That's all "salvation" can be. — Vera Mont
Considering that some of the happiest countries on the planet are atheist and some of the worst aren't that's a good start. Buddhism is a religion but not to the extent others are, if anything even Buddhists themselves wouldn't call it that.
Sounds like you're just scared. — Darkneos
Except it is that simple, sorry you can't accept that. Religion overall has been a net negative for society, it's stagnated progress, and as we have seen recently it has reversed it in some ways. — Darkneos
In traditional theology and metaphysics, the natural was largely conceived as the evil, and the spiritual or supernatural as the good. — Max Horkheimer, The Eclipse of Reason, P11
:100:Anyway, in the main, atheism is not a "theological position" any more than celibacy is a sexual position. — 180 Proof
:up:Though IMO there are no existential truths, just opinions. — Darkneos
I would argue that religion isn't either. Religion is more about making their truths reality. — Darkneos
Our “heads” which we experience phenomenally, in the sense of a physical head of our bodies within our conscious experience, are, under both physicalism and analytic idealism, representations. When you look in the mirror, your head is a representation that your brain (if you are a physicalist) or your mind (if you are an idealist) has of itself. Your brain (or mind) is trying to represent itself to itself when it views itself by producing perceptions of it (just like anything else). — Bob Ross
But the challenge is, how can any kind of 'either/or' thinking or logical argument, in general, be explained in terms of the kinds of physical causation that characterises brain states? — Wayfarer
In the cause of physical brains, the brain state will be the configuration required to instantiate non-physical mental content.
— Mark Nyquist
So, how to validate that statement is what is at issue. How do you think you could ascertain the empirical fact of that statement, on the basis of neuroscience. — Wayfarer
What evidence would that be? We don't observe what we don't observe, so ...
As far as I can tell this is not something we believe on evidence at all, but an assumption. Hume describes it so. — Srap Tasmaner
Of course this is not quite what you mean, but that we infer similar perceptions upon seeing similar behavior. Not saying that's a bad inference, but it's an inference, not an observation. — Srap Tasmaner
So if the couch has changed too little for me to notice or care since I last saw it an hour ago, I'm allowed to pretend it's the same and call it the same. Is that the metaphysics you had in mind? — Srap Tasmaner
The argument against it is that it somehow has to posit that these neuological states are at once physical and semantic, i.e. meaning-encoding. — Wayfarer
Representation are within our heads: they are perceptions; but, the world one is fundamentally representing is will (i.e., ideas in a universal mind) as opposed to something unknown (for Kant). — Bob Ross
Rather, we assume they do. If you read my posts more carefully, you would see that I am saying that both the posits of 'existing' or 'non-existing' are mental constructions or surmises. — Wayfarer
you have said there are no immaterial minds - how would you even go about looking for such a mind (I hesitate to say 'phenomenon')? We have physical instruments that can detect electromagnetic and sub-atomic phenomena with exquisite accuracy, but how would you even go about investigating such a question? — Wayfarer
I think the stumbling block you're dealing with is the idea that unobserved ceases to exist, like what G E Moore said, when he asked if the train wheels ceased to exist when the passengers were boarded. That is not what Berkeley's idealism is claiming. — Wayfarer
Further to that, scientific method embodies a great many axioms, at least some of which are metaphysical, which, however, are not visible to science itself, as they’re not considered to be amongst the objects of scientific analysis. — Wayfarer
I think "science is founded on" pragmatic, or working, assumptions like that one. Such a "metaphysical position", however, may be a categorical generalization that has been subsequently deduced from scientific practices and findings. — 180 Proof
No need to take offense — Gnomon
at the novel ideas of professional physicists, or both? — Gnomon
There is a lot of documentation nowadays on the fundamental cosmological constraints that must be the case in order for a cosmos to form, and not simply dissipate into plasma or collapse into a mass of infinite density. These can't be explained in terms of consequences of the singularity as they must exist as causal constraints. I think they bear at least a suggestive similarity to a priori conditions of existence (see for example Just Six Numbers, Martin Rees.) — Wayfarer
The tree appears to you, and as such is part of the phenomenal realm. The tree - in and of itself - is the noumenal. — creativesoul
Is it a matter of opinion?
Hume agonizes over this; he can find no good reason to think objects persist, and yet he finds that he does believe so. It's a sort of prejudice; nature, he suggests, has taken the decision out of his hands, as a matter too important to leave to stumbling human reason. — Srap Tasmaner
So your intention was to say that the existence of the rock is an attribute of it that is not dependent on being observed. — Srap Tasmaner
(Around here was where I mentioned Hume's suggestion that we seem only to think things as existing, which leaves open a question about whether existence is merely, as it were, an element of how we conceive things.) — Srap Tasmaner
so it's one of the properties we can still safely attribute to unobserved objects. — Srap Tasmaner
My point is still that you're trying to bracket the "observedness" of the object, while depending on it completely to say anything at all, which means you haven't really bracketed it at all. — Srap Tasmaner
it says something about reality, as the subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
Roughly, I'm not convinced you've made any progress toward removing us from your conceptions. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm not arguing a "first cause", I am arguing a cause of material existence. This is an actuality which is prior to material existence, as cause of material existence. Since it is prior to material existence it is immaterial. — Metaphysician Undercover
What we have here is a case of human reason not operating in accordance with reality. Reality, as we know it, is that all things have a cause (principle of sufficient reason). So when we allow ourselves to say that such and such a thing has no cause, we are really allowing our reasoning to be not in accordance with reality, by accepting this premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
According to Aristotle biological beings are a single physical entity. There are no separate forms and hyle floating around waiting to be combined. There is not one without the other, substantiated in living physical entities, that is, substances. — Fooloso4
You can and you can also pick up the table with cup on top of it or you can pick the table apart, say by breaking one of its legs. Or you can sit on the table and use it as a chair, say someone who has never seen a table, might use it that way. — Manuel
So why do you call this something-or-other you're conceiving "unobserved rocks"? — Srap Tasmaner
in fact it is more difficult to imagine that they cease to exist when not being perceived
— Janus
Something like this then: when I imagine a rock existing unobserved, I imagine a rock and then conceptually remove things like color and other perceptible attributes, until I can only say that right there, where we would observe rocks if we were observing, there is something about which we can say nothing, except that it's still there when we're not looking. — Srap Tasmaner
But I hold a rather low opinion of the human species in general, so, there is that. — Mww
And yes, these objects don't have a natural separation point in which we can say this is a cup and this other thing is a table, on which the cup rests on, there's no reason why we can't take both things to be a single object. — Manuel
Think it'll work for conceiving unobserved rocks? — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, but I'm not sure we can just switch from visualizing to something vague like "conceiving" and declare the problem solved. I think it was Hume who noted that to conceive of something is to conceive of it existing -- which cuts both ways: on the one hand, there's no "and existing" step, which either means existence is not a real predicate (which Hume says in almost so many words), or it means it's already baked in, i.e., it's at the very least part of how we think things. — Srap Tasmaner
There's something interesting here, don't rush past it. — Srap Tasmaner
