Astronomical and physics based evidence suggests otherwise, if you take these sciences seriously, you have to seriously consider that the external world exists.
Not to mention archeological evidence
Yes, all these sciences are constrained by our modes of cognition, but when our cognition coincides with aspects of the external world, we get a science.
If that's not enough, or if you think this is not firm enough foundation, then, the only sense which I think cannot be "thought away", is solidity or impenetrability. Everything else is could be modified.
So either we assert, full stop, that we cannot know anything about the external world, or we say that some aspects we can tease out, most of them we cannot.
But we have to be somewhat realistic, we cannot attain the kind of certainty you are looking for, that is, one that defeats skepticism about these topics.
But then by definition, we cannot say what metaphysics is, because it is beyond all possible experience.
My point was simple, we have a model, which we use to navigate the world as is given to us. If there was no world, we wouldn't need a model.
Inferences with "beyond" premises (e.g. magic, myths, ideals), whether or not they are valid, cannot be sound. Metaphysics is rational, at best, and itself is never theoretical (i.e. explanatory of nature)
He says similar things about time. Is it your position that space and time are illegitimate concepts?
I am not sure if the OP's definition on Metaphysics is formally accepted by the public and academics. Metaphysics doesn't use imagination and conjectures all the time as its investigative methods.
For instance, Kant's Metaphysics arrives at its conclusions via rigorous logical arguments.
and it asks and investigates the topics these subjects cannot deal with or ask, such as the "why" questions.
If you start trying to wrap your head around the emergence of physical properties as the manifestation of pointer states in the process of the decoherence of quantum superposition from the web of entanglement it is hard not to think that you're thinking in metaphysical terms.
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/840954Can you please define what you mean by ‘metaphysics’? — Bob Ross
Non-rational metaphysics (i.e. supernaturalist, mythical, subjectivist, etc) is neither classical nor modern.Because, to me, metaphysics is ‘“beyond” premises’
My definition of metaphysics is that is the study of that which is beyond the possibility of experience, and not that it is a process of using the imagination. For most metaphysicians, they use principles like parsimony, explanatory power, internal/external coherence, (logical) consistency, intuitions, etc. to determine metaphysical theories. — Bob Ross
Logic devoid of empirically verified content is indistinguishable from the imagination. I can make a logically consistent argument for the world being comprised of one giant cookie monster. — Bob Ross
Of course, it attempts to answer questions we humans want to answer, but there is a reason we can’t legitimately: there is no way to ground it in reality, since all we have of reality is our experience of it and the questions metaphysics tries to answer (as a matter of ontology) is beyond that experience. — Bob Ross
For instance, Kant's Metaphysics arrives at its conclusions via rigorous logical arguments. Aristotle's Metaphysics analyses the abstract concepts and universals again via logic. I don't see any imagination there at all. — Corvus
Logic supplies no content; it consists in procedural rules. — Janus
Kant's philosophy is the product of logically constrained imagination; that is it consists in imagining the entailments of some basic premises in a logically rigorous, i.e. coherent and consistent, way. — Janus
But the point is that it doesn't tell the whole story. Rather, it raises a whole host of questions about the relationships between "properties" and events, and why some configurations are "preferred" by the universe versus others
Science is one colour on the palette. Metaphysics is about the palette, and the picture, and the painter, and the model.
In those cases, science uses hypotheses which are imagination in nature.
If you are only relying on the observable and verifiable objects only, you would have very little to work with.
For instance most of the astronomical objects are unreachable from earth. They are only viewable by telescope from a far distance.
In this case, their studies and investigations are metaphysical rather than scientific
Where empirically verified content is devoid, Logic uses inference for coming to their conclusions which is one of the main empirical scientific methods.
Could you please clarify which logic you mean here? There are vast many different types of Logic.
Deductive Logic
Inductive Logic
Predicate Logic
Philosophical Logic
Modal Logic
Non-Classical Logic
Dialectic Logic
Of course, it attempts to answer questions we humans want to answer, but there is a reason we can’t legitimately: there is no way to ground it in reality, since all we have of reality is our experience of it and the questions metaphysics tries to answer (as a matter of ontology) is beyond that experience. — Bob Ross
I don't understand this point here. Could you please elaborate in detail with some examples please? Thanks.
I never said the external world doesn’t exist; and astronomy and physics produce models of reality based off of predicting our experience (i.e., empirical evidence) and thusly are only valid insofar as they reference experience, which is conditioned by our forms thereof. — Bob Ross
All of archeological discoveries are conditioned, epistemically, by our possible forms of knowledge (namely space and time): if not, then please provide me with any empirical evidence you have of any archeology whatsoever which is not derived nor contingent at all on human (or animal) experience. — Bob Ross
I disagree. When our cognition can be predicted, we have science. Whether or not one wants to imagine that that predictability suggests a correspondence to reality (beyond our cognition) is another matter. — Bob Ross
If you think I am wrong, then I would challenge you to either (1) provide a means of providing empirical evidence for a claim which pertains to that which is beyond our experience or (2) provide justification for how we can know that our experience is accurate to the external world (of which is not appealing to models of reality which are determined by predicting our experience: which, naturally, are conditioned by our experience). — Bob Ross
But a model doesn’t really make claims about things beyond possible experience: it just says, hey, look, we can predict stuff in experience if we treat stuff like they are this, so, until we come up with a more predictive model, let’s use that to navigate experience. It doesn’t say: this is actually how the world in-itself is. — Bob Ross
Could you please clarify which logic you mean here? There are vast many different types of Logic. — Corvus
Could you please elaborate your points with the relevant quotes from Kant's CPR or any of his own writings? — Corvus
I have no problem with the imagination being used to try to sort of something empirical—it is when we going beyond the empirical that gets sketchy to me. — Bob Ross
Every valid aspect of science is a prediction about something which could be possibly experienced. Metaphysics is about that which, in principle, can never be. — Bob Ross
Viewing it from a telescope is a form of experiencing it. How do you ‘view’ whether the world is actually made of a physical or mental substance? Or that there actually are Universals, or just particulars? — Bob Ross
Positing hypotheses to try to predict objects within possible experience is not metaphysics. — Bob Ross
All of these (except maybe ‘dialectic logic’, depending on what you mean there) share that pertain to the form of argumentation and not the content. — Bob Ross
Of course! Metaphysics, in the sense that I defined it in the OP, is about ontological things; that is, about that which is beyond the possibility of experience (e.g., Universals vs. particulars, nature of time, nature of space, substances, etc.). Now, all we can ever know empirically is from our experience, so the best we can ever do in terms of explaining the ‘nature’ of things is what is conditioned, right off the bat, by our possible forms of experience (and, not to mention, our means of cognizing the world) (namely space and time) and thusly are only valid constrained to them. Take away your forms of experience, and everyone else’s, and what is intelligible left (with any metaphysical claim you can think of)? Absolutely nothing. — Bob Ross
None of them provide any content. — Janus
t is a characterization of Kant's philosophy that applies to synthetic philosophies in general. Wherever there is creativity, it is a product of the imagination. — Janus
My definition of metaphysics is that is the study of that which is beyond the possibility of experience, — Bob Ross
What say you? — Bob Ross
Kant, as can be seen in your quote of CPR, was making most of his arguments from the model that we represent the world; — Bob Ross
Instead, it just notes that we ‘experience’ with two possible forms: space and time. Whether, in our model of reality, we attribute those forms to our representative faculties is irrelevant. — Bob Ross
I would go for a more Kantian view that space and time do not pertain to the world as it is in-itself: there’s no noumenal space and time. — Bob Ross
Can you please define what you mean by ‘metaphysics’? — Bob Ross
To "define ... that which is beyond" seems patent nonsense to me. Also, "the possibility of experience" amounts to an anthropic / subjectivity-bias (contra Copernicus' mediocity principle & Peirce's fallibilism). Typical idealism.For example, I define it as "the study of that which is beyond the possibility of experience". — Bob Ross
IME, metaphysics has always been the reflective study of the most general prerequisites (i.e. ontology) for rationally making sense – interpreting the paradigm changes, research programs & provisional results – of physics (i.e. the counter-intuitive, defeasible study of nature (i.e. ontics)).
"What is Metaphysics?" https://as.nyu.edu/content/dam/nyu-as/philosophy/documents/faculty-documents/fine/accessible_fine/Fine_What-is-Metaphysics.pdf/quote]
A great article. :cool: :up: — Leontiskos
Here is a paper by Kit Fine on the topic, "What is Metaphysics?" — Leontiskos
“…the elements of metaphysics are those of penultimate generality, next in generality to the logical elements. Thus anything more general than a metaphysical element will
be logical and anything less general will be neither metaphysical nor logical. If we were to think of logic as relating to the structure of thought and of metaphysics as relating to the structure of reality, then logic would provide us with the most general traits of thought and metaphysics with the most general traits of reality.”
t is a characterization of Kant's philosophy that applies to synthetic philosophies in general. Wherever there is creativity, it is a product of the imagination.
— Janus
I would appreciate the direct quotes from Kant's own books supporting your points. Thanks. — Corvus
The existence of computers based on logical operations says nothing about content. Various logics are formalizations of the rules that are understood to govern thinking; consistency, non-contradiction and so on, and do not themselves mandate any particular view about anything. — Janus
I haven't claimed Kant said that—I am saying it, so your request for supporting quotes from Kant is not relevant. — Janus
Yes, models of reality - not models of models
if on the right track, tell us something about the way the world works absent us. Yes, experience tells us this, yes models are not reality, but they refer to it, not to a model.
Correct. But I ask you, is there any other way to get any knowledge at all about anything, that's not through a particular experience, related to the relevant creature? Knowledge is relational.
But you are limiting the historical scope of metaphysics only to things-in-themselves, not even Kant did this. He spoke about morals and religion as aspects of metaphysics.
And even Kant had things to say about things-in-themselves, that they are non-relational, and that they ground the objects of experience.
Finally, we should recognize, that appearances are part of empirical reality.
I do not know why you insist on using this as the benchmark for metaphysics.
The way you are defining external world precludes evidence which shows that there are things absent us. Like planets or the stars...Unless you say that because all we have is a model, this model doesn't get to things in themselves, ergo planets and stars are not external to us.
I agree we possibly can't have knowledge of things in themselves, but I don't restrict metaphysics or reality to these terms - I don't see a good reason for doing so.
I mean, are we going to ask a model for it to predict something which is beyond all possible experience? That's incoherent.
But then, why is there any reason to believe that a more predictive model will tell us about things beyond all possible experience? We are still stuck in the same cage you set up.
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