Well, the circularity of your "metaphysical belief", sir, begs the question. Besides, Christians mostly do not "actually live" Christ-like or miraculous "lives" even though 'Christ & miracles' are explicit "metaphysical beliefs" (e.g. Thomism, Calvinism) just as atheist materialists mostly do not "actually live" purposeless "lives" even though 'the purposelessness of material existence' is an explicit "metaphysical belief (e.g. nihilism, absurdism). Under existential-pragmatic scrutiny, sir, your espousal of Collingwood's absolute idealism does not hold up. — 180 Proof
Science makes metaphysical assumptions, within which it does its thing. — Pantagruel
What facts or metaphysical truths can it guarantee? If you think there are such facts or truths, how does it guarantee them?
— Janus
Perhaps the challenge is knowing in the face of uncertainty, in other words, belief. For me, the notion of spirituality aligns precisely with the noumenon-phenomenon (mind-body) problem and is to that extent "de-mystified", although it is still mysterious. Yes, we can have some certainties of the material world, which are in a sense trivial. These form the framework of our human existence, the stage whereupon we live our lives. And those human truths are not so easily acquired or proven. And of course, when human knowledge has reached a high level of sophistication, we begin to discover that the so-called simple truths of the material world are not themselves straightforward, when we finally reach the horizons of the quantum and the cosmic.
In the human body, muscles work in opposing pairs. And the ultimate strength of any muscle is always limited by the weakness of its antagonist partner. I conceive the mind (spirit) matter dyad to be like that. Indeed, all knowledge. Hence the power of dialectic.
Such understanding ranges from the comprehension of the babblings of children to Hamlet or the Critique of Pure Reason. From stones and marble, musical notes, gestures, words and letters, from actions, economic decrees and constitutions, the same human spirit addresses us and demands interpretation. (Dilthey, The Rise of Hermeneutics) — Pantagruel
Probably everything above is nonsense and I look forward to being told why — AmadeusD
If I don't have certainty of my own experience I can't very well have certainty about anything else, since anything else will always be an aspect of that experience. — Pantagruel
As far as being "reliably trained," you oversimplify. Not everyone can be reliably trained, it requires at least some aptitude — Pantagruel
Conversely, for people with the appropriate aptitude, the contention is that they are being educated with spiritual knowledge, whose broadened awareness is the practical result. Knowledge of the human spirit evolves right along with civilization. Some people even think that is what civilization is. Hegel, to name one. As well as the hordes who have tried to follow in his footsteps. — Pantagruel
Sure, things that are trivially true are usually trivially evident. But some things are not trivially evident. And to people who lack the ability to comprehend the basis of organic chemistry, for example, there is a whole lot of determinate knowledge that is not clear. — Pantagruel
I assume that you are classifying privileged internal mental states as empirical observations then, since I know and experience the truth of my own experiences. — Pantagruel
Tell me this is not a factor in these discussions. :lol: — Wayfarer
purpose, meaning, and design as fundamental features of the world. — Thomas Nagel
Do not agree. If you replace 'assumption' with 'inference' then, yes, that is where i stand. I think this is where science actually stands. I do not think 'evidence for evolution' is the factual, undebatable schema it is claimed to be outside its competition with other theories — AmadeusD
In all humility, I think this accounts for a lot of the outrage I provoke in the advocacy of philosophical idealism. — Wayfarer
Exactly where that line gets drawn that you call "determinate knowledge" is a function of innate ability, expertise, and experience. — Pantagruel
one as consciousness does not perceive owns own consciousness. — javra
You sound victimized. Let's refresh. — javra
You view this as "an argument for what you believe" whereas to me it is nothing more and nothing less than an emotively expressed authoritarian assertion: one which wants to disallow me from thinking freely. — javra
What I quoted was not an argument, but an angry denunciation. — Wayfarer
Again, you're just singing from the positivist playbook — Wayfarer
If you lived in a culture, such as India or China, where reincarnation was part of the culture, you might have a different view of that. And I suggest you're not interested in any 'coherent philosophical investigation' of such matters because you're pre-disposed to reject consideration of them. Hence your self-appointed role as secular thought police, which we see on display here with tiresome regulariy. — Wayfarer
So, again, please demonstrate how, as you claim, 'the established facts of evolution and cosmology are as "equally compatible" with idealism (i.e. antirealism) as with physicalism'. — 180 Proof
As just one example among many, consciousness is "something outside the range of human perception". Yet to proscribe philosophical investigations of consciousness seems a bit authoritarian. — javra
What then do you make of value theory in general? Ought it not be philosophically investigated? Meaningful tests regarding, for example, the very validity of dichotomizing intrinsic and extrinsic value are certainly not yet available, if ever possible. Does this, according to you, make the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic value something that "cannot coherently function as a claim"? — javra
Critique regarding what should and should not be philosophically investigated — javra
Though we disagree in some respects, ↪Fooloso4 beat me to it in the example he provided to the contrary. — javra
BTW, if you tack on questions to me after you've made a post, I might not see them. But maybe you already knew this? — javra
And how are any of the examples you've given "beyond human judgement"? Plenty of people judge these notions all the time. Some favoring these notions and others opposing their validity. — javra
Many who will uphold religions and essoterica will of course disagree with the dogma that they are "arbitrary imaginings". You seem to have some superior knowledge to the contrary. Care to share? — javra
I'm against any proscription of thought regarding reality. Hope that's blunt enough. The thought-police ought not prevent others from thinking freely as they will. As far as I see things, the ideas which result thereof can then be in part judged by natural selection. — javra
Yea. Any suppression of free thought regarding any existential topic will serve as an example of "unjustifiabley proscriptive". Scary to me to think otherwise. But repressive regimes are not unheard of. — javra
Dude, knowledge of what a sublimely aesthetic experience is felt to be shall often enough be ineffable ... other than by saying something like "the beauty of that there is beyond words".
But that aside, why should attempts at effing the heretofore ineffable be off limits? — javra
Given an example of such "necessary ignorance" which should remain off limits to investigation? — javra
Ha. Scientific hypothesis are "made up shit in the face of the unknown" which can be empirically tested for. — javra
See my first question. If we are necessarily ignorant of X than there is an implicitly affirmed proscription of thought, debate, and investigation as pertains to X. — javra
Funny. All I have are opinions of various strengths, some of which pass a threshold beyond which I term these opinions fallible knowledge — javra
Where have I affirmed "ineffable knowledge" in any of this debate? — javra
The esoterica of the gaps.... — Tom Storm
We seem to either be suffering from an absence of mirrors in which to see our own selves and conducts on this forum or else from a self-righteous arrogance of somehow being beyond foolishness. Or maybe both.
Because science and its paradigms does not seek to accomplish the exact same feat? Or any other field of human knowledge?
The proscription of thought, debate, and investigation on a philosophy forum by some is telling. — javra
You haven't been following the discussion too closely, then. Yes, Socrates/Plato stated that the Good as Form is beyond being. — javra
The issue was how does one define, else understand, being - this, specifically, in terms of Plato's affirmations. — javra
I happen to agree. Hence my contention that there is something lost in translation in saying that "the Good is beyond being". This would entail that the Good is not. Which is contrary to Plato's works. — javra
'Before' is a concept. — Wayfarer
But it's still a quite fuzzy distinction that, while it may suffice for everyday dealings, becomes more problematic as we think and analyze it with some depth. — Manuel
Sure, you can say external objects are real, but to go on to argue,
that our perceptions of them are real on account of the real affects they, along with environmental conditions, light, sound, molecules of scent and taste, and the nature of our bodies themselves, have on our perceptions.
— Janus
Raises a serious problem.
What about the objects' effects are we interacting with? As Descartes points out, the heat is not in the fire, and as almost everyone says, the orange and yellow colour is not in the fire either, and so on down the list of properties. — Manuel
My interpretation of 'beyond being' is that it means 'beyond the vicissitudes of existence', 'beyond coming-to-be and passing away'.
— Wayfarer
:100: And I'm in agreement with your post in general. — javra
A big issue, to my mind, is what exactly is meant by external here? People often speaking about external and internal, as if that distinction is very clear, I don't think it is. It would be replied that this sofa I am seeing is external to me, that is, it is not in my mind, so it is external in that sense. — Manuel
On the assumption that we have no access to the external ('external' here meaning 'external to our bodies') world, what would constitute evidence for evolution? Just answer that one question and we might get somewhere. — Janus
Correlation, I suppose, would be the only way. Do the things we're experiencing correlate with the expectations Evolutionary Theory posits?
But, I get the feeling I am committed to basically say "its an inference" and im fairly comfortable with that. — AmadeusD
On the assumption that we have no access to the external ('external' here meaning 'external to our bodies') world, what would constitute evidence for evolution? Just answer that one question and we might get somewhere.The veracity of evolution itself is based on the assumption that we have access to external reality
— Janus
I am fairly sure understand your position and am not missing it(that is obviously possibly wrong)... But, my position is still no, it isn't, and that this is the one of the cruxes. — AmadeusD
Yeah, that is not what I or Ligotti was claiming in the sense of "meaninglessness". So that is a moot argument. — schopenhauer1
How so? You said there is no intrinsic value. That is missing the point, that it is only beings that perceive value, and human beings that are self-aware they are perceiving value. And that is what matters, not what the universe is devoid of beings who have value. If that was the case, we wouldn't need to talk about anything. We just wouldn't "be". — schopenhauer1
We have discussed this before, and I believe I have answered you before regarding this. — schopenhauer1
The value is squarely on the being-in-the-world. It is rather about not the universe devoid of being, but the universe with a being that can feel, comprehend, and in the case of the human, self-reflect. — schopenhauer1
I don't view "no purpose" as positive or negative either on its face. Rather, it is suffering that is paramount to the pessimist. Suffering can show itself in peculiar ways to the human animal. When doing something tedious, or in prolonged bouts of melancholy, one might see an immense worthlessness to it all. — schopenhauer1
Indeed, what better way to be motivated than some external, culturally derived and tested way? — schopenhauer1
Since we cannot refute this possibility on the basis of the nature of the concepts of existence and cause (as distinguished from the empirical fact that these things always seem to go together), we therefore cannot make the case that it is impossible for anything to come into existence without a cause – after all, anything is possible unless it is logically impossible. — expos4ever
I agree, that evolution has done an incredibly good job of making us think this is the case... — AmadeusD
Fact is, our mind is in receipt of data only. The movie it puts together to play to our experiential faculties isn't actually relevant to that - its an illusion. — AmadeusD
I'm sure i could find plenty of examples of thinkers relating experience to sense data (perhaps in other words) and carving out "actual objects", as it were, from the data. IN fact, that seems to be the entire thrust of Idealism (more specifically, Kant's Transcendental Idealism). — AmadeusD
It isn't. It's derived from the very clear fact that my mind is not actually in touch with any objects, yet my mind is the arena of my experience — AmadeusD
Hmm, point taken, but also I disgree.. but I think you're a step back from the level of analysis i'm at in this discussion.
Yes, that is, superficially, a reason to think those things are 'out there'. Our experiences converge, as it were. But I have already noted that I assume there are things out there. But it's an assumption that those people and their perceptions are also "real", so it's somewhat tautological to rest on that, imo. — AmadeusD
They are all part of the same whole. There is no "true level" of human misery and suffering that we can discover by "cutting through illusion." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I know. And I have answered, many times, my friend: I have experience, and I cannot understand that I have experience, other than as a result of sense data, based on the empirical fact of my experience. — AmadeusD