The only way out that I see is some form of infinite regress out of necessity (but what is necessity if not a brute fact?) We could say that the "brute fact" is ABCD, and if we try to analyze what "brute fact" amounts to, we'll end up with ABCD as well. A circular but infinite explanation. Sort of like saying everything can be divisible an infinite amount of times. — darthbarracuda
Doesn't that make a brute fact just a true statement that is not subject to doubt? — Banno
You're also mistaken about Humean causation too. There is not "no reason" any given event occur. The presence of particular states which case other is present defines Humean causation. Why did the sun rise? Because states, causes and effects, were such that a rising sun came to be. That's "why" some alternative outcome hasn't occurred. — TheWillowOfDarkness
That there is some reason why God, the universe, mind, etc cannot not exist. — Marchesk
But that leaves me doubting whether the sun might rise tomorrow. In fact, it leaves me doubting everything about the future. — Marchesk
But why does this reason exist? — darthbarracuda
But why does this reason exist? And why does the reason that this reason exist also exist? If something is necessarily existent - why is it necessarily existent? " — darthbarracuda
So being is necessarily prior to reason, it seems. — John
It seems there could not be a reason why there must be something rather than nothing, because if there is nothing there can be no reasons. In other words there must be something for there to be reasons in the first place. So being is necessarily prior to reason, it seems.
But how do you explain the fact that we can think about impossibilities? Do these acts of thinking not really exist? — darthbarracuda
So you can think the statement "The triangle is a circle", or you can speak it or write it down. The collection of qualia, sounds, or ink marks on paper is consistent and exists, but it does not refer to anything. — litewave
What would be a brute fact that is undeniable, or whose denial has the burden of proof?
**How about the fact that there are, and couldn't have not been, abstract facts, or abstract statements about hypothetical conclusions from hypothetical statements about hypothetical relations among hypothetical quantities?**
I suggest that the burden of proof would be on anyone denying that. — Michael Ossipoff
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