There are different ways metaphysics is defined, but to me it includes ontological assumptions. Like, there are natural laws, everything is physical. The idea of 'emergent property' could be seen as metaphysical. Certainly much of cosmology in physics is metaphysics discussion. QM raises a lot of metaphysics issues. And if this seems distant, it's not. QM based phenomena affect large organisms, like birds and plants and perhaps for things. IOW a bird will change course due to qm phenomena inside its visual system. And any attempt to be objective is necessarily working with metaphysics. What is, fundamentally, perception and how is ours skewing our metaphysics. Since we need to know this to know what are objective conclusions and ones biased by the fact that we are primate bodies/brained, time bound something or others? And the idea that there are natural laws is a kind of metaphysical viewpoint and there is quite a bit within science challenging it. Not that the patterns we've noticed aren't there, but they may be much more local and time bound then we assumed. They may not be laws but local, temporary patterns. Of course 'local' may means something huge from part of to the whole of our universe in a multiverse. And time bound may be in billions of years - though there are indications of changes in constants in much short time periods.So if there is a thing beyond physics... what is it? Why is it "beyond" and not "outside", "under", "above" or "beside" physics? — god must be atheist
Metaphysics continues asking "why" where science leaves off. For example, any theory of fundamental physics is based on some set of axioms, which may postulate the existence of entities such as atoms, particles, forces, charges, mass, or fields. Stating such postulates is considered to be the "end" of a science theory. Metaphysics takes these postulates and explores what they mean as human concepts. For example, do all theories of physics require the existence of space and time,[12] objects, and properties? Or can they be expressed using only objects, or only properties? Do the objects have to retain their identity over time or can they change?[13] If they change, then are they still the same object? Can theories be reformulated by converting properties or predicates (such as "red") into entities (such as redness or redness fields) or processes ('there is some redding happening over there' appears in some human languages in place of the use of properties). Is the distinction between objects and properties fundamental to the physical world or to our perception of it?
Much recent work has been devoted to analyzing the role of metaphysics in scientific theorizing. Alexandre Koyré led this movement, declaring in his book Metaphysics and Measurement, "It is not by following experiment, but by outstripping experiment, that the scientific mind makes progress."[14] That metaphysical propositions can influence scientific theorizing is John Watkins' most lasting contribution to philosophy. Since 1957[15][16] "he showed the ways in which some un-testable and hence, according to Popperian ideas, non-empirical propositions can nevertheless be influential in the development of properly testable and hence scientific theories. These profound results in applied elementary logic...represented an important corrective to positivist teachings about the meaninglessness of metaphysics and of normative claims".[17] Imre Lakatos maintained that all scientific theories have a metaphysical "hard core" essential for the generation of hypotheses and theoretical assumptions.[18] Thus, according to Lakatos, "scientific changes are connected with vast cataclysmic metaphysical revolutions."[19]
An example from biology of Lakatos' thesis: David Hull has argued that changes in the ontological status of the species concept have been central in the development of biological thought from Aristotle through Cuvier, Lamarck, and Darwin. Darwin's ignorance of metaphysics made it more difficult for him to respond to his critics because he could not readily grasp the ways in which their underlying metaphysical views differed from his own.[20]
In physics, new metaphysical ideas have arisen in connection with quantum mechanics, where subatomic particles arguably do not have the same sort of individuality as the particulars with which philosophy has traditionally been concerned.[21] Also, adherence to a deterministic metaphysics in the face of the challenge posed by the quantum-mechanical uncertainty principle led physicists such as Albert Einstein to propose alternative theories that retained determinism.[22] A.N. Whitehead is famous for creating a process philosophy metaphysics inspired by electromagnetism and special relativity.[23]
In chemistry, Gilbert Newton Lewis addressed the nature of motion, arguing that an electron should not be said to move when it has none of the properties of motion.[24]
Katherine Hawley notes that the metaphysics even of a widely accepted scientific theory may be challenged if it can be argued that the metaphysical presuppositions of the theory make no contribution to its predictive success.[25] — Wikipedia
'Knowing what consciousness is' could mean a number of things. I think one could say that experiencing is going on. How much information this adds I don't know, but I think the word 'experiencing' is a bit more phenomenological. Consciousness reads like a thing noun, an object. But I agree with you. What is experiencing without the contents of experiencing? is it the same as other consciousnesses, just that the contents are different? Or is every consciousness, to put in metaphorically, a different tone, even if the contents are the same?Since i am conscious right now i should know what consciousness is .. but i don't and nobody really knows. Also, If one is conscious that doesn't mean he will know necessarily that he is conscious, it requires self-consciousness for one to "see" himself. — Basko
I don't think this is an issue of knowledge but rather one of definition. I think that is a good synonym. That's how I would want to define it. That or 'experiencing.' IOW I don't think one can dissect and analyze consciousness and decide that it is constituted by awareness, but rather that it's a possible definition.Then, does consciousness = awareness ? — Basko
This often also applies to anti-religious fanatics. — Wayfarer
Physics Forums: Metaphysics
it's usually helpful to examine the roots of an unfamiliar term. Try a search on "metaphysical etymology" .
Meta= beyond,
so what's beyond physical ? Philosophy, i guess, and maybe the occult — Shushi
In the US these days it has a lot to do with the near death of investigative reporting and taking news releases from the government (not inherently bad but run by neo-cons for the most part as you said) as news itself. — Noah Te Stroete
I appreciate that reaction since we tend to think differently about it. And I certainly don't claim to know. Those are my concerns.You give a very nuanced analysis. It SEEMS like it could be a good model of reality, — Noah Te Stroete
Of course. I realized after the enormous post that this could be a tactic, just swamp other people with too much to respond to. I wrote it mainly to work out where my own reactions were coming from, and to at least make it seem not completely irrational to someone with differing views.Anyway, there is too much there to respond to each point — Noah Te Stroete
"Science will answer all our questions and solve all our problems" or "any question that is not answerable by science is not a coherent question" (this latter would probably count more as positivism, but I think it is also an expression of a kind of scientism). — Janus
It is something to notice, sure.Doesn’t it at all concern you that Brexit is what Putin wants? — Noah Te Stroete
I suppose Putin and the common people of the UK could have interests in common by accident and for different reasons — Noah Te Stroete
You say the EU would be another step removed from the people they are supposed to represent, so that would be bad for the common folk. — Noah Te Stroete
There's Nato and there's the EU, both forms of European unification, the former tying it in with the US. I am sure Putin for purely practical reasons - perhaps some negative, some neutral, some simply taking care of his country's and his own interest - would see benefits in being able to negotiate with, engage in dimplomacy with and barter with a diverse group instead of a block. I would guess he is also concerned about US hawks and how they want to use Europe.Putin doesn’t want a strong and united Europe for a couple of reasons, probably because they are his historical enemies, but also maybe because they won’t then need Russia for trade as much? — Noah Te Stroete
That sounds like a bit of a stretch to me that the corporate media is solely trying to line its pockets by hoodwinking the commoners who have a common goal as Putin?? — Noah Te Stroete
I think very little of it is evil. Like sitting around rubbing their hands with glee evil movie villain. I am sure that when they repeat the views the neo cons want them to have, the neo cons, as one example, have found a way to make it seem obvious (whatever the particular issue is) and those reporters, editors and owners to a great degree think they have the right editorial opinions, have investigated the right things, have taken facts to support their articles and so on. I would think very, very few journalists and editors thought the Bush Admin was making shit up about Hussein's WOMD to get both the US and Britain into Iraq. I am sure that a number deep down didn't really care, but even these still bought the ideas because it was comfy for them. There are so many reasons why even good people can end up supporting bad ideas, not doing due diligence, decided not to air their doubts. This is especially true when one would be damned as crazy, evil, hating your country, moronic for doing so.Perhaps the corporate media isn’t all evil? — Noah Te Stroete
Fox News is pro-Trump while MSNBC is anti-Trump — Noah Te Stroete
I may have missed it but I didn't say there was a conspiracy. Not in any gett he main players together have a sit down and decide. People are actually much more easily led by people with power than to need their being in on whatever changes those in power want to make.Where is the conspiracy there? — Noah Te Stroete
In meteorology, for example, they cannot determine what is going to happen in a specific location, only a general trend over a generally large area. They can only do this because the science ignores individuality, and so ignores most of reality. Does that make sense? — Noah Te Stroete
That's sounds like a battle of appeals to authority. IOW philosophy has a critique of that kind of communication - we could call this critique or fallacy something similar to a natural law - which can aid one in dealing with such things in scientific discussions, philosophy, politics, wherever.When I read or discuss a bit of philosophy I become frustrated with the way people quote a philosopher as if the philosopher has the answer. — Denovo Meme
There are certainly philosophical works that include data. And philsophical discussions online will sometimes include data. Other types of discussions in philosophy can't use data.There is never a shred of data, worldly evidence of universality, or even revolutionary insight. — Denovo Meme
I assume that was an example that number. Science is in fact a product of philosophical thinking, at least at many points in its history there have been philosophical discussions, by scientists, by generalists, by philosophers, about epistemology. And this has aided (and perhaps sometimes blocked) scientific research and strategies. If you are having a discussion over free will vs. determinism, I am not sure where a numerical value can come in. If you are analysing the language use in a position, again, I don't see where number values come in. It's a bit like saying that your literary studies didn't deal much with chemicals. These are different kinds of truths being sought after, often at a more abstract level then science is aiming for in specific research.Science has fundamental laws and principles by which we obtain a 0.05 answer. — Denovo Meme
Such as, how do you model individual clouds or people. Generalities are easy because it ignores most of reality. — Noah Te Stroete
On the other hand, science doesn't really have any laws either. A law describes how something has to act or should act. Scientific laws only describe how the world generally tends to act under certain circumstances. They describe. They don't cause or explain. — T Clark
I also agree that only a person who has his basic needs met has enough time to think about this possible futility of existence, yet perhaps there are some who are bugged by it even when they have no roof above their heads (fortunately not my case though). — DanielPhil
Actually a number of religions are quite empirical. You'll find this in many branches of Hinduism. You have stages and steps in experience, for example, with meditiation, and these can even be predicted by the experts, down to order of experiences and stages and tailor fitting predictions for individuals. Now an atheist or other skeptic will say that the conclusoins are still false, those that have to do with the external world. Though how they know this is an issue, but also the main point here is that there is a huge empirical aspect to spiritual beliefs, this is often systematized based on thousands of years of experience and that it works for people. IOW promised goals can be achieved by following the practices of, and the posited entities of, certain religions. In the West people are often used to prioritizing faith, so debates between believers get skewed to faith vs. knowledge. But this is not the only type of religion, and even Western theists will base their beliefs, often in part or in the main one what they experience as participants and how it is working for them. Now skeptics will say, as I mentioned about, that even if it is 'working' and there are predictable stages and experiences, this is not knowledge. But that is based on their sense that what is posited, say God, is not real. But actually knowledge has to do with experience and working, certain in instrumental approaches to knowledge. And further I have never met anyone who does not consider conclusions reached in similar ways knowledge. Not similar as in similar to meditation or chanting, but similar in the sense of built up over time in predictable stages of experience and finding that the beliefs work.Bear in mind, it is possible to have true beliefs without evidence, so spiritual beliefs can still be true, they just don't rise to the level of knowledge by traditional epistemic standards. Hence the centrality of "faith" in many religions. — Pantagruel
I'm a benficiary of the EU, in that it let me move fast to a third country from the US. I have to say I have long term concerns about it. I don't feel well read enough to demonstrate the validity of my fears. But I do think that larger entities, in the long run, are more subject to control by the private sector. And the governments are less connected to the people on the street. I feel this is the case with the USA, which can be seen as having similarities to the EU in that there is semi-independent smaller parts with their own laws,then there are federal laws that overlap, supercede or cover other areas.Well said, I have been surprised for years now how polarised the US electorate is. While I thought politics was more fluid in the UK. Now we are equally, if not more so, polarised and it is quite a surprise. I realise that the split had been developing beneath the surface for years, but I thought the EU scepticism was in a minority amongst the hard right and a little amongst the hard left. What surprised many was a large group of traditionally working class labour voters in the north who voted leave and a strong leave vote in agricultural areas ( who will suffer most from leaving).
Unfortunately this has resulted in the hard right seizing power, so we're in for a rollercoaster ride now. — Punshhh
I'm primarily a Yank (though also a Brit) so the above sounds to me like, well, politics. I mean, when is it not so. The difference is a huge decision made via direct democracy rather then representational. I can think of other decisions made via representational democracy, in Britain and the US, where similar descriptions fit. In fact it is the norm. Which is not to say one should not complain about it, but to my eyes and ears it is the rule and not a recent phenomenon.Oh, I see, thanks for clarifying. Yes, I agree. The problem from where I'm standing is that the majority of the electorate who voted and will vote if there is another referendum don't ever find out what the real issues are, what reality will be like. All they hear is the popularised slogans on each side. — Punshhh
I am beginning to have doubts about their impartiality, or at least their editorial decisions. They appear to be falling for the anti Corbyn, anti labour rhetoric and giving to much credence to the hard right dogma. While relentlessly attempting to analyse the minutiae of the internal politics of the Labour Party and continuously failing to call out the Tory bluster about the political psycho drama and undemocratic power struggles within the Tory party and with their corporate supporters. — Punshhh
I don't really understand what you're saying. The Hard Brexiters (our government), say that we have a great future, one in which we are set free of the shackles of over regulation and protectionism. They point out that we will be free to make our own trade deals ( ye haa! ) — Punshhh
And yet could be a nihilist, having the kind of luxury to put their morality and sense of meaning on a shelf, having less or little struggle and less need for the motivations inherent in non-nihilist belief systems.A psychologically stable individual, his experience through good fortune circumscribed by a benign situation, necessarily thereby suspecting nothing outwith his resultant bliss. — Robert Lockhart
who might also be a nihilist, but then might suprise us (or not) and be deeply embedded in various objective value, transcendent or other meaning paradigmns.A psychologically unstable individual, his experience through misfortune circumscribed by a malign situation, likewise necessarily thereby suspecting nothing outwith his resultant misery. — Robert Lockhart
Such nihilism would in principle be an example of the degree of possible inequity innate to a situation descended solely from a logical reality - would it not? - its manifestation therefore perhaps being symptomatic of the nature of our situation. — Robert Lockhart
Again - matter, meaning, reason, significance, importance, insignificance, irrelevance, importance - all these are human terms for human situations. Of course they don't apply situations where no human or other sentient being is involved. — T Clark
Earth, our son, our solar system, the Milky Way, other galaxies, the universe - all are just as insignificant as we are. — T Clark
WE don't matter to whom. The verb 'matter' in this sense, has to do with someone or some entity that is capable of caring about or being interested in the life of us (or whatever it is that matters to them). There are obviously people to whom nearly all of us matter.We don't matter as universe will continue to exist whether we exist or not — Sheik Yerbouti
A couple of common things I could put under the banner of scientism would be:There are definitely people who treat science as a religion. I'm not sure if there's actually anyone with the view you describe in quotation marks above. — Terrapin Station
I remember acknowledging that proof is often difficult to achieve in practice. But the problem, I think, is not positives or negatives but "proof". — Pattern-chaser
"Proof" is easier, as its definition holds it close to its absolute meaning: an unambiguous demonstration of the correctness of something. And this is very difficult to achieve, it seems to me. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Why shouldn't an individual matter when there are so many people in the world?Why should an individual matter when there are so many different people in this world? — DanielPhil
I've asked you for postives that don't show this property. You acknowledged that all of science does not show this property. And scientific conclusions are generally framed in the positive. Give me the bones, man.There is something specific about negatives: it is impractical (as in 'impossible in practice') to prove them. That some positives also show this property does not affect the truth of this, does it? — Pattern-chaser
Well, let's find out together.The specific thing about negatives is that they are framed in such a way that proof becomes impossible because of the way they're framed. This only applies to some positives, I think? — Pattern-chaser
So, then, like with positive assertions, we can argue in terms of probability. Or we are simply reduced in all things to trading assertions. So, your argument in favor of your assertion that one cannot prove a negative was an attempt to say it was unlikely, for reasons X and Y. That's our position in terms of postive assertions also.No, I stated it without proof, as proof is impossible. Where there can be no proof, we can only trade (what we think are) possibilities, n'est ce pas? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Sure, agreed, but that wasn't my point. My point was that the difference between analytic and synthetic statements is not so cut and dried.We could begin by telling the absolute truth, as we understand it, and see where we can go from there?
We have never seen or heard of a swan with fur, so we believe there are no furry swans.
There, a belief and its justification, simply presented. No claims to proof. :up: — Pattern-chaser
That there is a God is not incompatible with science. It is just not supported. SAme with the afterlife. There are several interpretations of Jesus being the son of God.Yes they do. Core claims in Christianity: God exists, there's an afterlife, Jesus is the son of God, The Holy Spirit of Jesus rose from the grave. — S
Which is what is called 'does not support'.Science has a method. Application of that method does not result in the above. — S
And there you go again with the attitude.So you can't both adhere to the scientific method, which would result in scepticism at best, and at the same time hold beliefs which fly in the face of that scepticism.
How can anyone be so blind to the obvious incompatibility here? — S
Well, if we take "prove" to be more or less absolute in its meaning, then I suspect there's nothing we can prove. And if we dilute its meaning to avoid this problem, what we are left with is 'proof' that is sort of probable or likely, rather than, er, proof. — Pattern-chaser
Which is a negative claim and thus unprovable. yet, you seemed to intend to prove it.Impossible, in practice (which is all that — Pattern-chaser
I already acknowledged that. And it's exactly the same as all swans are white, which you acknowledged. So what's with the negative. If you want to argue 'some swans are white is provable' then you are going against what you agreed with earlier that all of science is inductive and thus open to revision. Perhaps it will turn out they are not swans or it is not white, but soem other color our eyes register as white or _______________some unknown thing that means that they really weren't white that we can't think of now.OK, so to prove that "no swan is black", you would need to examine all currently-living swans. No matter where they're hiding. Impossible, in practice (which is all that matters). It can't be done, in the real world we live in. — Pattern-chaser
Well, let's find a positive we can't state as a negative to see if it makes sense to make it seem like some positive we can prove. I mean, I thought we agreed that all of science was revisionable and thus not proven. So what are these positives that we can prove?...yes, it does. But you still can't prove a negative. Just like you can't prove some positives. — Pattern-chaser
I called it analytical (as opposed to synthetic). Actually I think there are non-trivial examples of this, though it has to be more complex definitions.The proof here refers to the definition of the term "bachelor", which is "unmarried male". Thus it is disproved by definition, which is a somewhat trivial case, don't you think? :razz: — Pattern-chaser
for it to be a theism, yes. I wouldn't stop someone in argument or in any other way from saying they are Christian but consider God to be a metaphor for a non-sentient universe or something, but then that's no longer a theismSo then you should agree with the point that I was making, namely that there are at least some key beliefs which must be taken literally — S
And these beliefs are not supported by science. — S
No? Didn't think so. — S
Well, the verb 'is' eliminates the time jumping. But this is all true for the positive. Not sure how we got back here to this again.you would need to examine all currently-living swans, all swans that have lived in the past, and (if you want to — Pattern-chaser
That's just what your gut tells you.:razz:[Edited to add: and you can't prove a negative.] — Pattern-chaser
Whether you like it or not, religions do make factual claims, not just normative claims. — S