Comments

  • Pessimism’s ultimate insight
    Well normal human cognitive function is often impaired by severe mental conditions, or physical brain alterations like a lobotomy. I doubt those apply to you..so being you’re in the spectrum of average functioning human, I call bullshit.schopenhauer1

    It has always been clear that you and I have very different understandings of human motivation and behavior. You have always seemed unable to see that many, perhaps most, people find life interesting; worthwhile; and, often, enjoyable. The fact that you can't imagine living without boredom is a case in point.
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    reaching out for support of like minds and administratorsJoe Mello

    I am speaking to you and for myself. Nothing you have written so far rises to the level that requires moderator involvement and I didn't imply that it has.

    If you haven’t found anything in my posts to ponder because in your mind I haven’t justified them according to your ideas of what such a justification looks like, then you are simply riding along a rail you can’t get off.Joe Mello

    What's important is not my ideas of what adequate justification looks like, it's what reason requires that matters.
  • Pessimism’s ultimate insight
    You need to keep yourself busy at all times because ...baker

    I said I am never bored, not that I am always busy.
  • Romanticism leads to pain and war?


    This makes sense to me. You know a lot more about 17th century cultural history than I do.
  • Pessimism’s ultimate insight
    Boredom sits at the heart of the human condition.schopenhauer1

    That certainly isn't true of me or most of the people I know. Again, you seem to be projecting your own feelings onto others.
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    Your judgement of my contributions here so far isn't really much of a thing, now is it?Joe Mello

    I made a specific claim - that you have made most of your assertions without justification. Do you dispute that? It makes your claims to be a qualified philosopher unsupportable.

    I think the fact that you are unwilling to follow the forum's standard methods for quoting and referencing other posts shows you are not interested in collegial philosophical discussion.

    I don't expect you'll be around on the forum for long. You don't seem to me to be someone who can tolerate recognition that the emperor, by which I mean your arguments, has no clothes, by which I mean reasoned justification.
  • Romanticism leads to pain and war?
    Wikipedia explains neoclassicism like this "The main Neoclassical movement coincided with the 18th-century Age of Enlightenment, and continued into the early 19th century, laterally competing with Romanticism."Athena

    As I noted in my post, I was referring to romanticism not as a movement in art but as a nationalistic impulse. I think that impulse can be reflected in art, which is fine, and in ideology, which may not be. It is the focus on "...an exaltation of the primitive and the common man, an appreciation of external nature, an interest in the remote, a predilection for melancholy..." that I see as relevant to this discussion.

    Is that a class struggle? I am quite distressed by what I perceive as foolish liberty today. A breaking of the social rules that gives us hope of overcoming racism and has meant the liberation of women, but destroys family order and may have negative social ramifications as well. I guess that makes me a conservative although many think I am liberal.Athena

    Romantic - Marked by the imaginative or emotional appeal of what is heroic, adventurous, remote, mysterious, or idealized.
    — T Clark

    That is what I am comfortable with.
    Athena

    I don't know if you should be called liberal or conservative, but you sure seem to be a romantic in the sense we are talking about it here. I have thought that before reading your posts in previous threads.

    By the definition above, I think Nazism, communism, jingoistic patriotism, and other similar ideologies can be defined as romanticism.
    — T Clark

    I think that is so but so was the democracy we were manifesting through education a Romantic notion.
    Athena

    Let me think about that... I don't think so, but I'm not certain. I'll think some more.

    I certainly think support for our nation and government is often expressed in romantic terms, but I think democracy is a down-to-earth, practical way of governing. I don't think the founders of the US were romantics at all. You, on the other hand, seem to be. Is that something that might lead you to support risky policies in the name of national solidarity and tradition?
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    go be a fool someplace else.Joe Mello

    @praxis has a history of making intelligent and useful posts here on the forum. You have... not.
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    years of disciplined thinking,Joe Mello

    I have not seen any of this vaunted disciplined thinking so far in your posts. You just keep making smug assertions without justification and then accusing others of doing the same thing. Claiming other people's opinions are absurd, impossible, or illogical is not an argument.

    a single wise personJoe Mello

    Nothing you have claimed so far has struck me as wise. If you are a wise person, your arguments so far have not shown it.

    A philosophy forum should be populated, at least, mostly with people who studied philosophy well enough to reason out basic logical problems.Joe Mello

    Your argument so far has not shown any great talent for logic. You just keep repeating your assertions and calling them logical without demonstrating a chain of logical inference. Again, that's not an argument.

    a multi-universe is illogical. There cannot be an infinite line of finite things.Joe Mello

    The two current theories that speculate on the existence of a multiverse do not require that it be infinite.

    you forgot to show me where I went wrong in placing a human being at the pinnacle of creation.Joe Mello

    Here on the forum we usually expect people who make a claim to provide justification. It's not our job to show you where you went wrong. You're supposed to show why you're right. You haven't.

    A more complex molecule is still a molecule, not a living being ... not a thought.Joe Mello

    You're saying I'm wrong without providing justification. Your just saying "Oh, yeah?" Well, yeah. There's a theme in all my comments - you don't provide justification, you just make unsupported claims.

    A suggestion and request - If you will use the forums standard methods for referencing other peoples posts, it will be easier to respond. There are two methods. The simplest is to just use the "reply" button, the arrow at the bottom of each post next to the time marker. It doesn't show up unless you run the curser over it. The second, and more helpful, is to highlight the specific text you are referencing and then push the "quote" button that will show up following the highlighting.

    Either method will notify the poster that you have responded and identify the text you are responding to.
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    show me where you have discussed this principle before.Joe Mello

    Here's a link to a well-known paper - "More is Different" by P.W. Anderson.T Clark

    Forgot to include the link I referenced -

    https://www.tkm.kit.edu/downloads/TKM1_2011_more_is_different_PWA.pdf
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    T Clark, show me where you have discussed this principle before.Joe Mello

    Emergence is not a philosophical principle, it's a scientific one, although it is not fully accepted. It has been discussed lots of times here on the forum, although I can't remember a specific discussion. Here's a link to a well-known paper - "More is Different" by P.W. Anderson.

    https://www.tkm.kit.edu/downloads/TKM1_2011_more_is_different_PWA.pdf

    life evolving from the elementsJoe Mello

    Taking physical elements and adding to them an equal thing, such as other elements, to create a living being would be an impossibility.Joe Mello

    Life did not "evolve from the elements." Darwin was very clear that he did not know how life began and his theory has nothing to say about it. His theory of evolution by natural selection only applies to, oddly enough, the origins of species, i.e. changes in populations of organisms, by natural selection.

    Our understanding of how life developed from non-living matter is not as well-established as Darwinian evolution, but scientists are making progress. Suggested reading - "Life's Ratchet" by Peter Hoffmann.
  • Introducing myself ... and something else
    No combination of lesser things can create a greater thing without something greater than the greater thing added to the lesser things.Joe Mello

    Many of the posters before me on this thread have expressed their skepticism about this statement, a skepticism I share. Groups of lesser things creating a greater thing without something greater being added is one of the primary ways the world organizes itself, e.g. chemistry creating life and biology creating mind.

    Seems like maybe you're itching to provoke a fight more than you are just introducing yourself.
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    philosophy is unnecessaryWayfarer

    No. Evolutionary biology is science. Philosophy, in the sense we usually use it here, is not science.

    ...the mind can be understood solely through 'physical and biological mechanisms'.

    So how is that not reductionist?
    Wayfarer

    Unfortunately, I think my statement is ambiguous. I was trying to thread the needle by making a fuzzy but important distinction between the mind and the mechanisms of mind. As I see it, the mechanisms of mind are neurological, biological, perceptual, and psychological. The mind itself is not.

    So, no. I don't think I am being reductionist.

    In the traditional understanding - and I'm not referring to any kind of creationism - the intellect - nous - has a kind of familial bond with the cosmic intellect - whether the One of Plotinus or what later became identified as God.Wayfarer

    I think what you've written is what I was referring to when I wrote:

    Although I probably don't have the same understanding of how it might work, I don't think what you've written is necessarily at odds with what I've written above.T Clark

    I don't see any cosmic mind, but I think the world we normally think of as reality is inseparable from our experience of it. That's what I learned from Lao Tzu.

    In the Darwinian view, there is no foresight in nature, no aim to be achieved, no grand plan or design.Wayfarer

    This is my view also.

    Everything that occurs in nature, occurs as the consequence of molecular activitiesWayfarer

    I think this is where my comment about mechanisms of phenomena as opposed to the phenomena themselves comes into play. Life grows out of chemistry, but is also different from, more than, chemistry. Emergence. The mind operates in accordance with different rules than the nervous system.

    Whereas the traditional understanding - I would include Taoism in this - is top-down, not bottom-up. The patterns or orders of nature are perceived to embody a kind of intelligence, whether that is the 'grand architect' of Western tradition, or the subtle naturalism of the Tao (which is 'the way of nature'.)Wayfarer

    Do I agree with this? Is the Taoist view of reality top-down?.... I guess I don't think so. The Tao is the bottomest thing there can possibly be. It's so bottom a thing it's not a thing at all.
  • Romanticism leads to pain and war?
    Could Romanticism be the problem?Athena

    Sorry I come late to this discussion. I've gone through the other comments. Some of them touch on the point of view I see this from. First, I want to make sure we are clear on what we mean by "romanticism" and "romantic." It has several related meanings, but here is the one I think of when dealing with political and ideological issues:

    Romanticism - A literary, artistic, and philosophical movement originating in the 18th century, characterized chiefly by a reaction against neoclassicism and an emphasis on the imagination and emotions, and marked especially in English literature by sensibility and the use of autobiographical material, an exaltation of the primitive and the common man, an appreciation of external nature, an interest in the remote, a predilection for melancholy, and the use in poetry of older verse forms.

    Romantic - Marked by the imaginative or emotional appeal of what is heroic, adventurous, remote, mysterious, or idealized.

    When I think of romanticism in this context, I usually think of ideologies that focus on a mythical golden age that existed in an unspecified past.

    These definitions indicate that romanticism in this sense originated in the 1700s, but that doesn't necessarily mean that the romantic impulse wasn't around earlier. By the definition above, I think Nazism, communism, jingoistic patriotism, and other similar ideologies can be defined as romanticism. So, yes. I think it is fair to say that romanticism is one of the major sources of, or at least excuses for, conflict.
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    You know what reductionism means? Do you see why this might be described as reductionist?Wayfarer

    Yes, I know what "reductionism" is. Is my statement reductionist?.... I'm not sure. If it is, does that mean it's wrong, misleading, or incomplete?... I'm not sure, but I don't think so.

    RICHARD DAWKINS: Why we exist, you're playing with the word "why" there. Science is working on the problem of the antecedent factors that lead to our existence. Now, "why" in any further sense than that, why in the sense of purpose is, in my opinion, not a meaningful question.

    To me, that is something the Bishop ought to have pounced on, but he was not philosophically astute enough to sieze the moment. The question as to whether there is a reason for existence is obviously a central question for philosophy - not just biblical creationists, but even atheist existentialists. Because without there being some reason, in the larger sense, then it's difficult to avoid the conclusion that life is a kind of biochemical fluke.
    Wayfarer

    I don't find "why?" a very interesting question when we are talking about the world we live in. Science has nothing to say about why. The best it can do is help us understand how. I don't feel any need of a reason for the way things are. Life is a biochemical phenomenon. A fluke? My intuition tells me that life might be inevitable, although I can't justify that with specific knowledge.

    There are, however, all kinds of 'evolutionary' answers to that conundrum - like, for instance, Tielhard du Chardin, and Henri Bergson, from several generations back, and nowadays the 'Big History' school which sees the evolution of consciousness as intrinsic to the Cosmos.Wayfarer

    These types of answers have always seemed to me to be romantic musings of people who don't really believe in God but can't get past a need to have a concrete anchor to attach their longing to.

    But it should be stressed that none of those ideas are really relevant to mainstream evolutionary biology as such, which I maintain has a much more limited scope that it is usually given credit for.Wayfarer

    I'm not sure what you mean by this.
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    Evolutionary biology is not itself a philosophy or a metaphysics. It’s a theory of the evolution of species....It’s also not a philosophy of mind. As far as evolutionary theory is concerned, the only factors it takes into account are those which can be understood in terms of what leads to successful reproduction and continued existence.Wayfarer

    Evolutionary biology is not a philosophy of any sort. That doesn't mean it doesn't have anything to tell us about the development of mental phenomena, e.g. mind, consciousness. I find it perfectly plausible that the physical, biological mechanisms which lead to the experiences we call "mind" evolved in accordance with principles discovered by Darwin and others. For those of us who think that physical and biological mechanisms of mind are all there is, that's enough.

    It is generally based on an intuition of the relationship or even continuity between mind and world - that both the mind and the world embody an order which is in some sense complementary and suffuses both, in the mind as reason and in the world as causation.Wayfarer

    Although I probably don't have the same understanding of how it might work, I don't think what you've written is necessarily at odds with what I've written above. I won't go far into this, but Lao Tzu is the one who opened my eyes to the relationship between humanity and reality.
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    I appreciate the axiomatic nature of matter,Michael Sol

    "The axiomatic nature of matter" is a metaphysical presupposition as described by R.G. Collingwood in his "Essay on Metaphysics." It is not true or false, it is more or less useful in a particular situation. I'm sure you won't find that a satisfactory answer and I don't really want to get into another argument about metaphysics right now, so I'll just say I don't appreciate the axiomatic nature of matter.

    explain what it is that changes without cause?Michael Sol

    Cause is a useful concept for simple systems, e.g. the cliche pool table. When you get much more complex than that, when an event has many causes or you can't practically identify the chain of causation, it becomes meaningless. Another argument, Russell's, is that modern scientific models of physical reality do not involve causation. An example commonly used relates to theories of gravitation. Newton's theory involves a force, which is an agent of causation. Einstein's theory involves the geometry of spacetime, which is not.

    And no, I am not qualified to discuss the intricacies of general relativity.
  • Non-Physical Reality
    The macroscopic, material understandings of matter, time, and energy are all still the framework within which reality is understood and physics is practiced with precise results. Furthermore, mysteries and ignorance surrounding the nature of quanta DOES NOT imply that the material reality within which you live, whose impregnable laws are used on a daily basis to produce cars, radio equipment, space flights, and power, is not what it has arranged itself to be.Garrett Travers

    Well put and I think it's an important point. What we call reality is at human scale. How could it be anything else?
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    You replied that you can imagine the creating of a consciousness by some natural process other than evolution? Could you share us the description of that process?Michael Sol

    First off, let me be clear. I believe that consciousness is a neurological, perceptual, psychological process the mechanisms for which have evolved in accordance with Darwinian principles as they are currently understood. There are many non-religious people who do not accept that explanation, who think that consciousness has a non-biological component. I think they're wrong. but I can imagine there is some other process.

    Many philosophers reject the need for causation. See B Russell, 1912.

    Yeah, Hume, Russell and all of those others are wrong, and none of them ever gave us any other mechanism whereby material reality might operate. I would really like to see a conceptual model that accounts for Object change without causation.... Causation is, as Kant pointed out, an indispensable basis of all existence.
    Michael Sol

    So, Hume and Russell are wrong and Kant is right. Sez Michael Sol. That's not an argument. We can have a discussion about the metaphysics of causation I guess, but that will take us off in another direction. It's been discussed many times here on the forum.
  • The Existence of an Evolved Consciousness is Proof of its Objectively Extant Universe.
    As we cannot even Imagine a means of Creating a Consciousness other than by Evolution in a Material Reality,Michael Sol

    I can. Many people can.

    Also, to suggest an all-powerful being created us by some mysterious process that does not involve causality is simply a silly recourse to MagicMichael Sol

    Many philosophers reject the need for causation. See B Russell, 1912.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?
    any serious thought about it dispels the illusion that it can be anything more than faith.Janus

    Faith - if by that you mean belief without evidence - no. Faith - if by that you mean belief based on the evidence of personal experience - ok.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?
    believing nonsense under the guise of impressive, intimidating and esoteric arguments._db

    Sounds like philosophy to me. Not all of it, but definitely some of it.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?
    Not sure exactly what your point is, but it sounds a little like Alvin Plantinga's Reformed Epistemology wherein God is seen as a properly basic belief, the necessary foundation for objective reality and coherence. This is worked up from Kant's transcendentals.Tom Storm

    I'm not familiar with Plantinga, but from what you've written that sounds like just what I'm talking about.
  • An Objection to Divine Command Theory
    but to Banno and @T Clark I say: probably best to avoid this thread unless you're going to address the OP.jamalrob

    Agreed.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?
    I assume philosophy is open to all possible ideas but after talking to a Catholic priest who made it seem like he considered religion and philosophy to be synonymous. However the idea of reincarnation certainly wasn't up for debate at all. The conversation seemed entirely dogmatic. How are these topics related?TiredThinker

    I had another thought, or maybe it's the same idea as my previous post. I have often thought, and more than once written on the forum, that a belief in objective reality requires an objective observer. Someone who can stand outside the reality we experience and see it as it really is. The only entity I can think of that could fill that role is God.

    It's not my intention to argue for the existence of God here. Rather, I'm arguing for the philosophical relevance of religion.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?


    R.G. Collingwood wrote that one absolute presumption of all science is that God exists. That may seem absurd at first take, but I interpret him as meaning that all science is dependent on the existence of a universe that operates in accordance with lawful principles that we are capable of understanding. I'm not any kind of historian of science or philosophy, but it seems reasonable to me to ask if that presupposition depends on, or at least once depended on, religious understanding.
  • To what degree is religion philosophy?
    much religion is dogma and antithetical to philosophyTom Storm

    Much philosophy is dogma and antithetical to philosophy. There are plenty of examples here on the forum. And no, I'm not talking about you.
  • An Objection to Divine Command Theory
    If you like. It's just that you seem to be annoyed at a newbie for not responding, when their thread has been hijacked - you are upset a the wrong thing.Banno

    Hey, @SwampMan, Banno is full of crap. If you are going to start posts, and you've started three, you should be participating.

    Banno likes to stick his nose in cause he thinks he's all wise and stuff, but you'll notice he rarely has anything substantive to say. This exchange is a case in point.
  • An Objection to Divine Command Theory
    Again, who would one bother posting here, with Bart's nonsense? It seems to me that your anger is misdirected.Banno

    You seem to be just using me as a passive-aggressive way to attack Bartricks. Knock yourself out.
  • An Objection to the Teleological Argument
    But that sounds like philosophical Apatheia gone awry.Gnomon

    No. As someone who prides himself on time management, i.e. someone lazy, why should I try to answer a question that doesn't need an answer?

    I grew up in the post-Depression & post-War-to-end-all-wars 1950sGnomon

    You and I are about the same age.
  • Mindfulness: How Does the Idea Work Practically and Philosophically?
    My own understanding of mindfulness is about paying attention to body, emotions and thoughts.Jack Cummins

    Yes, I think this is exactly right. It's about awareness.

    It is important to be aware of how mindfulness meditation arose in the context of Buddhism, although it has been developed independently from this within psychology.Jack Cummins

    I think the idea of "mindfulness" is a westernization of eastern principles. It's always seemed to me it was developed because people were embarrassed to talk seriously in a medical or psychological context about something tainted with mysticism. It's kind of Buddhism Lite.
  • An Objection to Divine Command Theory
    I wouldn't blame SwampMan for not responding here; Bart's nonsense has hijacked the thread.Banno

    It may shock you to hear this, but I'm a bit cranky sometimes. On the other hand, three discussions with only a single post beyond the OPs is a bit much.
  • An Objection to the Teleological Argument
    Maybe we could refocus the topic from speculative Teleological Ends to retrospective Evolutionary Trends.Gnomon

    My point from the beginning has been, given the information we have about life and the universe, there is no need to hypothesize teleology, the anthropic principle, the multiverse, fine-tuning, or any other similar phenomenon. You disagree and want to keep on examining the issue. I'm not going to convince you. You're not going to convince me. We've run through the same arguments over and over.

    I don't see any point in going on.
  • An Objection to the Teleological Argument
    But I was hoping you would at least offer some relevant evidence or argument in favor of a downward trend in evolution.Gnomon

    I don't think there is a downward trend. I don't think there is any trend.

    a universe where LIFE is rare & precious.Gnomon

    We have no idea of how rare life is in this universe.

    evolution is a collective holistic process,Gnomon

    Sorry, I don't know what this means in the context of this discussion.

    Ok, ok. No more. This is fun but we're not going anywhere.
  • An Objection to the Teleological Argument
    I don't agree with your math. Let's reduce your number from 1000 to 2 to make this clearer. You know one marble is black. You also know there is only 1 or 2 marbles in the box. What we therefore know about our box is that it has one of the following combinations:

    1 black marble
    2 black marbles
    1 black marble and one not black marble

    There are three scenarios, one guarantees black, two guarantees black, and the third guarantees a 1/2 black and 1/2 non-black. I'm going with 5/6 chance for black based on the information provided.
    Hanover

    I started out with the assumption that there are a finite number of marbles in the box. I chose 1,000 for the illustration because it's a pretty big number. I didn't choose 2 because it isn't. I acknowledged we know there's at least one marble and no more than 1,000. One or all of them might be black. So, if I take another marble out of the box, the odds of it being black are anywhere between 0.001 and 1. The range of probabilities for any possible event is between 0 and 1. So, I have slightly better than no information at all about how unusual black marbles are. All I really know is that they're possible.

    So... do I need a special theory to explain why the marble I pulled out of the box was black?

    I was trying to keep things simple, but there could be a trillion marbles in the box. Or a google (10^100). Or a googleplex (10^100)^(10^100). Given the current theories of multiverse formation (quantum mechanics and cosmic inflation) the number would probably be very big. Or maybe not. Maybe just one.
  • An Objection to the Teleological Argument
    But what does the marble analogy have to do with cosmic coincidences and Teleological inferences? As noted in the quote below from 20th century astrophysicists ; after a century of searching for a "physical explanation" they still don't know what causes those lucky streaks that 21st century physicist Paul Davies called the "Cosmic Jackpot".Gnomon

    I don't see any reason to continue with this discussion. We're not getting anywhere.
  • If God is saving us, God is hurting us.
    Argument layout:
    In the Christian view, God saves us from our suffering.
    When God is not saving us from our suffering, They [God] are allowing it to continue.
    One would never inflict unnecessary suffering upon someone they loved.
    In Chrisianity, God loves everyone.
    Thus, Christianity is false.
    makayla harris

    The "problem of evil" argument is one that gets used here often. I don't find it very convincing. Who the heck knows why God does what it does? Unless I am a fundamentalist, why would I think that people who think they know what God thinks or what God wants are right? Everyone, every religion, knows that suffering and death are part of our lives. Even so, the world is a wonderful place.

    To be clear, I am not a follower of any religion.
  • An objection to the Teleological Argument: Other forms of life


    There is another thread on the same subject open now on the forum.
  • Xinxue
    In 1506, Wang Yangming proposed his main idea of Xinxue: Mind ( Soul) is the “Dao”, and there is nothing that exists other than that.Howard

    The idea of the Dao, or Tao, was around for a long time before that. Have you read the Tao Te Ching from about 2,000 years earlier. I'm not sure how Wang Yangming's use of the word differs from Lao Tzu's, if at all.

    I really like Wang YangMing and his book 《教条示龙场诸生》. I would like to propose my argument to support his claim above.

    1. If objective physics exists as science discovered, then physics cannot continue to develop.
    2. According to the history of mankind, the science of mankind has been progressing.
    3. Objective physics does not exist exactly as it is studied by science.
    4. the existence of something that does not exist objectively depends on the human’s mind.
    5. Everything depends on the human heart in order to exist.
    Howard

    I don't understand this argument.

    What if people have already reached the highest level of physics and there is no way to improve? It might be the reason why science is not developing as fast as the last couple centuries.Howard

    I don't think this is true. Physics has run up against some walls in the past few decades, but that usually means some rethinking is necessary. We'll see. On the other hand, biology, genetics, cognitive science, computer science are progressing at an amazing rate.