While the questions posed are interesting in their own right, the point of this thread is not to discuss the answer, but whether the framework (story, if you will) in which the question is posed is meaningful to the way in which we do philosophy. When we inherit a tradition, are we doomed to its faults or limited by its ambition? Putting aside the quality of why one might prefer the Buddhist answer to the Western one, how do we evaluate, philosophically, the limits of our own intellectual garden and evaluate whether we wouldn't be better off being replanted somewhere else? — Ennui Elucidator
True randomness would be me rolling some dice and them turning into Santa Clause.
— Philosophim
This was random enough to make me smile. — mentos987
If true randomness exist and we are subjected to it constantly, would there not be new "first causes" being created all the time? — mentos987
If we can trace back different happenings back to a true randomness, and there are an infinite amount of true randomness. Would that not mean that there is an infinite amount of "first causes"? — mentos987
Surely that is context dependent though. — NotAristotle
The idea that it was a conscious supernatural being that caused it is introducing a level of complexity that should not be considered until the other two are ruled out. Even then, you would need concrete proof that such a being existed and caused the miracle. — Philosophim
Over time radioactive decay behaves in a statistically predictable manner, but each event is completely random and uncaused. — EricH
You may be right that OPs version of causality requires determinism.
— mentos987
Agree. — EricH
Although I still do not have a firm grasp on your ethical theory, I do commend you for your creativity; as this is very outside of the box! One of the many reasons I enjoy our conversations...(: — Bob Ross
So, ‘X is preferable to Y’ does not entail, by my lights, that ‘there ought to be as much X as possible’. If I prefer vanilla to chocolate ice cream, there is no entailment here such that I should create as much vanilla as possible. — Bob Ross
To be clear, only over an infinite period of time and space. In a finite period of time and space, order will generate overall more existence.
I don’t see why this is true. Over interval [1, 50] years a chaotic world will have more ‘new identities’, ‘parts’, and ‘relations’. Order produces a system where things do not sporadically get created: if we only procreate when we are financially stable vs. whenever we want for whatever reason we want, then the latter will produce more existent entities (and relations and what not) than the former. Chaos will always be better in your view. — Bob Ross
Sure, if we are just asking which is better under your view and everything else being equal, then 10 for an hour is better. This is not the pressing issue with the theory though. — Bob Ross
Causation need not be a rule for the universe that is on a layer on top of ours. Time, gravity, individuals, energy and causation could all be concepts exclusive to our universe. — mentos987
I'm clearly missing something. The conclusion that I get from reading these two statements is that there exists in the physical universe multiple "first causes". I.e., all those atoms that come into existence via radioactive decay have no prior cause for their creation, therefore they are all "first causes"? — EricH
I think a 4th option would be that you follow the chain of causation as far back as you can and then find out that the next causation source exists in a universe a layer above ours. Such a universe would not necessarily follow our laws of causation and could be rather unknowable. — mentos987
First Cause arguments open the door to inferences of Creator Gods, that 180's belief system explicitly excludes. Therefore, Atheistic worldviews must assume, as an implicit axiom, that the universe itself is eternal, without beginning or end. In which case, there is no need for a First Cause. — Gnomon
But in the real world a host of causal "forces" may be in play at each step, and somehow they must average out to prolong the expansion. Here is an attempt to corral those forces in the simplest mathematical structures. — jgill
And this lands you, at least prima facie, in a super counter-intuitive moral position. That’s my worry. Sure, it could still be true and be super counter-intuitive; but no one is going to accept that we have create as many things as we can. — Bob Ross
I don’t see how B is better. I get that 3 is better than 2 if #1 (that I quoted above), but this makes me question how you derived that more existence is better from existence is good: could you elaborate?
This may just be the ambiguity in “existence is good”. What does it mean for existence itself to be good? Are you just saying “existence is preferable to non-existence”? — Bob Ross
Like, in number? What constitutes “most existence”? Number of “material” and “expressive” existent entities? — Bob Ross
So this section, I don’t think, answered my worry: isn’t this kind of pure chaos you described the best possible reality in your view? This, again, goes against all moral intuitions I have (: You are advocating for the good being destruction and construction alike. — Bob Ross
My point is that the real elephant in the room, which needs to be addressed before discussion which of the two options you gave is better, is that no one will agree that the best option is to blow up the entire submarine, let alone that it is an option at all. You seem to be saying it is not only a validly morally permissible option, but it is, in fact, the best option. — Bob Ross
My initial thought was 'that's incoherent' but i reflected a few minutes and I actually think this is very, very reasonable and a problem not-oft dealt with. — AmadeusD
all other moral questions are moot
— Philosophim
Do you mean by this, that they are ipso facto immoral given that being is immoral? — AmadeusD
I would understand the claim 'nothing should exist' as better repped. by "existence shouldn't be". — AmadeusD
But if existence itself shouldn't be (as an objective moral claim) we are already too far gone to make a comment on it. We exist :) — AmadeusD
If it is F that nothing should exist, and something SHOULD exist, how can we get to a moral agent from 'something'? — AmadeusD
Im not seeing a connection between (6.) and (7.). We can only conclude that it is from (6.). — AmadeusD
But can we take the idea that existence is better
— Philosophim
I don't see how we can do that.. — AmadeusD
You say it is irrational…but I still don’t see why. — Bob Ross
Encouraging or mandating? This is what I would like to know. Is it morally permissible in your view to not create more existence when there is an opportunity to? — Bob Ross
What you do evaluate morally if there is no subject? What if a rock had the ‘opportunity’ to create more exist by interacting in a partular way but ‘chose’ not to? Well, obviously, this makes no sense because the rock doesn’t ‘decide’ anything, so why consider what would be better morally for the rock to do? — Bob Ross
1. If existence is good, then more existence is better.
This seems to be mandating the creation of more things. — Bob Ross
If I have to kill 20 people in my lifetime in legitimate self-defense and I never contribute to the creation of more life and #2, then wouldn’t it follow that I am evil?
Likewise, if we could calculate out that force castrating 10% of the population, let’s say convicts, would total net increase the amount of people or lives, would this then, under your view, be righteous? — Bob Ross
What counts as ‘existence’ here? Just things that are alive? What if I am constantly destroying rocks, is that lowering the overall ‘existences’?
Likewise, I don’t think your ‘material’ vs. ‘expressional’ existence answers my above question. — Bob Ross
Likewise, I don’t think your ‘material’ vs. ‘expressional’ existence answers my above question.
When existence A collides with existence B, something happens. That something is an existence, but a fleeting one. How each individual material reacts when an interaction happens with another material existence would be the expression of each material existence
…
If more existence is better, than more expressions of existence are also better.
This makes it sound like more collisions equals better: but this is just chaos, pure chaos, then, no? — Bob Ross
But, wouldn’t it be better, if “If more existence is better, than more expressions of existence are also better.” and more existence is better, to cause the submarine’s parts to collide, by way of explosion, with as many things as possible so as to maximize the odds of expressions of existence? — Bob Ross
As I said, the thought experiment is useless, because you have to stipulate whether or not time is passing, to get anywhere, but then you're begging the question. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let me try your own thought experiment, maybe that will help. Imagine two things not moving relative to each other, and time is passing. Easy so far, right? Now add your special premise, these two things are the only things in the universe. Where's the difficulty? — Metaphysician Undercover
Things do not need to be measured by a human being, to exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Notice that I am talking about "physical change", "observable change", and I say that time could pass without any of this occurring. However, I do not intend to exclude "change" in an absolute sense. I described time itself as a sort of change, the process of the future becoming past. The point though, is that this, itself. is not observable. We don't observe the future becoming the past, we observe particular, specific physical changes, and from this we can infer that time is passing. However, time passing, itself, is not observed. And, we must maintain this principle, that time passing is not any specific type of observable change, but a general type of change which encompasses all observable physical changes, in order that we will be able to measure all types of physical changes, through a theory which provides a non-physical, unobservable change, "time", to provide the measurement tool. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here we have it, this is where we differ. You define knowing as "most rational conclusion" and your "knowing" can be utterly changed if new evidence is introduced.
I have a much higher threshold of required certainty in my definition of knowing. — mentos987
1. I don’t see why it is internally incoherent for moral realists people who accept there is objective morality to affirm that “there should be nothing” if that particular theory accepts that it is a moral fact that “there should be nothing”. — Bob Ross
I don’t really understand your idea of morality being objective, and I think a lot of our disagreement is due to the murky waters here. — Bob Ross
So, let’s say “there should be something”: does this simply mean that “existence is preferable to non-existence” or does it mean that “we must create as many existent things as possible”? — Bob Ross
(2) this seems to contradict common-sensical moral intuitions (which perhaps isn’t relevant to your point) in the sense that it seems to be a sort of biting of a bullet (e.g., we would have to force people to procreate, etc.). — Bob Ross
But the Lorentz transformations, which are what constrains matter to travelling below the speed of light, aren't derived from empirical evidence or subject to data that is variable. They're derived from the postulate that the laws of physics are invariant (necessary for science to be consistent with itself) along with mathematical modeling. — Hallucinogen
Agnostic - Doesn't know if God exists or not
— Philosophim
That is not what agnostic means, agnostic means unknowing. — Lionino
Truth exists despite our knowledge of it. They are not the same thing. I can know physics today, but there may be aspects of it that aren't true which we discover 100 years from now.
— Philosophim
So you can "know" that Einstein was wrong (because he had only theories, no proof) until someone else provides the proof? — mentos987
If someone provides concrete proof that god exist I will be proven wrong in my belief that god does not exist. — mentos987
The way I see it, if you knew something and are later proven wrong, it means that you never knew it to begin with. — mentos987
Again, it is just a small matter of semantics. It all depends on how high a degree of certainty you assign to the word "know". — mentos987
The thought experiment is unhelpful, and that's the point I'm making. We don't know enough about time to answer the question. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the answer simply depends on what you mean by "eternity". If by "eternity", you mean time passing endlessly, then clearly time passes in the thought experiment. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, the second part is completely illogical from accepted self-evident premises. If there is only two particles unmoving relative to each other, in the entire universe, it is impossible that they could suddenly move closer to each other, because this would require a cause, meaning something else in existence is necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the proposed thought experiment is entirely useless for two distinct reasons. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you imagine two material objects not moving relative to each other, while some time passes? If so, then you ought to accept the proposition that movement of material objects relative to each other is not logically necessary for time to be passing. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, you are trying to base your conception of "time" in the observable effects of time passing (the movement of material objects), instead of looking directly at what time is, to produce a much more accurate understanding of it — Metaphysician Undercover
As ↪jgill indicates, premises concerning what we know about the physical universe, in conjunction with good logical practise, indicates that time could pass without physical change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since time in theory, is infinitely divisible (and we have found no real points of division in the continuity of time), then In theory we can still proceed to an even shorter period of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
The obvious problem with this proposal is that physicalist tendencies incline people to disallow the possibility of unobservable change, and the entire immaterial realm. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are they moving in reference to something else, like revolving? I have brought this up earlier. It has seemed odd that Minkowski spacetime might imply the passage of time with no physical movement. — jgill
So perhaps this is best left alone if that’s the MO. — AmadeusD
I don't see the need for these two existents. The change relative to each other requires the passing of time, so it is evidence to an observer that time has passed, but time could also pass without any change of these two, relative to each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyone is free to claim whatever they want. Knowing is another matter to me.
Consider this; scientists have spent the last 50 years trying to prove Einsteins theories. They are slowly finding that most of them are true. Does this mean that the theories were not true until we proved them true? Did we know them to be false until we proved them to be true? — mentos987
At the very least, if you accepted the definitions that are actually used for those terms, the ambiguity would disappear and the words would already (and they do!) serve the purpose your trying to reinvent the wheel for. — AmadeusD
Do you think matter that travels faster than the speed of light can exist? — Hallucinogen
. If you claim to not know it, then argue that there are no green men on the moon, you believe it.
— Philosophim
Err nope. Arguing against the likelihood of something does not require knowledge that it “isn’t”. Your misinterpretations are starting to seem trollish — AmadeusD
When I hear people say they "know" something about religion I will automatically translate that to "believe", because religion is such an unknowable field. — mentos987
Theists believe in God. Theists may claim they know God exists, but its never held up to any standard of knowledge, so becomes faith. — Philosophim
I do not think that atheists truly knows that god does not exist, since it is too hard to prove. — mentos987
Why is it incoherent? I think we both agree it isn’t internally incoherent, but why is it externally incoherent? — Bob Ross
If I don't know if "Contradictions should be encouraged" is real, I can follow the logic to realize it contradictions itself, so then in conclude contradictions should probably not be encouraged.
This is circular...but, then again, so is all fundamental reason and logic. — Bob Ross
P1: The way reality is does not entail how it ought to be.
P2: Moral facts are ways reality is such that it informs us how it ought to be. — Bob Ross
1. Your proof no longer works for “existence should be”, because there is no contradiction. — Bob Ross
Or what makes it objectively true in your view? — Bob Ross
Abstaining from belief requires no knowledge. Sorry if that’s not how you feel. — AmadeusD
So if someone asked, "How do you know X", you would provide your proof as such. This does not negate my point.
— Philosophim
No, I would not claim I know there are no green men on the moon. But I would argue against it. — mentos987
What? No it isn’t. That’s entirely non sequitur. It’s a lack of knowledge of the existence of God/s. It is neutral. It is not a decision. It is in fact NOT making a decision. — AmadeusD
I know that there are tons of things that I have never heard of nor experienced any evidence for, yet I do not claim they do not exist. — mentos987
Regardless of compliance with Cicero's Criteria, and with Skeptical caution, the Enformationism thesis remains a philosophical conjecture, not a scientific fact. — Gnomon
Like many atheists I do not say there is no god since that is a positive claim which requires demonstration. — Tom Storm
Suffice to say you are wrong here and just repeating the incorrect descriptions. Abstaining from belief requires no knowledge. It is precisely a lack of knowledge that leads one to abstain. No evidence? Ignored. — AmadeusD
Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods. Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system. To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
Agnostic isn’t just a “weaker” version of being an atheist. It answers a different question. Atheism is about what you believe. Agnosticism is about what you know. — Tom Storm
An atheist merely abstains from belief. They do not assert that God does NOT exist. — AmadeusD
I think yours is an inadequate definition of time because "registered change" implies observation, judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, physicists are actually heavily invested in the use of "causation". Take a look at the concepts of "lightcone", "timelike & spacelike", "worldline", "propertime", for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
Until we come up with a clear description of what time is, this statement cannot be justified — Metaphysician Undercover
When an atom decays radioactively from one element to another there is no prior event or cause for this to happen - it is completely random. — EricH