God, no. We tolerate every species of fool in my country; dunno about yours. But tolerate them we do, because freedom of speech is a rights-based equality, available to all. — J
That is a very thin attempt at an explanation. What are the two putatively different claims, how are they different, and which one am I supposed to be making? — Leontiskos
Banno makes that statement as an atheist who is presumably not assuming non-living minds (whether or not God counts as a non-living mind). — Leontiskos
it is not time or change that changes but things.
— Janus
Not really. Or, not always. I just ate dinner from the same plate I ate dinner from last week.
Anyway….not that important. — Mww
It is true that there is gold in Boorara. If all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed, then it would still be true that there is gold in Boorara.
It is true that even if all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else were undisturbed, that there would still be gold in Boorara. — Leontiskos
I wonder why there is no Nobel Prize for philosophy.Frankly, I am surprised there are as many grants for philosophy as there are. — jgill
Even the instantaneous cogito? — Moliere
Not quite; time is the representation of change, change presupposes time as the means by which changes are determinable. Change requires things that change, usually in the form of movement, but nevertheless, something empirical, whereas time itself does not change. — Mww
Well he literally said, "If all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed, then it would still be true that there is gold in Boorara." This is clearly committing to the view that truth exists where no minds do.
But apparently you hold a different view, namely the view that we can make truth-apt statements about unperceived events? — Leontiskos
For me the strangeness of Banno's position is the claim that truth can exist where no minds do. — Leontiskos
That would depend on there being a valid objection. — Wayfarer
Apart from any conception of it, it neither exists nor doesn't exist. Both existence and non-existence are concepts. — Wayfarer
Whatever 'particles' are, they are not defineable until they are measured. — Wayfarer
What their existence might be outside of any perspective is meaningless and unintelligible, as a matter of both fact and principle. — Wayfarer
Physics has demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that the purported fundamental constituents of material reality do not have a meaningful existence outside the act of measurement which specifies them. — Wayfarer
This has more to do with the sort of skepticism inspired by Descartes which desires a certain foundation. — Moliere
A limping authority that derives from pop physics. — Banno
But one may be an empirical, without being a metaphysical, realist. — Wayfarer
Consciousness in that sense is collective. — Wayfarer
The fourth thing, albeit directed at Janus, is that it is not obviously wrong. — Michael
Even if you're an astrophysicist aware of the vastness of the Universe, you are providing the perspective within which that is meaningful. — Wayfarer
Similarly, in phenomenology (e.g., Heidegger or Merleau-Ponty), the world is not an objective domain "out there" but is always encountered through the structures of embodied, situated being. — Wayfarer
But there's also the philosophical understanding of the role of the mind in constructing the world. — Wayfarer
This sort of question is risible. The Orion Nebula is not dependent on you, nor are trilobites. But your saying anything (thinking, believing, doubting...) about them is dependent on you. — Banno
Neither of those is quite right. It's a silly argument. — Banno
Ok. I'm not a science guy but I am reminded of the famous Feynman quote, "I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum mechanics."
Is there not also a difference between science's predictive success versus knowing why? — Tom Storm
Yes, I suppose this works. I'm curious what others might say. It seems to be a tendentious area. — Tom Storm
Give it time and it might explain these phenomena.
— jgill
Is that a faith based position? :wink: — Tom Storm
Interesting. Does nature include quantum mechanics and consciousness? — Tom Storm
Doesn't it rest upon a metaphysical presupposition that reality can be understood? — Tom Storm
If you're familiar with philosophy of science, E A Burtt's Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science, in particular, you will see that this is completely mistaken. The 'metaphysical belief' in question being early modern science's division of primary and secondary attributes, overlaid on the Cartesian separation of mind and matter. — Wayfarer
Unless he means that we can't take our seriousness seriously? — J
The unity of thinking and being described by Plotinus challenges the prevailing view that knowledge is a sequential accumulation of information. — Wayfarer
As regards its modus operandi, then, all analysis is metaphysical analysis; and, since analysis is what gives its scientific character to science, science and metaphysics are inextricably united, and stand or fall together.
~R.G. Collingwood, Essay on Metaphysics — Pantagruel
Yet it falls into the common trap of: "wow, philosophy is hard and we don't get the same sort of certainty the early moderns decided should be the gold standard, thus nothing really matters." — Count Timothy von Icarus
1. If “God exists” is true then it is possible to prove that it is true
2. If “God exists” is false then it is possible to prove that it is false
3. If it is not possible to prove that “God exists” is true and not possible to prove that “God exists” is false then “God exists” is neither true nor false — Michael
It's not obvious to the anti-realist.
If you're only "argument" against anti-realism is that it's "obviously" wrong then it's not an argument, just a denial. — Michael
If God exists then we can know that God exists, and if God doesn't exist then we can know that God doesn't exist. — Michael
The anti-realist will say that it is knowable that "there are unknowable truths" is false. — Michael
You assume "there are unknowable truths" is unknowable and then conclude "there are unknowable truths is knowable". — Michael