It seems that Eliminative Ontic Structural Realism fills the bill, for a metaphysics combining Idealism and Realism.
"I like the Eliminative Ontic Structural apart, but I don't agree with the Realism part." — Michael Ossipoff
You'd have to define what the realism part means to you, that you don't like it. — noAxioms
Realism isn't really a view, it just means you consider something to exist, but without a definition of existence, that can be taken a number of different ways.
"Could our possibility-world be there without you, could it have existence apart from you? Sure. But then we're talking about an entirely different story, and that doesn't have relevance to your own actual life-experience story. "
That is the gist of the new thread I'm working on, once I seem to have time to attend to it.
"So sure, the physical world without you has some sort of existence, as do all of the infinitely-many hypothetical possibilty-worlds and possibility-stories--but that doesn't matter because that isn't the story that you're living in. There are infinitely-many hypothetical possibility-stories, and only one of them is real for you. ...the one that you're in."
So I suggest that Realism is unrealistic."
Nonsense. You've just described existence in sort of idealistic terms. Inferred things exist, even to you.
The far side of the moon makes no difference to my life, but that doesn't mean I think it doesn't exist.
"By the way, I was pleased to find,in an Ontic Structural Realism article, that the article refers to Tegmark's Mathematical Universe Hypothesis (MUH) as Ontic Structural Realism (OSR), because that means that Skepticism is different from MUH, and so Tegmark didn't propose exactly the same metaphysics that I propose. "
Tegmark himself did a post or two on the old forum, and actually referenced my post where I noted that a determined structure need not be instantiated (computed say) for the elements within (us) to be functional. My tiny little claim to fame I guess. I think that statement is the gist of what you're saying with this if-then terminology of this thread.
"Do you advocate Physicalism?"--Michael Ossipoff
This was also asked of me, and it seems irrelevant to the thread. Physicalism isn't really any ontological stance. It is mostly a view that the mental supervenes on the physical
, and yes, I think that is the case. If the other way around
If the other way around, it is idealism of sorts
None of the three assert a foundation for ontology. Materialism does I think, the view that nothing is more fundamental than, well, material.
I think of the word as an adjective, not so much a noun. If I believe in God, then I am a deistic realist. It means I think thing X is real. Without the X, the term means little, but often carries the implication of 'that which I experience'. I see a cup, the cup must be real.If I understand you correctly, you're saying that, because "real" is undefined, and "real-ness" is a matter of opinion, then Realism isn't a factual claim...if the advocate of Realism acknowledges that "real" is just a matter of opinion. — Michael Ossipoff
So let's pick something the Soviets can't measure for me. How about really distant planets (say 30 billion light years away). I can make a case for their existence, and I can make a case for their nonexistence. I can drive both arguments to apparent inconsistency, mostly by not having a stable definition of existence. Point is, all the models of the universe that work imply their existence, but such planets cannot have relevance to me personally.The far side of the Moon is definitely part of your life-experience possibility-story. The Soviets photographed in in 1959, if I remember correctly. — Michael Ossipoff
Metaphysics includes more than just hierarchy of ontology. The definition by google says "the real world consists simply of the physical world". The word 'simply' is the mind part, asserting lack of a second mental substance. The reference to 'the real world' carries implication that it is the only real world, with no existence beyond it. So yes, ontology is in there. My definition of existence makes that statement not wrong, but incoherent.Yes, Physicalism can refer to a position in the philosophy of mind, but it's also fully recognized as a metaphysical position.
I am unaware of another word for it, but am open to suggestions if you have one."Supervenes"? :) Western academic philosophers have exhibited a need to invent expanding terminologies, evidently to obfuscate, to justify continual publishing.
None of the three assert a foundation for ontology. Materialism does I think, the view that nothing is more fundamental than, well, material. — noAxioms
I thought that was the difference between materialism and physicalism, which is whether material is fundamental or not. No, I don't think it is, especially since nobody has every actually found material. I keep reading articles stating that say rocks are 99.<something>% empty space. My reaction is always: Really? Somebody found some nonempty space??That's metaphysial Physicalism too. (...as opposed to philosophy-of-mind Physicalism)
The root definition of those concepts is 'stands apart', which is why I didn't like litewave's definition since I could thing of nothing that isn't identical with itself without first setting up a context with rules about what might make it not identical with itself. — noAxioms
Not quite. A cup stands apart from the apple. That usage would be what makes two existent things not be the same thing, but are in fact different from others. But existence itself needs a definition that distinguishes something existent (something that is itself), from something nonexistent (that is not itself), and thus not part of 'others'. I couldn't think of an objective (context-free) example of the latter (or the former for that matter). All examples require some sort of context. An abstract four sided triangle can be itself, and is not itself only in a context where three and four have meaning and are not each other. I guess this is a fairly non-platonic view since platonism does in fact assert that numbers are real and 3 and 4 are different ones.Doesn't 'stand apart' mean 'being different from others'? That's part of my definition of existence. — litewave
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I'm not sure if you offered your definition of 'exists'. Maybe it is buried up above.
.“The far side of the Moon is definitely part of your life-experience possibility-story. The Soviets photographed in in 1959, if I remember correctly.” — Michael Ossipoff
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So let's pick something the Soviets can't measure for me. How about really distant planets (say 30 billion light years away). I can make a case for their existence, and I can make a case for their nonexistence. I can drive both arguments to apparent inconsistency, mostly by not having a stable definition of existence. Point is, all the models of the universe that work imply their existence, but such planets cannot have relevance to me personally.
.“Yes, Physicalism can refer to a position in the philosophy of mind, but it's also fully recognized as a metaphysical position.”—Michael Ossipoff
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The definition [of Physicalism] by google says "the real world consists simply of the physical world". The word 'simply' is the mind part, asserting lack of a second mental substance.
.“ "Supervenes"? :) Western academic philosophers have exhibited a need to invent expanding terminologies, evidently to obfuscate, to justify continual publishing.”—Michael Ossipoff
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I am unaware of another word for it, but am open to suggestions if you have one.
.None of the three assert a foundation for ontology. Materialism does I think, the view that nothing is more fundamental than, well, material. — noAxioms
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“That's metaphysial Physicalism too. (...as opposed to philosophy-of-mind Physicalism)”—Michael Ossipoff
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I thought that was the difference between materialism and physicalism
.…, which is whether material is fundamental or not. No, I don't think it is, especially since nobody has every actually found material. I keep reading articles stating that say rocks are 99.<something>% empty space. My reaction is always: Really? Somebody found some nonempty space??
.Nevertheless, I am a physicalist in the sense that I think the stuff we see is real…
.and we're made of only it.
So let's pick something the Soviets can't measure for me. How about really distant planets (say 30 billion light years away). I can make a case for their existence, and I can make a case for their nonexistence. I can drive both arguments to apparent inconsistency, mostly by not having a stable definition of existence. Point is, all the models of the universe that work imply their existence, but such planets cannot have relevance to me personally. — noAxioms
Your're evading the question and also disproving your own statement by posting about something you say has no relevance. I'm asking if something outside your causal influences (a distant object) is real (part of the context of the universe). Answering tells me what you consider to be that context.NPR news and tv have no relevance to me, but I don’t call them nonexistent. — Michael Ossipoff
Pretty much my answer as well. The 'me' that everybody seems so bewildered by is actually an illusory carrot on a stick leading you to behave in a fit manner. Not recognizing it as such seems to lead to that hard problem. At least that's how I see it.We’re biological organisms. …animals, to be more specific. Animals have evolved—been designed--, by natural selection, to respond to their surroundings so as to maximize the probability of their survival, reproduction, and successful rearing of offspring. We can be regarded as purposeful devices.
Well I suppose I don't regard them as having meaning either, since my prior thread was exactly about my inability to pin down the metaphysical meaning of those words.So I fit your definition of “Physicalist”, except that I don’t really regard “real” or “existent” as having meaning in metaphysics. — Michael Ossipoff
I've been torn apart by others when I express my opinion on that. I put it on a scale from zero on up. Insects are more conscious than a mousetrap, but less than the mouse. It is arrogant to presume that there cannot be something more conscious than us.By the way, regarding the word “conscious”, of course it isn’t obvious or clear where “consciousness” starts, in the hierarchy of life, from viruses up to humans. At what point can an organism be said to be conscious. Surely mice are. Insects too, right? — Michael Ossipoff
Funny. I kill most bugs indoors, but leave the spiders, only putting out the scariest looking ones. Are you vegan, that you consider it inhumane to kill even bugs?I don’t squash insects when they enter my apartment. I put them out. If an ant is on the counter or table, I brush it onto the floor instead of squashing it. If any insect, including an ant, is drowning in water, I fish it out with tissue, and leave it on the tissue, to give it the opportunity to dry and recover.
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I do squash spiders, because, for one thing, each spider you squash means lots of insects that won’t die in a particularly unpleasant manner. …so it more than balances out. Also, of course some spiders dangerously bite us humans.
.Point is, all the models of the universe that work imply their existence, but such planets cannot have relevance to me personally. — noAxioms
.NPR news and tv have no relevance to me, but I don’t call them nonexistent. — Michael Ossipoff
.Your're evading the question and also disproving your own statement by posting about something you say has no relevance.
.I'm asking if something outside your causal influences (a distant object) is real (part of the context of the universe).
.We’re biological organisms. …animals, to be more specific. Animals have evolved—been designed--, by natural selection, to respond to their surroundings so as to maximize the probability of their survival, reproduction, and successful rearing of offspring. We can be regarded as purposeful devices.
.Pretty much my answer as well. The 'me' that everybody seems so bewildered by is actually an illusory carrot on a stick leading you to behave in a fit manner.
.Not recognizing it as such seems to lead to that hard problem. At least that's how I see it.
.By the way, regarding the word “conscious”, of course it isn’t obvious or clear where “consciousness” starts, in the hierarchy of life, from viruses up to humans. At what point can an organism be said to be conscious. Surely mice are. Insects too, right? — Michael Ossipoff
.I've been torn apart by others when I express my opinion on that. I put it on a scale from zero on up. Insects are more conscious than a mousetrap, but less than the mouse. It is arrogant to presume that there cannot be something more conscious than us.
So it isn't something that is a line crossed, a thing that you have or don't. The dualists invented the binary consciousness since it means you have the mind thingy or you don't. But they're largely in charge of the vocabulary, so the question becomes "is a bug conscious?" and not "how conscious is a bug?".
I don’t squash insects when they enter my apartment. I put them out. If an ant is on the counter or table, I brush it onto the floor instead of squashing it. If any insect, including an ant, is drowning in water, I fish it out with tissue, and leave it on the tissue, to give it the opportunity to dry and recover.
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I do squash spiders, because, for one thing, each spider you squash means lots of insects that won’t die in a particularly unpleasant manner. …so it more than balances out. Also, of course some spiders dangerously bite us humans.
.Funny. I kill most bugs indoors, but leave the spiders, only putting out the scariest looking ones.
,Are you vegan, that you consider it inhumane to kill even bugs?
You really should consider fleshing out your replies a bit more. — Terrapin Station
Well, maybe you need to flesh-out that statement more. It's easy to make vague criticisms, without giving an example of what you're talking about. — Michael Ossipoff
Everyone is a body, and nothing more. — Michael Ossipoff
"Everyone is a body, and nothing more". — Michael Ossipoff
What about a conscious electronic AI? — Jake Tarragon
I'm asking if something outside your causal influences (a distant object) is real (part of the context of the universe).
. — noAxioms
The definition of exists is one of choice, and physicists often switch between a subjective and a more holistic inclusion of all the parts of the universe.It is.
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If the people whom I trust to know about such things say that it’s almost surely there , then I accept that it is almost surely real and existent, because I regard the physical universe and its contents to be real and existent, because they’re real and existent in the context of my life.
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Those distant planets become part of my experience when the physicists &/or astronomers tell us about them almost surely being there. — Michael Ossipoff
.I'm asking if something outside your causal influences (a distant object) is real (part of the context of the universe).
. — noAxioms
.It is.
If the people whom I trust to know about such things say that it’s almost surely there , then I accept that it is almost surely real and existent, because I regard the physical universe and its contents to be real and existent, because they’re real and existent in the context of my life.
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Those distant planets become part of my experience when the physicists &/or astronomers tell us about them almost surely being there. — Michael Ossipoff
.The definition of exists is one of choice, and physicists often switch between a subjective and a more holistic inclusion of all the parts of the universe.
.To illustrate, a live T-rex exists on earth (is part of the universe)
., but does not exist now (an arbitrarily defined slice of the universe that goes through a reference point, typically the point of the statement being made.
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In the same way, the distant planets exist, so you seem to take that more holistic view. The distance place is not a different universe, just another part of this one
.like the Jurassic is part of Earth.
.But it doesn't exist now
.since if it did it would be receding faster than light.
.It doesn't exist in our reference frame
., and never will. No violation of light speed since only two things in the same frame are confined to sub-light speed. But these places do exist, I agree.
.If find it offensive to describe it as a multiverse, which is like calling the USA multi-country because the map is a book with a page for each state.
.In the subjective view, the universe is only some max size (about 27bly across)
.because it has not yet had time to expand beyond that. It still has infinite mass, meaning almost all of it is bunched up at the edge.
.The subjective view is also often 'what I see' and not 'what is now'. So the article read that the merging of two black holes was about to occur and they were going to measure the gravity waves. That statement said that we were about to observe it, and ignored the fact that it happened over a billion years ago. It would not be of any interest if it were happening now.
I'm not sure why this "Skepticism" is anything more than saying about existence "it is what it is...".. — Jake Tarragon
To illustrate, a live T-rex exists on earth (is part of the universe) — noAxioms
The verb is tenseless. The Tintanic sinks in 1912. Betelgeuse goes supernova in 2700. The tensed version would be "a live T-rex is existing on earth".No it doesn’t. You’ve used a present-tense verb, and live T-Rex no longer exists on Earth. — Michael Ossipoff
If the universe doesn't include spacetime, then it isn't a very holistic definition: It exists only if I'm present with it. It is valid to do that, but when questioning the existence of something beyond reach, we can't use that one.You could say that it “exists” in spacetime.
I stand corrected. Guess it wasn't important to the point, and I didn't bother to actually look it up.T-Rex lived in the Cretaceous period, not the Jurassic. …Jurassic-Park notwithstanding.
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I guess “Cretaceous Park” wouldn’t have as good a sound to it.
No, it is simply a different choice of coordinate systems. The distant place exists in spacetime, but doesn't exist 'now', and we don't exist in their 'now'. Two different coordinate systems, usually left unstated because locally they're the same thing. In the 'now' view, the planet is so young, it's galaxy has yet to form, so that region of space has yet to form stars and such. In the comoving coordinate view, the planet is there, 30bly distant, but the system allows speeds greater than light. Most of the physics equations cease to apply. For instance, an object in motion tends to slow down in the absence of forces, which is why all the galaxies are not going anywhere fast."But it [30bly planet] doesn't exist now since if it did it would be receding faster than light."
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First you say that science predicts planets billions of lightyears away, then you say that they don’t exist unless they’re receding super-lumnally?
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Nothing that distant from us exists? That’s a novel minority position.
Light from there will never reach us, even given infinite time. Look up Hubble-sphere, which has little meaning in classic coordinate system. Things outside that sphere recede (have a divergence speed, not velocity) greater than light. A short ways beyond that is the event horizon (15bly) beyond which signals from objects the same age as us can never reach us, even given infinite time.Obviously our telescope observations of very distant objects are showing those objects as they were when the light now received by our telescopes was leaving those objects. But that doesn’t mean that they don’t still exist now. Things very distant exist right now, even though it will be a long time before we receive the light that they emit. …and even though we have little information about them.
Same here. Tegmark categorized them.Unfortunately, “multiverse” implies that it consists of some separate universes. I personally don’t call something a “universe” if it’s physically-related to something outside it.
Sounds like they're mixing coordinate systems, like one of them is more correct than the other. Bad form by SI if that's the case.A Scientific American article about 14 years ago said that it wasn’t known whether our big-bang universe (BBU) is finite or infinite.
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But the article said that evidence is beginning to pile up in favor of the BBU being infinite.
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Of course new information could have been discovered since then. Maybe, during the last 14 years, it has been determined that the BBU is finite, and is about 27bly across.
That term has nothing to do with red-shift or real limits. It is about the subset of material/energy that can in principle have any influence on us now, even if beyond the CMB wall through which light does not penetrate. Most matter in the observable universe is seconds old. The SI article might have been talking about this, but the current figure is about 90 bly, meaning that the most distant observable matter (seconds old as we observe it now) is 45 billion comoving light years distant in when that matter is about 13.7 billion years old in its own frame. The matter is in our reference frame, but only a few more seconds old than what we're observing now. There is no planet there 'now'. Still going blam.Are you sure that you aren’t referring to the observable universe?
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…the part of the universe whose recession-speed from us isn’t red-shifting its radiation to unobservably low energies?
This is why it is such an elegant solution to the cosmological argument, which outside religious answer, argues something on the lines of: "Why is there something instead of nothing". The question presumes there is objectively something.Such a system, referring to nothing outside itself, doesn't need any external explanation, and couldn't not be (because no one's saying that it "is", in any context other than its own). ... for the reason that I've explained earlier in this topic. — Michael Ossipoff
That claim of equivalence would need some justification. ...which you haven't supplied. — Michael Ossipoff
Presumably the whole point of metaphysics is that it is thinking largely detached from scientific analysis - or at least from scientific falsification. I don't think complete detachment is necessary - even your Skepticism is based on Occam's Razor, for example, which is, arguably, a scientific principle. Also,. there must be some metaphysics that are potentially falsifiable (or realizable ) in the future through discovery - either of knowledge of new scientific concepts, or through new knowledge of a general sort. For example, a fifth dimension could be discovered that confirms a certain metaphysics, or Alpha Centauri could be reached and shown not to have the planet Zog orbiting it, and controlling a huge simulation containing ourselves as proposed by the Zoggist metaphysics.Any reasonably well-written proposable metaphysics is an unfalsifiable proposition, because no metaphysics can be proven. — Michael Ossipoff
.Any reasonably well-written proposable metaphysics is an unfalsifiable proposition, because no metaphysics can be proven. — Michael Ossipoff
.Presumably the whole point of metaphysics is that it is thinking largely detached from scientific analysis - or at least from scientific falsification.
.I don't think complete detachment is necessary - even your Skepticism is based on Occam's Razor, for example, which is, arguably, a scientific principle.
.Also, there must be some metaphysics that are potentially falsifiable…
.…(or realizable ) in the future through discovery - either of knowledge of new scientific concepts, or through new knowledge of a general sort. For example, a fifth dimension could be discovered that confirms a certain metaphysics
,, or Alpha Centauri could be reached and shown not to have the planet Zog orbiting it, and controlling a huge simulation containing ourselves as proposed by the Zoggist metaphysics.
.Solipsism is presumably a metaphysics - but one that is completely detached from scientific thinking, and also unlikely ever to be falsifiable ever
.So where am I going with all this? I think I'm trying to generate classes of metaphysics, based on 1) amount of scientific content - some or none;
.2) potential for being declared falsifiable/realizable or not now or in the future - if not why not - logical or through knowledge
.BTW, is it valid to speak of a metaphysics as being potentially realizable (declared "true")...?
This is why it is such an elegant solution to the cosmological argument, which outside religious answer, argues something on the lines of: "Why is there something instead of nothing". The question presumes there is objectively something. — noAxioms
Though it seems to me that Occam was speaking of physics, the Principle of Parsimony seems independently relevant to metaphysics. In fact, isn’t it more even compelling in metaphysics than in physics?
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...to the point where only the more parsimonious metaphysics should even be considered? — Michael Ossipoff
I claim that the metaphysics that I propose here doesn’t need or use any assumptions, doesn’t make any controversial statements, and doesn’t posit any brute fact(s). — Michael Ossipoff
But at the other extreme, can high parsimony become tautology? — Jake Tarragon
As I mentioned earlier, I have a feeling that your Skepticism borders on the tautological ..
"it [existence] is what it is".
I claim that the metaphysics that I propose here doesn’t need or use any assumptions, doesn’t make any controversial statements, and doesn’t posit any brute fact(s). — Michael Ossipoff
also true of a tautology!
And, unlike the absolutely unquestionable certainty of a tautology, no metaphysics can be proved. — Michael Ossipoff
"there’s no evidence that our physical universes consists of more than inter-related if-then statements". — Michael Ossipoff
Here I am, sitting in my chair. My fan is on. It's almost time for dinner. The sun is a bit low in the West. The chair arms are brown-stained wood, ash I think. It's smooth. The varnish and stain on the right side, which gets more use, is fading in some spots.
Please explain how this concrete expression of physical reality consists of interrelated if-then statements. — T Clark
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