That is, of course, because in your reality gods don't exist. — Haglund
I don't agree. Wise claims need not be based on knowledge. On the contrary. A wise claim can be based on knowledge, but not necessarily so and wise claims direct knowledge. — Haglund
Maybe not, but these unfalsifiable concepts are needed as concepts within the sciences and outside of it ti direct science. For example, I think the gods, in their common effort to create the ingredients of the universe, created the most simple and perfect particles, which means only two will do. A preon model. — Haglund
So, since "natural" is the things built with the building blocks, then this kind of thing which "existed all along" the building blocks themselves, are non-natural. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now you have gone outside the the constraints of your definition of "natural". You'll have to produce a new definition for me. We'll start all over with a new definition, and then I'll see if there are things outside your definition which are necessarily non-natural. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you don't even know what "natural" means, why are you so vehemently opposed to "supernatural". I don't understand this. Do you give "supernatural" a meaning which is not based in the root "natural"? — Metaphysician Undercover
-Can you demonstrate the possibility of such an existence?a. A first cause is an uncaused existence, that then enters into causality. — Philosophim
-Correct but Since our current indications (Cosmic quantum fluctuations) and logic (non existence not being a state) point to something existing eternally...why making up a first cause?Once a thing exists, it can interact with whatever is around it, and follows the rules of its own existence. — Philosophim
-Yes that is a common characteristic among explanations invoking "magic". No data...no limitations.b. There are no limitations or rules that necessitate what a first cause must be. — Philosophim
-Nothing, because Necessity NEEDS to be demonstrated objectively, not assumed logically. Logic is not an adequate way to argue for Necessary and Sufficient of metaphysical mechanisms of reality (ontology). We have made so many many mistakes in the past but some of us insist in the same tactics.What can we conclude about reality if a first cause is logically necessary? — Philosophim
If we ignore all the fallacies and problems, there is one reason to limit adding up things in a "magical" cause...and that is Parsimony.a. While it is possible only one first cause happened, there is no reason that there should be any limitation on the number of first causes, or that first causes cannot happen today. — Philosophim
-Correct, as I said Unfalsifiable claims can not be tested as possible or impossible mainly because they carry no limitations. Vague concepts have zero characteristic to evaluate. They are absolute declarations posing as Panacea for all mysteries.This necessarily follows from the rule that there are no limitations as to what a first cause can be. — Philosophim
-Not only that. Our current picture of the cosmos dismiss the necessity...and obviously the sufficiency of a first cause.b. Proving if a particular parcel of existence is a first cause may be impossible. — Philosophim
-If you design an answer without limitations then....there aren't any. Now we know particles pop in and out of existence all the time and we can observe them by viewing the affect they have on the particles of our universe.If there are no limitations on what a first cause can be, then a particle with velocity could have popped into existence. — Philosophim
Our current physics and QM point to an area, not a singular point, that would make the role of a "first particle" relevant to this discussion. Now this is way in the Metaphysical realm so any conclusion beyond this point will be, by definition pseudo philosophical/scientific.If we traced causality back to this first cause particle, we would see it had velocity at its origin. That would cause us to try to find what caused the particle to have velocity. We may very well believe it is another existence that caused the velocity of the particle, when the reality is it was uncaused. — Philosophim
-Why use the word god when most of the people believing in this concept don't recognize the narrative you are placing it in and what happened to Parsimony? Answering Mysteries with mysteries is not philosophy.Where does this leave the idea of a God?
It is possible that there is a first cause that could have a power over existence we do not fully understand. But it is also possible that this is not the case. Further, because there is no reason why there should only be one first cause, there is no reason there cannot be other first causes, thus other Gods, or other alternatives such as particles that simply appeared. — Philosophim
Can we use the idea that a first cause is logically necessary to prove there is a God?
1. We cannot prove any one thing is a first cause.
2. There is no logical limitation that only one thing can be a first cause.
So while we can state it is possible for a God to be a first cause, so could any other possible thing we imagine. As such, a God as a first cause is not logically necessary, only a logical plausibility. — Philosophim
-Sloppy transition. I don't know why you connect the unfounded plausibility of a god with an argument against his existence!Does this argument deny that God can exist?
No. All the current philosophical arguments for there necessarily being a God can no longer stand. This does not mean a God is not a logical impossibility. While we likely cannot find what the first causes are in our universe, we can prove causes exist. If a God exists, and interacts with humanity today, there should be evidence for it, like the evidence of any other causality. — Philosophim
The argument for a God must be done through evidence. The only thing which can be logically concluded is that a God is a possibility among many others. T — Philosophim
-Sure, but I don't know how good it will be to explain a made up "necessity" (first cause) since our facts point to existence being a necessary state for the cosmos.(empirically and logically).,One must find evidence of a God, and that evidence must necessarily lead to a God opposed to another possible alternative — Philosophim
A while back I wrote an argument that a "first cause" was logically necessary. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/12098/a-first-cause-is-logically-necessary/p1 After much debate, I am satisfied that the argument successfully stands. With this concluded, I wanted to add what this means for origin theories of our universe. — Philosophim
I know. The point I am making is that the below are two different claims that you are conflating:
1. The statement has been evaluated as true
2. The statement is true — Michael
-No my arguements have nothing to do with this strawman. Pls reread my posts more carefully.You argue for the former and conclude the latter which is a non sequitur. — Michael
Well by definition it can be. The utilization of that guess and the successful yielding of results alone render it" knowledge". Unsystematic Empirical Knowledge is mostly the result of guessing and unconscious or conscious empirical testing.A random guess may be in agreement with facts, it may have instrumental value, but it is not knowledge. — hypericin
Same error here(absolutism). Knowledge and truth are not(always) the same thing.If we cannot evaluate truth in an absolute sense, then we cannot evaluate knowledge either. — hypericin
-Correct as I already said, knowledge is nothing more than an evaluation term. Its a status we apply on claims that are in agreement with currently available facts.We can only claim that something does or does not hold the status of knowledge. — hypericin
-I will only change the term "truths" with "facts."What is or is not considered knowledge changes over time, because our body of currently accepted truths, as well as the justifications we consider legitimate, change over time. — hypericin
Yes, our truth claims are limited by our nature, but truth itself isn't. Either there is an apple in the bag or there isn't, regardless of whatever I claim. . — Michael
-Correct, being reasonable and accepting the current facts has nothing to do with the actual True statement. BUT again, the time to depart from our Default Position is ONLY after we have available facts to support our position.but whether or not he committed the crime has nothing to do with the evidence available to jury and everything to do with historical events that actually happened. — Michael
In some cases, I've heard that theology is a specific branch/subset of philosophy of religion. In this case, theological posts would therefore belong on a site like this. But to me, how would we differentiate a theological post/claim from a philosophical one? — Paulm12
-Theology is the umbrella term where different religions arise and flourish.But it did get me wondering what the difference is between theology, religion, and philosophy (of religion) — Paulm12
Further, the Center for Naturalism
deny[ies] that individuals have ultimate responsibility for their actions (in the sense of origination - being the self-caused authors of their actions) and assert that free will is an illusion — Paulm12
-First you will need to demonstrate that free will is an option for organisms with biological urges, drives, peer and cultural pressures, environmental influences etc etc. Sure agency must provide the "luxury" of choice, but again how free is it?I was curious how (or if) metaphysical naturalists reconcile a universe governed by only natural laws with free will. — Paulm12
if naturalism is true…the laws that govern the universe are what make everything happen. That everything which happens in the universe is a physical play out through time. And that means everything single thing, including our conscious thought and decision-making…If our decisions are tied to the physical processes of the universe, then we only have a say in them in so far as the physical processes output what we will say about them. In other words, what we think, feel, say, and do are all an output of how the universe is playing out
I don't understand what tense has to do with it. In the general form we're discussing the meaning of the noun "knowledge" which obviously has no tense. The proposed definition is "a justified true belief". We can then use tense to talk about having (or not having) a justified true belief or having had (or not having had) a justified true belief, and so on, but grammatical tense has no bearing on the meaning of the noun. — Michael
If there isn't a bus and you say "there's a bus" then what you say is false. — Michael
But what's wrong with saying something false? — Isaac
Look, lets say there is a bunch of building blocks, and what these building blocks do is obey the laws of nature, so that whatever they produce is said to be natural. Now, lets move along and consider how the building blocks came into existence. Clearly, the activity which caused the existence of the blocks is not an activity of the blocks themselves, because it is an activity which is prior to the existence of the blocks, causing the existence of the blocks. And only the activity of the blocks is defined as "natural". So whatever activity it was, which caused the existence of the blocks, this must be other than natural. Agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
-Well why is this even a question???? Is Discrimination an option?I am asking you to show how to apply your moral considerations in a particular case. How best to treat transgender folk? — Banno
Nickolasgaspar presented a particular approach to ethics, which I think somewhat problematic. The suggestion that he show how it can be applied remains open. — Banno
It might be more interesting to get Nickolasgaspar's opinion here. He has explained how we are caused to act for our own wellbeing, and that as a result all we need to do is measure wellbeing - in terms of brain chemistry, it seems - in order to work out what that wellbeing is, and so solve all the problems we previously considered to be questions of "ethics"
So here's an opportunity for Nick to explain the practicality of that theory. In my old-fashion ways, I might pose the moral question "ought we use the word "woman" for a man who has transitioned to a woman?" I'm sure @Isaac and @Tom Storm would be interested in hearing how it works in a practical situation.
Show us how your ideas will objectively set us on the straight path. — Banno
-both describe the same concept.Ok, rather than call what is outside of natural "supernatural", would you prefer "non-natural"? I don't really care about the terminology. If you dislike the term "supernatural" let's just call it "non-natural". — Metaphysician Undercover
-Dude...your language mode is a mesh. This "system" includes facts of REALITY. (our biological urges, environmental stimuli, peer pressure, cultural pressure, superstition, habits....etc etc.A "system" is a human construct. This statement makes no sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you have painkillers in your drawer...then you know that I am not mistaken....I'm not asking you to explain it, I'm informing you that you're mistaken. — Isaac
Yes this is true. And this biology that "cares" about its well being and forces us to take actions results in friendships and murder, among many other things.
How do you go from that to prescriptive morality? By which I mean telling a murderer what they did was wrong, and people in that situation should not commit murder in the future.
If you are sticking to science, then seeing a murder should result in you update your theory of human behaviour to include murder as part of biology that "cares about well being.". Is that what you do, or do you say "murder is wrong"? — PhilosophyRunner
I'd love for you to expand on this if you have time. How does a brain generate an emotion? — bert1
Thank you. To be clear, would you consider a thermostat to be aware of temperature in this sense? — bert1
There is no sharp cut-off point between being bald and non-bald
— bert1
of course there is. You just choose not to admit it. Here are the extremes for both cases(Again)
A. a head without hair b. a head with hair.
A a unconscious state b. a conscious state.
Both extremes in both cases display many stages in between. — Nickolasgaspar
OK, lets write it out:
[bald] .... [1 hair, 2 hairs.....501 hairs....100,001 hairs]... [not bald]
[seven] ... [???] ... [not-seven]
[spatial] ... [???] ... [not spatial]
[unconscious] .... [what do we write here???]... [conscious]
Please tell me what goes in between unconscious and conscious?
I have included the concepts of seven and space as these are arguably binary as well, with no middle ground, just to illustrate the point. I'm suggesting consciousness is like that. — bert1
You've yet to demonstrate that. Comfortable and free of pain I'll grant as being self-evident since such emotions are directly about comfort or pain, but where's your evidence that following such emotions leads to happiness, physical health and being valued by ones peers? — Isaac
Yes, I can use it as an argument for something. Consciousness is an unusual concept. The vast majority of concepts do admit of degree. That's why I mentioned the example of baldness. It's a perfectly good concept, but it is not binary. — bert1
of course there is. You just choose not to admit it. Here are the extremes for both cases(Again)There is no sharp cut-off point between being bald and non-bald — bert1
You should also agree with me on this one.Well, for the vast majority of properties in the world, I completely agree with you. But consciousness is different. — bert1
There is of course, plenty of degree about what we experience once we have got consciousness 'booted up' as it were, — bert1
-And there are many degrees to baldness when we get/or loose our first hair.There is of course, plenty of degree about what we experience once we have got consciousness 'booted up' as it were, to use an emergentist metaphor, but if there is a 'booting up', there has to be a binary transition from non-conscious to conscious. — bert1
Neither consciousness or baldness is binary........But nature generally lacks such binary transitions, especially when you get the microscope out and look closely. So that presents a problem for the emergentist. — bert1
But I have evidence of my consciousness that no one else can have, because no one else is me. — bert1
-Cherry picking? Special Pleading...are you ok with the use of fallacies in your arguments? I am not, I tend to dismiss such arguments without second thought.When I say panpsychism is a denial of emergentism, that's only with regard to the emergence of consciousness specifically. — bert1
Pansychism has nothing to do with Philosophy. Its an unfalsifiable metaphysical worldview and it is direct conflict with the available scientific facts of reality.I'm only talking about the philosophy of mind. — bert1
-Again Special pleading. What do you mean "consciousness" is very unusual, what is unusual about a biological sensory system arousing specific areas of the brain allowing the organism to be conscious about things in his environment????? You don't get to declare something unusual, you need to demonstrate it. You must point to the science that proves external stimuli can not be collected by our biological sensors (eyes,ears) and they can not be converted to electric pulses, can't arouse a specific area of the brain responsible for visual consciousness and the image can't be compared with a previous input providing info on what we look at etc etc etc etcOf course, the vast majority of properties in the world are emergent. But consciousness isn't one of them. Consciousness is very unusual like that. — bert1
No I only point out that making up magical answers was a common practice in our medieval philosophy. The example was random.I think you might be confusing panpsychism with substance dualism. Panpsychism is typically a monistic view. — bert1
Again....you need to demonstrate that the alternatives are false......The evidence we have don't favor your ideology.It isn't assumed. Panpsychism must be true if the alternatives are false. — bert1
-You converted the induced conclusion of neuroscience....to a tautology. Great!Of course a functioning human brain in a human body is necessary and sufficient for a functioning human being, that's pretty much true by definition. — bert1
-Obviously you were not paying any attention. Neuroscience has located the areas responsible for our conscious states, for the introduction of the content of our thoughts and how by manipulating those areas we can affect our states.You haven't told me anything interesting about consciousness. — bert1
And there is a reason for that......its because the brain mechanisms responsible for our conscious states....are irrelevant to those things you mentioned.This says nothing about the consciousness of, say, a snail, thermostat, or lawnmower. — bert1
- Well what it matter is what it tells to experts, not to us. Our brain has the hardware that allows it to be conscious, it is hooked on a sensory system that provides information about the world and the organism, it has centers that process meaning,memory, symbolic language, pattern recognition.A combustion engine....burns fuel and its censors provide information for that process.It doesn't tell me why a functioning human brain is conscious, and why, say, an internal combustion engine isn't. — bert1
-I am not sure you understand what it means for a brain to conscious....It helps to be aware of where you can find resources, avoid predators and obstacles, make choices of your behavior and actions in your society, adjust it according to other people's behavior.Why can't a brain do all the things it does in the dark, without consciousness? We know it doesn't, but why not? — bert1
OK, that's good. OK, so we look at an fRMI scan and what? See consciousness there? Or do we infer consciousness? Or what? If we infer it, what is the inference? Can you spell it out? — bert1
-Actually the correct quote should be "I feel , I am ". The evidence are not the same but the are more than sufficient to meet any objective standard.I agree with you, I think I am. But the evidence I have for your consciousness is not the same evidence I have for my own consciousness. — bert1
Sure, the "Natural" is everything which manifests "through verified building blocks", but we still need to account for the existence of these so called "building blocks". That's what we deal with in metaphysics. If "Natural" is whatever is constructed with the building blocks, then whatever constructs the building blocks must be supernatural. Do you agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
Again declaring a natural phenomenon of cognitive deliberation "supernatural" is not evidence for the supernatural.Yes, remember I mentioned "free will". And the hypocrite that you are, chose to reject the reality of free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
-You just don't get it. You keep promoting the same Argument from Ignorance fallacy. Don't you value valid arguments at all?If it is a fact that the natural effectively restricts the supernatural, this does not necessitate the conclusion that the supernatural has been excluded. — Metaphysician Undercover