I think what Nishitami failed to grasp was that will to
nothingness is still willing. Self for Nietzsche isnt an entity but a vector of change. — Joshs
Ideas are abstractions and have no material form. But they can be Causal, as in the Aryan Myth that motivated millions of people to join in a world war, and a holocaust, with devastating physical effects. — Gnomon
We have not (all of us, or most of us) agreed as to what metaphysics even is. — Manuel
I can certainly see the appeal of using "physics" as ones metaphysics, and then forget about all the other issues that will arise. Or, as is said, "shut up and calculate." — Manuel
Since explanations concerning the cause of material being have always been incomplete, what is wrong with pursuing an explanation which would likely require a further explanation? I don't see the merit in your rejection of such a "rabbit hole". — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, what does it say apart fromYou reckon? :yikes: — Wayfarer
?"necessary being, also known as the unconditioned, unmade, uncreated and so on". — Janus
The value it gives, is to tell us that to proceed in the direction of pure chance is to go in the wrong direction. — Metaphysician Undercover
To go down the road of "there is an explanation", even if that explanation may require a further explanation, and a further one after that, is a much more reasonable route than "there is no explanation". — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe that something that is conspicuously absent in modern philosophy generally is the whole concept of necessary being, also known as the unconditioned, unmade, uncreated and so on. — Wayfarer
then this doesn't amount to saying anything much.necessary being, also known as the unconditioned, unmade, uncreated and so on. — Wayfarer
So, no, I don't agree that it is pointless or meaningless, it is mainly dismissed on the basis of incomprehension. — Wayfarer
My position is that you have an experience, and it might be caused by a variety of things, but the sensation itself ultimately was caused by your brain, or some such internal faculty that experiences. — Hanover
The point of metaphysics is to arrive at the terminus of explanation. Surely many will say that it can’t be done, but it’s worth spelling that out. — Wayfarer
That's why I think Wittgenstein said that believing that scientific laws are the explanations of natural phenomena is illusory. — Wayfarer
Determined by what? Or rather, what is it that determines? — Wayfarer
I agree. And any explanation only brings forth more that needs explaining (which I see as a good thing).Asking for why is a contamination of science by human notions of purpose and meaning. — T Clark
a maelstrom of studied indifference — Tom Storm
All that's to say, nature is mind-boggling. That's a good thing, to me. — Manuel
That is just another way of saying 'by chance'. The million-monkeys idea - give a million monkeys typewriters and enough time and they'll produce a manuscript. When in fact what you will get is an enormous pile of broken typewriters covered in shit. — Wayfarer
I wonder if much of these discussions about science being this or that could be alleviated by speaking of "habits", rather than "laws", as this latter term implies something of which there can be no exception. — Manuel
But we know circumstances in which such universal "laws", break down, in black holes or near the singularity. — Manuel
No argument there. But what do you make of that statement 'the whole modern conception of nature is founded on the illusion that so-called laws of nature are the explanations of natural order'? Why does Wittgenstein think this is an 'illusion'? — Wayfarer
That's how it must seem to us in this day and age but do please notice the implicit division between 'our own natures' and 'the Universe', as if these are separable. But really they're not, as nature is not something we're outside of, or apart from. The idea of being a subject in a world of objects is just that - an idea. An idea which then becomes a condition. — Wayfarer
His argument is that until now, scientists simply assume scientific laws, without exploring why they are the way they are. That's why he is saying science 'rests on faith' - faith in scientific laws. I think that's a hangover from science's Christian origins. (See Nancy Cartwright No God, No Laws.) — Wayfarer
I take it as axiomatic that the predominant belief in secular culture is that 'life arose by chance'. — Wayfarer
This is that the Universe gives rise to sentient life-forms as a way of discovering horizons of being that could not be realised any other way. You find ideas like that in Tielhard du Chardin, Henri Bergson, and others. It's neither creationist on the one side, nor materialist on the other. — Wayfarer
Yep, it is a bit like that!AAARRRGGGG!!!! — Mww
It’s import, in accordance with the theory from which it arises, is to limit our empirical knowledge to only that which can be a phenomenon for us. Otherwise, nothing prevents us from claiming knowledge of everything there is, even without the possible experience of it. — Mww
In other words, the laws should have an explanation from within the universe and not involve appealing to an external agency.
The specifics of that explanation are a matter for future research. But until science comes up with a testable theory of the laws of the universe, its claim to be free of faith is manifestly bogus.
They can only be determined to be reasonable or not, based on Logic and incomplete evidence. — Gnomon
I'm not sure what you're getting at. — Hanover
The properties experienced of the object are subjectively imposed. — Hanover
I really hope so. — Tom Storm
But further, saying that we impose the properties of the experience seems to directly deny what you claimed earlier: that the noumenal is causative of the phenomenal. — Banno
I've acknowledged it's causative, but there other ways to evoke phenomenal states other than perceptual input, like chemicals, electrodes in the brain, tumors, mental dysfunction. — Hanover
The properties experienced of the object are subjectively imposed. — Hanover
Frantic Freddie had an unfortunate tendency. He enjoyed belittling others, thinking his views were unique. But they weren't entirely, and so he would from time to time borrow from other philosophers, without attribution and even while criticizing them. His Amor Fati, for example, is similar to Stoicism, though he maligned the Stoics. — Ciceronianus
All I can say is that we're worlds apart, and I'm not interested in bridging the chasm. It's too much work, and whatever reward might come of it doesn't justify it. Like I already said more than once, I'm engaged in these discussions for my own reasons and my own understanding of meta-Buddhist topics that would be impossible or inappropriate to bring up in a Buddhist setting. — baker
