Evolutionary theory does indeed answer the question of why things act as they do. — Daniel Sjöstedt
I thought that science, therefore, just focuses on what is and ignores or dodges "Why?". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I think that science can answer "why" questions, provided that the "why" is shorn of any teleological baggage — Arkady
The word telos means something like purpose, or goal, or final end. According to Aristotle, everything has a purpose or final end. If we want to understand what something is, it must be understood in terms of that end, which we can discover through careful study. It is perhaps easiest to understand what a telos is by looking first at objects created by human beings. Consider a knife. If you wanted to describe a knife, you would talk about its size, and its shape, and what it is made out of, among other things. But Aristotle believes that you would also, as part of your description, have to say that it is made to cut things. And when you did, you would be describing its telos. The knife's purpose, or reason for existing, is to cut things. And Aristotle would say that unless you included that telos in your description, you wouldn't really have described - or understood – the knife....
Here we are not primarily concerned with the telos of a knife .... What concerns us is the telos of a human being. Just like everything else that is alive, human beings have a telos. What is it that human beings are meant by nature to become in the way that knives are meant to cut, acorns are meant to become oak trees, and thoroughbred ponies are meant to become race horses? According to Aristotle, we are meant to become happy. This is nice to hear, although it isn't all that useful. After all, people find happiness in many different ways. However, Aristotle says that living happily requires living a life of virtue. Someone who is not living a life that is virtuous, or morally good, is also not living a happy life, no matter what they might think. They are like a knife that will not cut, an oak tree that is diseased and stunted, or a racehorse that cannot run. In fact they are worse, since they have chosen the life they lead in a way that a knife or an acorn or a horse cannot.
I thought that science, therefore, just focuses on what is and ignores or dodges "Why?". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Evolutionary theory does indeed answer the question of why things act as they do. — Daniel Sjöstedt
I think it's reasonable to say that, and also to say that physics explains why some physical facts are as they are, explaining them in terms of other physical facts.
Science explains facts in our physical world in terms of other facts, and that qualifies validly as a "Why" answer.
But don't let anyone tell you that science can explain anything other than the relation of some physical facts to other physical facts. It can't take "Why" any farther than that.
Many people, called Science-Worshippers, or Scientificists, think they can apply science to metaphysics, and that science has the metaphysical answers. They're wrong.
Science-Worshippers are almost nonexistent at this forum.
But if somebody asks why things are not another way, the response he/she will get is "Because of A". But then there's the question, "Why A?". Whatever response you get, there's the question why that is the case. And so on. It seems we have an infinite regress and no definitive, conclusive answer to any "Why?". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
No matter what answers science--or any kind of inquiry--produces, "Why?" remains.
Why does 2 + 2 = 4?
Whatever the answer to that is, "Why?". And so on.
I thought that science, therefore, just focuses on what is and ignores or dodges "Why?".
In the metaphysics that I propose, our whole physical world is a system of inter-referring if-then statements, and nothing more. — Michael Ossipoff
The entire physical world consists of nothing more than statements? That's an odd sort of metaphysics — Metaphysician Undercover
That was Michael's first post on the Forum. Hey, Max Tegmark believes the universe consists of numbers. As do Pythagoreans, generally. Check out this New Scientist video. — Wayfarer
Such an if-then system can fully describe a physical world. ...and is consistent with our experiences and observations. — Michael Ossipoff
Like I said, science is ultimately not concerned with why. Above it is implied that "Why?" does not matter. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
So if someone asks you why 1 +1=2, then you would reply that it is necessarily so. It has mathematical inescapability.
What then when fundamental physics discovers the same lack of alternatives? Particles like quarks and leptons simply have to be as they represent the simplest possible symmetry states. Nature can't be broken down any further. Like cubes and tetrahedrons, ultimate simplicity has mathematical inevitabilty. And that is then the why. It is just a formal constraint that something has to be what is left after everything has got broken down to the least complex possible basics.
This isn't the ordinary notion of a telic goal or purpose. But it is a scientific one. And it places a limit on infinite regress. There actually is a simplest state in the end. You wind up with quarks and leptons as they are as simple as it gets. — apokrisis
I thought science does not answer "Why?"
Yes, although in some small corner of the larger scientific enterprise (namely psychology and the social sciences), purpose and intention are still legitimate areas of inquiry. I would say that, in the overall sweep of science, it has simply become unnecessary to impute a purpose or telos in explaining most phenomena. Explaining, say, why a positron behaves as it does in the presence of a magnetic field can be done without reference to the inclinations or purpose of the positron or its behavior.With the advent of scientific materialism, explanations were sought which could understood solely in terms of physical, material and efficient causation. That is how the notion of 'purpose' came to be rejected entirely from the scientific account. And that is what being 'shorn of teleological baggage' means, isn't it? — Wayfarer
There are two answers to the question 'why is the water boiling'. One is: it has been heated to 100 degrees celsius, and as the kettle is at sea level, that is causing it to boil'.
The other is: 'because I want to make tea'.
They're both valid answers. — Wayfarer
.But Plato and Aristotle proved Pythagorean Idealism wrong, a long time ago, by appealing to substance dualism, and that's how we get beyond these apparent paradoxes.
.A physical law is a description of the physical world, one produced by human minds, it is not the physical world itself.
.Such an if-then system can fully describe a physical world. ...and is consistent with our experiences and observations. — Michael Ossipoff
.See, the system describes the physical world, but don't you recognize a difference between the description and the thing described?
.How do you make this leap, to saying that the physical world is nothing more than the description?
Explaining, say, why a positron behaves as it does in the presence of a magnetic field can be done without reference to the inclinations or purpose of the positron or its behavior. — Arkady
Particles like quarks and leptons simply have to be as they represent the simplest possible symmetry states. — apokrisis
You're still thinking 'fundamental particles', — Wayfarer
So their "why" is because of nature's "desire" for lowest mode simplicity. — apokrisis
A physical law is a description of the physical world, one produced by human minds, it is not the physical world itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Modern observations show the currently observed laws of physics operating long before there were any physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
So no, I'm not saying that the physical laws exist independent of us. — Michael Ossipoff
I didn’t say that a thing and its description are the same. — Michael Ossipoff
There’s no reason to believe that the objectively-existent “things” of Materialism are other than fiction. — Michael Ossipoff
Ok. Not sure what that has to do with the "telos" of the positron, though.But then you have the 'observer problem' which has thrown the entire 'mind-independence' of observation into question. One implication of that being, what you see depends on what you decide to measure. 'We have to remember that what we observe is not nature herself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning' ~ Heisenberg. — Wayfarer
.Modern observations show the currently observed laws of physics operating long before there were any physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
,I cannot comprehend this statement. First, the "laws of physics are produced by human beings, created by human minds.
.So secondly, when you say the "observed laws of physics", I assume that what you mean is that the laws are "respected" by physicists, not that they are things like entities observed through the senses.
.Finally, therefore, it is nonsense to say that these laws were "operating" before there were any physicists. What could you possibly mean by "operating" here?
.So no, I'm not saying that the physical laws exist independent of us. — Michael Ossipoff
.This seems to directly contradict what you said above.
.Are you sure that you know what you're trying to say?
.I didn’t say that a thing and its description are the same. — Michael Ossipoff
…and replied:In the metaphysics that I propose, our whole physical world is a system of inter-referring if-then statements, and nothing more.
.If-then statements are statements of description. And you said that these statements of description are the physical world itself, (the thing being described).
.There’s no reason to believe that the objectively-existent “things” of Materialism are other than fiction. — Michael Ossipoff
.Are you saying that there is no such thing as the thing being described…
.… that "the thing being described" is fictitious? What's the point of a description then?
I thought that science, therefore, just focuses on what is and ignores or dodges "Why?". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Physicists haven’t just been sitting on their hands during the past 400 years. They’ve arrived at some well-established, experimentally well-supported, never falsified laws of physics.
.
And yes, believe it or not, observational evidence indicates that those laws were also operating at times before there were any physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
No, they’re observed through the senses (often via instrumentation). You can call then “entities” if you want to, but they’re provisional facts, that are accepted if they’re sufficiently confirmed, and never falsified. …eventually increasingly regarded as confirmed instead of provisional. And yes, they’re based on observation of physical events and conditions. — Michael Ossipoff
You really think that contradicts the statement that there’s observational evidence that currently accepted and used physical laws obtained at earlier times when there weren’t physicists? — Michael Ossipoff
Angry-noises and vague, unspecified, unsupported expressions of personal opinion are standard, typical common troll-tactics.
If there's another sample, it won't be answered.
I stop replying to people who show that they're incapable of disagreeing politely. — Michael Ossipoff
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