If you mean the reason for the existence of a particular thing, then the type of reason is given in the OP under the section "PSR in Metaphysics". In short, there are 3 types of reasons:What is the reason for existence? — Fooloso4
The reason is given in the OP under the section "Argument in defence of the PSR". In short, it follows from the premise that "Reason finds truth".What is the reason for thinking that there must be a reason for what is? — Fooloso4
Not quite. What I meant was, if we inquire why 2+2 results in 4, then the explanation is that 4 follows out of logical necessity. We could not say that 2+2 causes 4, as though they are separate things. So the point is that, alongside causes, logical necessity is also a type of explanation that fulfills the PSR.Basically you're saying if you give me an answer I can come up with an equation that comes up with that answer. — LuckyR
BTW, many, many actual explanations don't initially seem to be the most reasonable explanation. — LuckyR
Yes I agree. This occurs when we don't have enough data that points in the right direction. But given enough data, the most reasonable explanation will tend towards the actual explanation. So the trick is to continually gather data and conduct empirical tests (when possible) until we reach a high level of confidence.We can come to reasonable conclusions that are not true — Philosophim
Of course the scientific revolution introduces a wholly different conception of reason as mechanical causation. With the banishing of teleological reasoning the idea of reason in that classical sense fell out of favour. — Wayfarer
Yes, the "intellect as a whole" as the image of the cosmos versus "the mathematical model." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or if you mean "existence" as the general concept, then that's just a concept. Concepts are not concrete existing things that need reasons. — A Christian Philosophy
The reason is given in the OP under the section "Argument in defence of the PSR". In short, it follows from the premise that "Reason finds truth". — A Christian Philosophy
P1 - Let there be an event which could be either event 1 or event 2, where event 1 and event 2 are different.
P2 - The Principle of Sufficient Reason states that if event 1 occurs there must be a reason.
P3 - By the Law of Non-Contradiction, if event 1 occurs then event 2 could not have occurred.
P4- Suppose event 1 occurs without reason.
C1 - From P4, if event 1 occurs then event 2 could have occurred.
C2 - C1 and P3 are contradictory.
C3 - Therefore, if the Law of Non-Contradiction is valid (P3), then events occurring without reason is invalid (P4). — RussellA
Mind or nous as the governing principle, arranging things according to what is best, is not the same as a world governed by reason.
For Aristotle, the question of the intelligibility of the natural world faces two problems, the arche or source of the whole and tyche or chance. We have no knowledge of the source and what happens by chance or accident does not happen according to reason. — Fooloso4
I still hold that the relevant propositions must have "at the same time" added to them — A Christian Philosophy
Parmenides pointed out that if the world had come into existence from nothing, there is no answer to the question as to why the world didn't come into existence earlier or later than it did. From this he concluded that the world has always existed (SEP - Principle of Sufficient Reason) — RussellA
There are several conclusions that might follow from not being able to answer a question. They include the possibility that: C1 - Reason and our capacity to understand is limited. C2 - The question itself is the problem. C3 - Any conclusion that follows is questionable. — Fooloso4
C1 - The fact that my cat cannot understand The Old Man and the Sea does not mean that the book isn't understandable — RussellA
C2 - The fact that a question is the wrong question doesn't mean that there isn't a right question — RussellA
C3 - The fact that every answer can be questioned doesn't mean that there isn't an answer. — RussellA
C3 - The fact that every answer can be questioned doesn't mean that there isn't an answer. — RussellA
Randomness simply means that there isn't any self repeating pattern or patterns to be found. — ssu
And (C1) - our inability to conceive how something can come from nothing marks a limit of our thinking, but should we assume that our limits are the measure of reality or possibility? — Fooloso4
If all objects in a set are explained, then the set is also explained. Thus, if all objects in existence are explained, by 1 of the 3 types of reasons as per the OP section "PSR in Metaphysics", then existence is also explained.I mean the reason why there is anything at all. — Fooloso4
On the epistemology side, yes, that is, our knowledge of the PSR is defended by that premise.A premise is the reason why there must be a reason for what is? — Fooloso4
Yes I agree. This occurs when we lack data. The best way I know to counter this is to perform empirical tests (when possible) and continue to gather data. Despite that, I still would not go against the laws of reason to find truth.Although we do employ reason in our search for truth, it may lead us astray. — Fooloso4
That's fine. Things under the laws of nature are explained by those laws, and the laws themselves also need to be explained. Since there are only 3 types of reasons in the OP section "PSR in Metaphysics", the laws of nature would be explained by 1 of the 3 types.You posit "laws of nature" as an explanation, but this is problematic for two reasons. First, we might ask what the reason is for the laws of nature. Second, what is the explanation for the causal power of these laws? — Fooloso4
Thus, if all objects in existence are explained, by 1 of the 3 types of reasons as per the OP section "PSR in Metaphysics", then existence is also explained. — A Christian Philosophy
On the epistemology side, yes, that is, our knowledge of the PSR is defended by that premise. — A Christian Philosophy
This occurs when we lack data. — A Christian Philosophy
Since there are only 3 types of reasons in the OP section "PSR in Metaphysics", the laws of nature would be explained by 1 of the 3 types. — A Christian Philosophy
So what is the sufficient reason (why) for the "PSR" (Why) or any so-called "sufficient reason" (why) as such? — 180 Proof
C1 - If there is no reason why the lamp turns on, then there is no reason why the lamp turns on earlier or later than the lamp turning off.
C2 - However, if there is no reason why the lamp turns on, then there is no reason why the lamp cannot turn on "at the same time " as the lamp turning off, other than the Law of Non-Contradiction. — RussellA
They are still the same. In the principle of parsimony, it is reasonable to pick the simplest of 2 explanations that account for all the data because the less simple explanation is superfluous, that is, more than sufficient. Both principles demand that the explanation or reason be just sufficient, not more, not less. — A Christian Philosophy
I agree that a thing cannot be its own cause, yet a thing can explain itself. — A Christian Philosophy
Rather: reason directs us toward truth. Induction doesn't necessarily fund truth, but it tends to lead in the proper direction.“Reason finds truth." — A Christian Philosophy
This sounds like you're reifying logic; logic is semantics- it applies to propositions, not to reality. We devise propositions that describe reality, and apply logic to these propositions, but logic itself is not part of the ontological fabric of reality. The world operates per laws of nature, and because of this - we are able to draw correct (or truth-tending) inferences from observations.It is correct to think logically because reality behaves logically. If it wasn’t the case, there would be no reason to think logically.
It is correct to look for reasons to things because reasons exist in reality. If it wasn’t the case, there would be no reason to find sufficient reasons. — A Christian Philosophy
We look for "reasons" - i.e. prepositional descriptions of the grounding of some aspects of reality, and we are successful because such groundings exist.It is correct to look for reasons to things because reasons exist in reality. If it wasn’t the case, there would be no reason to find sufficient reasons. — A Christian Philosophy
Fallacy of misplaced concreteness (i.e. mapmaking =/= terrain). At most the PSR is, "like logic", a foundational property of reason.Since the PSR is a first principle of metaphysics, like logic, then it is part of the fabric of reality. — A Christian Philosophy
In accord with the OP it means that there is an explanation. Did you mean 'petitio principii', begging the question? — Fooloso4
The OP describes the PSR ... — RussellA
In this way, the PSR is also called “Principle of Parsimony” or “Occam’s Razor”: the simplest explanation that accounts for all the data is the most reasonable one. — A Christian Philosophy
We posit three explanations — A Christian Philosophy
The principle of sufficient reason states that everything - everything, not just some things and not others - has an explanation for its existence.
That principle is by no means obviously true. For after all, if it true, then it generates an infinite regress. A cannot be explained by A, and so B has to be posited. But B cannot be explained by B, and so C has to be posited. And on and on for an actual infinity. — Clearbury
Are you claiming that there are reasons that do not involve explanations? — Fooloso4
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