A scientific investigation could begin with the hypothesis that the purpose of a birds wings is flight, for example, and the scientific method could be applied to this teleological supposition. — praxis
The way you say "real purpose" tells me that what you mean by "real teleology" is having an meaningful ("real") goal as opposed to a meaningless ("as if") goal. — praxis
Idealists do not dispute the existence of objects, they simply give a unique answer to the question of what objects are. Instead of being a collection of mind-independent bits of physical matter, the idealist will say that objects of experience depend upon the mind for their content (an epistemological claim) or that they are ideas in the mind, whether my mind, other people's, or God's (an ontological claim). The idealist, in other words, is not committed to the notion that our knowledge of objects is illusory, i.e. unreal. They are real, but their reality is in some sense dependent on the mental or composed of the mental. — Thorongil
Some of what you say here reminds me of the following recent speech by W.L. Craig I saw, which might be relevant to the thread — Thorongil
You say teleology in science is a "compressed" explanation. Yet another one of your idiosyncratic terms that makes it difficult to communicate with you. Are you doing this on purpose? Anyway, technically all explanations are compressed as no explanation can account for everything, so it's only a matter of how compressed. — praxis
What distinguishes a teleological explanation is that it explains phenomena by the purpose it serves rather than by assumed causes. — praxis
As far as I'm aware, people didn't start thinking Obama is or might be the antichrist until he became President. — Michael
What I should have realized before was that the spirit of Idealism as it was expressed by W T Stace isn't merely that when I am not literally looking at the paper, there is no way to tell whether it exists. Rather, when I normally suppose that the paper exists when unperceived, I suppose that it exists in such a way that its existence outstrips any mode of observation. Stace's Idealism springs from the claim that there is no way to reliably determine that this supposition is true. — PossibleAaran
Your position is that Trump is all right — tim wood
Only for a year? I think the fantasy has been going on for many years. — Agustino
I never professed to be baffled by the suggestion that there was any difference at all. — Pseudonym
Youve jumped from some epistemological difference (namely that aristolelian 'natures' are necessarily the case whereas scientific descriptions only 'appear' to be the case, to talk about 'meaning' and I've yet to understand how you got from one to the other.
How exactly does a thing 'necessarily' being the way it is rather than merely 'appearing' to be the way it is have a negative impact on the meaning we assign it, and what evidence do you have that this is happening? — Pseudonym
What do you think is going on? — Mongrel
Here is the simple reason to doubt the ordinary story which I have stressed already. The ordinary story includes the proposition that some things exist unperceived. There is no reliable method at all, for determining whether the paper in the drawer exists unperceived, and this same problem occurs for the vast majority of objects we perceive. In that way, the belief that things exist unperceived is sheer speculation. This doesn't depend on the argument from illusion. — PossibleAaran
Like, if I have "A & B" then I can deduce that "A". — MindForged
In what sense is Idealism less explanatory? In what sense less ad hoc? In what sense less parsimonious? — PossibleAaran
In the field of biology, an example of an intrinsic teleological claim might be that the purpose of a birds wings is for flying. This is "real" or valid teleology. — praxis
An example of invalid or nonsensical teleology — praxis
Religious narratives are far from offering a complete account for everything in the universe.They don't need to. They just need to be meaningful. — praxis
You're not explaining why an overarching narrative is necessary to retain values. You're only saying that an individual's values may not jive well with the world around them. That is obvious and unenlightening. — praxis
Basically your position boils down to the fact that the scientific explanation for why things are as they are is insufficient because it cannot (does not even attempt to) demonstrate that they necessarily are that way, just that that is they way they seem to be. I'm with you so far, that's a perfectly sound definition of science. — Pseudonym
But then you go on to say that various metaphysical positions do give reasons why things are the way they are necessarily because of some metaphysical mumbo-jumbo, which you can't quite remember but nonetheless believe profoundly is the case. — Pseudonym
This argument sounds like an argument I could make using my own resources, doesn't it? — PossibleAaran
I'm baffled as to what the distinction you're trying to make is here. The fact that things have 'natures' is entirely what science, and therefore by extension materialist philosophy, has confirmed. — Pseudonym
Physical things are bound by the laws of physics to behave the way they do, — Pseudonym
How does a thing's Aristotelian 'nature' not just happen to be the case? Why are you allowing philosophical ideas to just 'be the case' for no reason, but when scientific ideas try to just 'be the case' for no reason, you think they've somehow lost something? — Pseudonym
The difference is that science goes on to say that this is just our best current theory and if a better theory turns up or if something unexpected happens then the floor might well turn to jelly. It's just that our best current theory is that it won't. — Pseudonym
Sorry for the pop-psychology, but it's crucial to understanding where I'm coming from. — Pseudonym
I believe that there are items which exist when neither I nor anyone else is perceiving them. Examples of such items are pieces of paper, seas, mountains and apartment blocks. I believe it, but how could I possibly know it? — PossibleAaran
You seem to have some meaning of the word purpose, which you are not making clear, which the apparent goal of DNA does not fit, but which the apparent goal of a God would fit. — Pseudonym
The goal of successful replication simply derives mechanistically from the chemical properties of DNA. — Pseudonym
Firstly we need to establish what you mean by meaning. I understood it to mean purpose, but you seemed not to be happy with the proximate purpose evolution gave us (to propagate our DNA). It seems you want there to be some other purpose, but I'm not sure why. — Pseudonym
The purpose of our lives, according to materialism is to secure the survival of our DNA. — Pseudonym
We all have to stop asking "why?" at some point, even the religious. — Pseudonym
If God made the world, then why? — Pseudonym
Maybe it will clarify if you can explain why your apparent view that Aristotelian teleology is "real" rather than "as if." — praxis
Right, the metaphysical form of naturalism is synonymous with scientific materialism. — praxis
But the whole isn't intelligible through and through, in any narrative. This is anthropomorphism. Meaning can't be intrinsic to the universe without an intelligence or subjective experience. — praxis
Why is an overarching narrative necessary to ground our values? — praxis
I agree with your separation of the different types of happiness, but I'm still not getting the connection with materialism. You mention raising kids as an example of just that kind of long term selfless sense of deeper fulfillment and I'd agree entirely, but you can't get much more materialistically hard-wired into our DNA, than the desire to raise kids. It's a direct result of a chemicals pre-priming neurons to fire in a particular way, but it creates on hell of a powerful meaning to life. — Pseudonym
What would be an example of a meaning or significance to the fact that anything exists at all? — Pseudonym
Well I didn't say these had to be assertions about reality. These can be understood purely formally and syntactically. — MindForged
you said something about "real" teleology. — praxis
Metaphysical naturalism is synonymous with scientific materialism. — praxis
Religious or metaphysical beliefs don't need to be true to be meaningful. — praxis
For some strange reason, he doesn't seem to believe that values exist once a materialist/mechanistic worldview is adopted. They just magically disappear. — praxis
So how does doing what makes you happy because we seem to like being happy miss that criteria? Are you specifically looking for meaning outside of the human experience? — Pseudonym
What properties would a 'meaning' have that you're finding absent in materialism? — Pseudonym
So Wittgenstein isn't that injurious to philosophy as I supposed. One member, I think it was Banno, said that everything is a game. I wonder if philosophical truths are more about the game rather than anything substantive. The question itself is part of the game I suppose? — TheMadFool
It's an axiom — MindForged
Where does 'science' say that? I've scanned through my Encyclopaedia of Science, can't find any pronouncements to that effect. Is it in a paper I've missed? — Pseudonym
This is where so many different versions and types of one religion must come from, but at some point, they have to have something in common. — Lone Wolf
Somebody will just have to wait and see. — Bitter Crank
That we wish to remain consistent does not entail that we can remain consistent. It's not [merely] a commitment. — MindForged
You seem to distinguish 'real' teleology from 'as if' teleology by whether or not there exists an intelligent designer, yes? — praxis
Naturalistic and mechanistic/materialistic are pretty much synonymous in this context, are they not? — praxis
It doesn't need to be true. It only needs to be meaningful. — praxis
You mentioned yourself that some sort of naturalistic understanding of the world could replace a "specifically religious stance" and avert a drift into nihilism. — praxis
You call it a magnificent miracle but the idea that there was once nothing and then there was something would be the true miracle. It would make more sense to say there had always been something. — Xav
I don't fully understand you. However, your thoughts on ''interpretation'' make sense but doesn't really refute the LNC. If A and B both interpret ''dead'' identically then the statement ''the cat is both dead and not dead'' is a contradiction. — TheMadFool
Can you explain what Wittgenstein means by ''language game''? — TheMadFool
I'm interested in what you're trying to say and your language is getting in the way of that. Perhaps you obfuscate by design? — praxis
No one can currently disprove the existence of an intelligent designer or whatever. — praxis
As far as I can tell we haven't had any movement in this discussion, which to my mind centers around your claim that once religious belief erodes, due to scientific discoveries that contradict religious doctrine, like evolution, for example, there's no possible over-arching narrative that makes any sense of a material universe.
My position is that the ONLY difference is that we are free, or freer, in modernity to find/construct our own narratives because there is no longer a reliance on an external authority. And to be clear, any such narratives don't need to be based on a "material universe." — praxis
Cities often wreck themselves by trying "urban renewal" where high-value buildings replace low value buildings (the kind that house restaurants, art galleries, porn shops, bars--all the stuff that leads to an interesting street. — Bitter Crank
Does this "middle-world" you speak of violate the LNC? — TheMadFool