By leaving out an essential feature you are misrepresenting it.
— Fooloso4
Asked and answered. — Dfpolis
what if anything are you actually explaining with regard to consciousness?
— Fooloso4
That it is not reducible to a physical process. — Dfpolis
... for it is not affected or altered. Hence this is a different form from movement; for movement is the activity of the incomplete, while activity proper is different, the activity of the complete. — ibid.431a4
After all, not all beings are conscious. — Fooloso4
This seems reasonable. I think Aristotle's idea of form is more applicable to organisms than the inorganic world.In my taxonomy, beings are differentiated from things precisely because they are animated (by soul, in Aristotle’s terms.) And you can see it in that even the simplest organisms embody intentional actions even if not conscious in any real sense, although that will sound too near vitalism for most. — Wayfarer
Are you guys referring to a specific OP? — Paine
This is good. What was the problem?I am of the view that the word 'ontology' refers to exploration the nature of being, as distinct from the study of phenomena or the analysis of what kinds of things there are, which I said is the domain of science proper. — Wayfarer
What was the problem? — L'éléphant
All water under the bridge — Wayfarer
Basically the problem was that this particular mod hated my guts and would initiate or join any pile-on concerning myself. All water under the bridge — Wayfarer
It's my job to deal with people with a wide range of net worth so basically I'm trained to deal with why people say what they say. (Not to say I've mastered it, so once in a while I fall prey to it, too -- but a "professional" one like me :cool: rebounds back)This happened to me last week when a casual remark made by a high school classmate seventy years ago popped into my thoughts. It's partly the evoked emotion caused by the incident that fixes it firmly in the subconscious, available for re-annoying. :sad: — jgill
I bet that memory came back to you at the moment when you're not feeling well or your mind was pre-occupied — L'éléphant
No, what allows me to avoid Cartesian dualism is Arsitotle's definition of the psyche as the actuality of a potentially living body instead of as res cogitans. — Dfpolis
Aristotle is clear that hyle is a kind of physis (an intrinsic principle of change), a "source of power," and that it "desires" the new form in a substantial change. Thus, it is an active tendency, and not passively receptive, in the case of natural changes. In artificial changes, it is passively receptive. — Dfpolis
Its form must be determined by a prior potential, viz. its predecessor's hyle. Also, it must be actualized by something that is already operational/actual. That line of actualization can be traced to the Unmoved Mover. Still, the form cannot exist prior to the being, because the form is the being's actuality, and it is not actual before it exists. — Dfpolis
Ultimately, it is. Proximately, it cannot be, because change requires a prior potential to new form. That is why the Unmoved Mover cannot change. — Dfpolis
That analysis shows the necessity of prior potentials in natural processes. — Dfpolis
We need to distinguish between making what was potential actual, and making something with no prior potential (true creation). — Dfpolis
We need to distinguish secondary causality, which is the causality found in nature, from metaphysical actualization, which is what the cosmological argument relies upon. — Dfpolis
It is interesting to me that the language in De Anima is more directed to recognizing different kinds of agency than coming to terms with a chain of causality. — Paine
Basically the problem was that this particular mod hated my guts and would initiate or join any pile-on concerning myself. — Wayfarer
Of course this is repugnant to the rational mind, to think that order could emerge from disorder, — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears to me, that what's coming out in this thread, is that there is a form of scientism within which the practitioners attempt to reduce all forms of causation to a single determinist form. This is the manifestation of an urge to reject dualism for monism, and dispel the spiritual woo-hoo. The common method of procedure is to conflate formal cause with final cause, and represent final cause as a type of formal cause, instead of as a distinct form of causation. Ultimately this renders the whole of material, or physical existence as somewhat unintelligible, because the two are fundamentally incompatible — Metaphysician Undercover
If I have anything of a unity within me, it certainly doesn’t lie in the conscious ‘I’ and in feeling, willing, thinking, but somewhere else: in the sustaining, appropriating, expelling, watchful prudence of my whole
organism, of which my conscious self is only a tool. Feeling, willing, thinking everywhere show only outcomes, the causes of which are entirely unknown to me: the way these outcomes succeed one another as if one
succeeded out of its predecessor is probably just an illusion: in truth, the causes may be connected to one another in such a way that the final causes give me the impression of being associated, logically or psychologically. I deny that one intellectual or psychological phenomenon is the direct cause of another intellectual or psychological phenomenon – even if this seems to be so. The true world of causes is hidden from us: it is unutterably more complicated
... pre-material final cause — Metaphysician Undercover
... we need to maintain a separation between pre-material final cause, and post-material formal cause, in the way that Aristotle demonstrated — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not reject the FA. It has led, inter alia, to the science of physics. I only reject its adequacy in studying mind.I saw supporting the rejection was the passage I quoted, where you moved from a rejection of the Fundamental Assumption (a rejection unsupported in principle), to a rejection of both property and substance dualism. — Metaphysician Undercover
You continue to be confused. First actuality is being operational. Second actuality is operating. While something actual must effect a change, the first actuality of organisms (their form) is being alive, and it is concurrent with them being able to act as they do.Within Aristotle's conceptual space, as explained in his "Metaphysics", this type of actuality is necessarily prior in time to the material existence of that body, as cause of its existence as an organized body. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I said in the article and in my earlier response to you: by not treating psyche as a thing, but as a kind of actuality, we avoid Cartesian dualism.So I ask you, how do you proceed within this conceptual space, to reject dualism? — Metaphysician Undercover
I referred you to my hyle article, where it is supported. I have no interest in repeating my explanations.This is completely unsupported and wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is the common view. It is not what Aristotle said. See my hyle article.Material cause is simply indeterminate possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not arguing against having more than one principle in an organism (not against matter and form) as Aristotle recognized, but against having two things (res cogitans and res extensa) as Descartes thought. I've told you this a number of times before.Aristotle's dualism — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle does not say that the human mind creates forms, but that it actualizes the intelligibility belonging to the form of the sensed object. He even says that in doing so, the nous becomes, in some way, the thing it knows. Thus, the known form is the form of the known.one created by the human mind as formulae — Metaphysician Undercover
I have not proposed such a duality. Again, the known form is the form of the known.you to recognize that Aristotle's conceptual space necessitates this duality of actuality (form) — Metaphysician Undercover
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