Don't see it. — Banno
If it walks like an idealist, and quacks like an idealist, then..... — Wayfarer
I'm not sure how science can lead to truth when Hoff says we are hardwired by evolution to be unable to recognise reality. — Tom Storm
However there must be some form of "judgement", though not rational judgement which is inherent within intuition — Metaphysician Undercover
What I am saying is that inherent within my sensibility, there is some sort of "judgement", which "decided" to present this display to me — Metaphysician Undercover
I explained in detail why it is necessary to conclude that there is some form of "judgement" occurring at a subconscious level — Metaphysician Undercover
the inclination to restrict "judgement" to conscious mental activity is a misunderstanding of the nature of living beings. — Metaphysician Undercover
The current issue of Philosophy Now magazine has an article by columnist Raymond Tallis that is critical of Hoffman's theory. He accuses Hoffman of "Darwinitis" : "the claim that evolution completely explains the human person". But I didn't get that impression from The Argument Against Reality. Instead, he uses the step-by-step heuristic*1 mechanism of adaptation to illustrate how an incomplete understanding of Reality could be "good enough" for practical purposes*2 . Presumably, long-suffering Evolution is not concerned with perfect adaptations, only workable solutions. Tallis also accuses Hoffman of "self-refutation". As a truth-seeker himself, Tallis is especially critical of Hoffman's "Fitness Beats Truth" theorem. But that's how evolution works, as opposed to the one step perfection of divine creation.↪Tom Storm
He’s a cognitive scientist but as he doesn’t subscribe to materialism so it seems suggestive of idealism. I’m going to read that critical review Banno posted. — Wayfarer
The position of truth would depend on how you would define "truth". — Metaphysician Undercover
According to Steven Schafersman, geologist and president of Texas Citizens for Science, metaphysical naturalism is a philosophy that proposes that: 1. Nature encompasses all that exists throughout space and time; 2. Nature (the universe or cosmos) consists only of natural elements, that is, of spatiotemporal physical substance—mass–energy. Non-physical or quasi-physical substance, such as information, ideas, values, logic, mathematics, intellect, and other emergent phenomena, either supervene upon the physical or can be reduced to a physical account; 3. Nature operates by the laws of physics and in principle, can be explained and understood by science and philosophy; and 4. the supernatural does not exist, i.e., only nature is real. — WIkipedia — Wayfarer
To it's more like what Sartre called beneath all explanation. — green flag
The experience that we need in order to understand logic is not that something or other is the state of things, but that something is: that, however, is not experience. — green flag
But it is nonsense to say that I wonder at the existence of the world, because I cannot imagine it not existing. — green flag
One might be tempted to say that what I am wondering at is a tautology, namely at the sky being blue or not blue. But then it's just nonsense to say that one is wondering at a tautology. — green flag
Right, the mystical is beyond all explanation, whether beneath or above. — Janus
I don't understand what that sentence means. — Janus
I think we can imagine that the world might not have existed (well I can at least). And even if we could not imagine that, I don't see why existence should not elicit a feeling of wonder. — Janus
I don't understand the contingencies of existence to be tautologies, or say how they could be so understood, so I'm afraid you've lost me here — Janus
Existence is not a predicate — green flag
Kant's criticism of the ontological argument. — Wayfarer
I don't know if Hoffman can have any corresponding ontology of what the real connections are between perceiving subjects and objects that correspond to his metaphor of creatures manipulating icons. He says it's not real - compared to what? — Wayfarer
'conscious agents' are not necessarily human beings, but might be completely unknown to us. — Wayfarer
These are declarations, mere assertions, with no detailed explanation accompanying them. — Mww
And I reject anything needing quotation marks that merely substantiate its ambiguity. It’s judgement or it isn’t, such a thing as “judgement” just doesn’t say enough to be taken seriously. — Mww
Everything in general about what you call the form of “judgement” inherent in intuition, inasmuch as your exposition of it has entailed, has already been rendered in the pertinent literature as imagination, which meets the explanatory criteria for the human intellectual system as a whole in much more satisfactory manner, and, first, eliminates such notorious ambiguity as “judgement” altogether, and second, serves as sufficient reason for not realizing you are right. Like…..my employment of methodological imagination is much right-er than your employment of methodological “judgement”. — Mww
This is an unwarranted presupposition that the nature of all living beings is imbued with conscious mental activity, all that being completely irrelevant anyway, for all I care about properly understanding, is the living being that is me. I for one, have no problem restricting judgement to conscious mental activity, for I assert without equivocation that is impossible for me to judge anything whatsoever, if I am not conscious of what is being judged. — Mww
Sure. But my point wasn't about truth as such, it was about the nature and validity of science and empirical data, which surely has a compromised status if human senses are not able to apprehend reality. — Tom Storm
The gist of what I said…. — Metaphysician Undercover
I addressed the "sensibility thinks" issue by stating that this is not a form of thinking — Metaphysician Undercover
I used the quotations to indicate that my usage might be one which you are not very familiar with. That would be the case if you haven't done the analysis required to find the thing which the term refers to in that context. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think of it as a courtesy which I afford for you…. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hoffman's Interface theory is based on the mechanism of Darwinian adaptation. But I just came across a similar notion in Fire In The Mind, an overview of 20th century quantum science development. The book focused primarily on information coming out of quantum & complexity studies in Los Alamos and Santa Fe, New Mexico. In a chapter entitled The Democracy of Measurement --- after discussing the "collapse" (decoherence) of the wavefunction from superposition --- the author notes that the reason we observers normally see a classical reality, is that "the environment is monitoring everything all the time, collapsing wave functions, bringing hard-edged classicality out of quantum mushiness"*1. Therefore the Observer Problem only arises when scientists eliminate as many variables as possible (simplicity ; reductionism), in order to focus on, and measure, a single particle in an unnatural situation. But superposition is a Holistic property.One weakness in the 'desktop metaphor' is that at least a computer scientist will understand exactly the real operations that are being performed by the user interface, right down to the machine code and micro-electronics that underlie it. A scientist could explain comprehensively what the icons really are and how they work to achieve the user's purposes. I don't know if Hoffman can have any corresponding ontology of what the real connections are between perceiving subjects and objects that correspond to his metaphor of creatures manipulating icons. He says it's not real - compared to what? — Wayfarer
It's not that "truth" has a compromised status. That would be a backward way of looking at things. We can still hold truth up to the highest standards. We simply need to recognize that empirical data and science are insufficient for truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
But also, rocks are just PDA loopy thingies. — Banno
I don't see why we can't just go back to saying that rocks are real. Doing so sorta cuts to the chase, if you see what I mean. — Banno
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