Ok. I'd go perhaps a step further and suggest that even the physical domain is not causally closed, in that some physical events do not have an explicit cause - that an individual electron moving through a double slit goes to the right and not the left, by way of an example.
But further, I'd treat acts of volition as a seperate conversation, after the approach of Mary Midgley. Saying that our acts of volition are determined is confusing seperate ways of talking - like fish and bicycles. — Banno
Sure, but what I was objecting to was the suggestion that true metaphysical statements cannot be facts:So, one reason why I agree with T Clark that determinism is a metaphysical thesis... — Pierre-Normand
I took this as implying that metaphysical statements are not factual, not issues of truth or falsehood. In contrast, I think it might be false that physics is deterministic.Whether or not the world is deterministic is a matter of metaphysics, not a matter of fact. — T Clark
Conservation of energy is neither falsifiable nor provable, — Banno
That you find such questions irritating is not a fault of mine, I'm just asking questions. No need to be rude. — Banno
I took this as implying that metaphysical statements are not factual, not issues of truth or falsehood. In contrast, I think it might be false that physics is deterministic. — Banno
So, one reason why I agree with T Clark that determinism is a metaphysical thesis is because its falsity, according to me, isn't contingent on such things as the indeterminacy of quantum mechanics. My stance would have been the same if some hidden variable interpretation had turned out to be empirically vindicated, or QM had never been developed (and our view of the physical world would still be broadly classical). I think the fallacious move from the causal closure of the physical (also assuming no bifurcations in phase space) to unqualified determinism depends on physicalist theses that are metaphysical in nature (and misguided to boot). — Pierre-Normand
Ok. No one seems to have noticed this ground-breaking revelation. — Banno
Conservation of energy is neither falsifiable nor provable, and so not empirical, and yet still a part of physics. — Banno
Furthermore, we all know that it is obviously false, and that's why we know that perpetual motion machines are impossible. T — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure. True but irrelevant. Choose whatever conservation principle you want. The issue is that there are parts of science that are logically unfalsifiable - they embed one quantification in another so that accepting a basic statement does not show them to be false. And sure, as is so keen to have the AI point out, folk might be convinced that it's not true despite it not being logically falsifiable. Now I am claiming that determinism sits in much the same place logically, but is weaker than conservation laws in that it doesn't support and is not needed by physics. Whereas the conservation laws are metaphysical and true and helpful, determinism is metaphysical and potentially false and not helpful.Energy and matter are equivalent. — T Clark
You take pleasure in disrupting discussions and annoying people, generally without adding anything substantive to the discussion. — T Clark
It'd be interesting to hear what others think of ↪Metaphysician Undercover's approach. — Banno
Can you think of a different reason why perpetual motion machines would be impossible? — flannel jesus
Whereas the conservation laws are metaphysical and true and helpful, determinism is metaphysical and potentially false and not helpful. — Banno
No I can't. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is at work everywhere, functioning smoothly at times, at other times in fits and starts. It breathes, it heats, it eats. It shits and fucks. What a mistake to have ever said the id. Everywhere it is machines—real ones, not figurative ones: machines driving other machines, machines being driven by other machines, with all the necessary couplings and connections. An organ-machine is plugged into an energy-source-machine: the one produces a flow that the other interrupts. — Deleuze, Anti-Oedipus, Pg 1
How do you feel about ramen noodles? — flannel jesus
Can you think of a different reason why perpetual motion machines would be impossible — flannel jesus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.