Returning to the original topic, I do wonder how much of the success of anti-realism has to do with how people have learned to think of alternatives to it as being something like positing "objective values." The focus on "values" doesn't really fit with philosophy prior to the 19th century. In it's current usage, it's a term coming down from economics. Nietzsche seems to have been big in popularizing it, and I honestly think he uses the shift to "values" as a way to beg the question a bit in the Genealogy (to the extent that it assumes that the meaning of "good" has to do with valuation as opposed to ends). I'd agree that the idea of something being "valuable in-itself," is a little strange, since "value" itself already implies something of the marketplace, of a relative transaction or exchange. At the very least, it seems to conflate esteem with goodness, which essentially begs the question on reducing goodness to subjective taste. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In what sense can anything be "good" "from the perspective of the Cosmos?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
And how can the Cosmos be self-organizing while lacking any self? — Count Timothy von Icarus
There seems to be a large distinction between "the reasonable universe," which seems to actually be acting "for no reason at all" and the "reasonable creatures," who act for intentional purposes. The use of "good" for both seems completely equivocal. And perhaps this is why you (apokrisis) have put "good" in quotes when referring to the universe? — Count Timothy von Icarus
You are not receptive to a technical redefinition that could make good metaphysical sense. — apokrisis
Have you never heard of natural philosophy as a metaphysical tradition then? — apokrisis
One day...Socrates happened to hear of Anaxagoras’ view that Mind directs and causes all things. He took this to mean that everything was arranged for the best. Therefore, if one wanted to know the explanation of something, one only had to know what was best for that thing. Suppose, for instance, that Socrates wanted to know why the heavenly bodies move the way they do. Anaxagoras would show him how this was the best possible way for each of them to be. And once he had taught Socrates what the best was for each thing individually, he then would explain the overall good that they all share in common. Yet upon studying Anaxagoras further, Socrates found these expectations disappointed. It turned out that Anaxagoras did not talk about Mind as cause at all, but rather about air and ether and other mechanistic explanations. For Socrates, however, this sort of explanation was simply unacceptable:
To call those things causes is too absurd. If someone said that without bones and sinews and all such things, I should not be able to do what I decided, he would be right, but surely to say that they are the cause of what I do, and not that I have chosen the best course, even though I act with my mind, is to speak very lazily and carelessly. Imagine not being able to distinguish the real cause from that without which the cause would not be able to act as a cause. (99a-b)
Frustrated at finding a teacher who would provide a teleological explanation of these phenomena, Socrates settled for what he refers to as his “second voyage” (99d). This new method consists in taking what seems to him to be the most convincing theory—the theory of Forms—as his basic hypothesis, and judging everything else in accordance with it. In other words, he assumes the existence of the Beautiful, the Good, and so on, and employs them as explanations for all the other things. If something is beautiful, for instance, the “safe answer” he now offers for what makes it such is “the presence of,” or “sharing in,” the Beautiful (100d). — Phaedo, IEP
...why is there anything? Because the universe is expanding faster than it can equilibrate. Why are there so many kinds of things? Because the universe is trying to simultaneously destroy as many different energy gradients as possible in its attempt to equilibrate.
I just cited Salthe's tellic hierarchy of tendency/function/purpose a few posts back. I've also cited it to you half a dozen times at least over at least a decade. — apokrisis
I just cited Salthe's tellic hierarchy of tendency/function/purpose a few posts back. — apokrisis
The idea that the Cosmos is governed by some overarching (transcendent) purpose is necessarily a theistic idea... — Janus
That's because in Western culture, it is construed that way. Buddhist culture, for instance, draws no such conclusions. Same with various schools of philosophy in the ancient world which construed purpose in terms of discerning the logos of the Cosmos, although that term then became appropriated by Christian theology to mean the Word of God. — Wayfarer
Hence the problem! — Wayfarer
The fastest route to non-existence is not a teleological explanation, sorry. — Wayfarer
Entropy is perhaps (that is, as far as we can tell) a global tendency, not a purpose. — Janus
The idea that the Cosmos is governed by some overarching (transcendent) purpose is necessarily a theistic idea, — Janus
Buddhism, to my knowledge, at least in its seminal forms, simply doesn't talk in terms of overarching or cosmic purpose. — Janus
If there was not this tellic trick of heading towards its own inverse, we couldn't be here to inquire about it. — apokrisis
Goodness, as we experience, would be defined in terms of an irreducible intentionality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
No. It simply doesn't meet the criticism. All of what you're saying may well be quite accurate from a scientific perspective, without amounting to a metaphysics. — Wayfarer
But all this is perhaps "too new" for you to realise how old hat your views of thermodynamics is?
This from a self-described "non-positivist" — Wayfarer
It happens sometimes. The cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman gets around to arguing for a sort of vaguely Hegelian objective idealism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And why is it set up for complex life? Presumably because this does more to collapse potential into actuality. But honestly, this one always seemed a bit much for me because it seems unfalsifiable in a particularly extraordinary way. — Count Timothy von Icarus
All of what you're saying may well be quite accurate from a scientific perspective, without amounting to a metaphysics. — Wayfarer
By the way, and as we're now discussing science, have there been any updates to the declaration from CERN some years back that the Universe shouldn't exist? — Wayfarer
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