have never found a counterexample. — Bylaw
'now that is ruled out period'..well, I disagree. — Bylaw
That is closer to my own worldview. However, I go one step farther from Physics toward Metaphysics to assume that "all that exists is Information"*1. With that premise, we provide a possible explanation for the emergence of immaterial Minds (awareness) from a material world. Matter is indeed "patterned energy", but Information (EnFormAction) is the Pattern Maker.Would it not be better to say that "what exists is energy (what matter is or is made of), and information (pattern). Matter is patterned energy, or in other words energy infused with information."? — punos
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