If there can be presuppositions which are "not true", then since presuppositions, under any reasonable interpretation of the meaning of the term, are also both suppositions and beliefs, — Janus
You seem to overlook that you are made entirely of inanimate matter - that has evolved to life. — Pop
Are you arguing that inanimate matte dose not evolve? If so what is your argument? Describe one instance of inanimate matter that has not evolved. — Pop
Evolution is well established from observation of evolving organic systems like Covid19, so the proposition in the OP "without evolution" is not an option. — Pop
It is easy to forget that everything is evolving, not just living things but the entire universe is in motion and evolving, and emerging, and natural selection acts on everything, not just animate matter, but all matter - it culls non viable form. — Pop
I think it is enough to describe how inanimate matter becomes animate. — Pop
This is a horizon of oblivion where philosophy usurps science. — Proximate1
presupposition
noun [ C or U ]
uk
/ˌpriː.sʌp.əˈzɪʃ.ən/ us
/ˌpriː.sʌp.əˈzɪʃ.ən/
something that you believe is true without having any proof:....
....So suppositions and presuppositions are species of belief, but not all beliefs are suppositions in this strict sense, of course ( that is some beliefs are founded on evidence).
Now, Collingwood uses a term,"absolute presupposition" to denote those presuppositions which are bedrock for all metaphysical and physical inquiry. I see no reason to think that he could not equally well have used the term "absolute supposition" or "absolute belief" to denote the same thing.... — Janus
In what ways do the views clash with your experience of desire and pleasure? — HamiltonB
In ordinary linguistics, they may be, from which arises the relative presupposition, according to Collingwood. In metaphysics, on the other hand, where I stake my epistemological tentpoles, presuppositions are taken as necessary conditions, re: absolute presuppositions, and beliefs, at best, are merely contingent judgements. Only here does it become apparent that the negation of a judgement does not falsify the presupposition that supported it. “Elvis is not dead”, a possible belief, has no affect on the presupposition of Elvis, the condition necessary for the belief. We don’t need to analyze the proposition to grant the necessity of the presupposition contained in it, even while analyzing the truth of the proposition itself. — Mww
Since I'm not likely to read that highly technical article, — Gnomon
n tune with Tao is much more than factual correctness and sometimes words just are not good enough to convey meaning. — Athena
Thoughts/criticisms on this form of psychological egoism elaborated by Justin Garson in the paper, Two Types of Psychological Hedonism? — HamiltonB
I had hardly abandoned the discussion when the original post had been just 5 days earlier! — Gary Enfield
This is a discussion group - so let's discuss.
Do you have any comments on the evidential subject matter? — Gary Enfield
We are having a debate about complex and personal things. Look out someone might get hurt! — Tom Storm
Found this particularly troubling... — creativesoul
have some respect and do not resort to name calling. — Tom Storm
It speaks to both the believer and the belief that they form, have, and/or hold. — creativesoul
It's understandable, there's a lot of anger towards science because it has destroyed the fantasy life of many people.
The problem is no one has yet provided any evidence that there is a God or any kind of supernatural realm. And no one has found a pathway to any reliable knowledge other than though methodological realism. I would never say that science is 100% certain or that humans can have access to capital T truth. But we know what works and what is merely speculation or fantasy. — Tom Storm
"What is the relationship, if any, between emergent properties and quantum mechanics?" Here's a clue : it's not questioning whether "biology emerges out of chemistry and physics". — Gnomon
Emergence and quantum mechanics describe different kinds of phenomena. — T Clark
As Atoms, so called indivisible elements by the Greeks, have been later discovered to be composed of still more elemental quarks, is it possible to move down to scales of smallness beyond quarks or is a dimensionless particle as small as it gets? — Proximate1
I really like to see your opinions on this, or maybe to see other theories that i did not think of and could have a little logic as well. — Adughep
a steady stream of virgins thrown into the volcan will keep it from erupting, — tim wood
I’m surprised you’d consider presuppositions are beliefs, or, as you say later, are truth-apt. Both of those would seem to make presuppositions congruent with empirical judgements and absolute presuppositions congruent with a priori judgements. Dunno how to justify that, at least from a metaphysical domain.You know...what with logical priority and all. — Mww
If absolute presuppositions are claimed to be the unquestioned hidden basis of ones worldview, — creativesoul
Collingwood wants to say that these hav no truth value, but is that simply because they've gone unstated, and thus not articulated by the person holding them? — creativesoul
I have watched with interest and awe at the passionate exchanges which you have conducted on theoretical and principled grounds, but I feel that you have largely strayed from the original topic. — Gary Enfield
So can we please speculate about solutions that have practical application in the circumstances of the examples, rather than endless debates about methods? — Gary Enfield
All you have said so far is that absolute presuppositions (in distinction to ordinary presuppositions) can be neither true nor false. I know Collingwood says that; I have read An Essay on Metaphysics. I am not convinced he is right, but that is a separate issue. — Janus
why don't you explain exactly how substituting the word 'belief' for the word 'presupposition' misrepresents Collingwood. — Janus
You should not presume to know that Collingwood would have rejected the use of the term belief as a synonym for presupposition. It just doesn't happen to be the term he used is all; to quibble over that thus seems quite pedantic and supercilious, and irrelevant to the OP. — Janus
If suppositions or presuppositions are beliefs, which in accordance with ordinary parlance they indeed are, then absolute presuppositions are absolute beliefs. The logic is inexorable. — Janus
How could it make sense to deny that suppositions are beliefs? — Janus
To me, the most important insight of Collingwood's essay is that absolute presuppositions are not facts. They are not true or false. They are useful or not useful in the particular situation in which we find ourselves. As I see it, we choose absolute presuppositions, either consciously or, more likely, unconsciously. I'm not sure if Collingwood would agree with that. — T Clark
I did not like Confucious because he is so sexist, but I did like his explanation of the importance of putting effort into being the kind of human being we want to be. — Athena
I would not know happiness if I had not stumbled onto philosophy! — Athena
My approach is outside the scope of his inquiry, but not contradictory. I would hope, both complementary and complimentary. — Pantagruel
I am a very fortunate person to have such a good life, — Athena
Thanks, ↪T Clark. That’s what I wanted, from Collingwood himself, — Mww
Metaphysical thinking is scientific and vice-versa; both are based upon and in search of absolute presuppositions. And an absolute presupposition is one which is actually believed as such. — Pantagruel


You referred to a technical article about "broken symmetry", which may or may not apply to this thread. I didn't login to read the article, so please summarize, in your own words, what "Emergence" means to you? — Gnomon
If we are just loads of chemicals grouped together through a random procces, — Franz Liszt
How do we know that our logical thoughts would actually show any truth in this universe? — Franz Liszt
