As I read you, dear thinkers, I get the impression we're all too anthropocentric here.
I recently got to know Georg Northoff and I think his idea of
stop-using the term mind and focus more on the brain and its relation with the world is very successful.
http://www.georgnorthoff.com/
Don't you think "mind" is an extremely anthropocentric concept in most of the cultures (western and asiatic) (except true pantheists of course - not sure Spinoza's was true one
:brow: )?
We're surrounded by what we call world, nature, univers, matter, etc. however we want to call it.We can deny it and speculate as much as we can but while our brains biology is the same than Plato's and Aristotle's or even Hegel's so that we still have many of their existential intuitions.... while we keep going in circles within many naif intuitions, the actual progress in understanding the world and in understanding human nature is coming from biology, neuroscience and physicists, in one word from science.
Philosophy should go hand-by-hand with science but I see here we talk too much speculative-philosophy only.
So the answer to the question "Is the material world the most absolute form of reality?" t
he net answer is yes, of course and keep moving. You can spend time defining the concepts within the stated question (world, material, absolute, reality, form) and you will get into Wittgenstein's linguistic turn and then Quine... but after this we should be talking about Stanislas Dehaene, Daniel Dennett, Georg Northoff maybe Metzinger as well, Antonio Damasio, and a long etc. of thinkers that are producing philosophy that has absorbed contemporary discoveries.
Those discoveries that come thanks to the new technologies, that are basically extensions of human humble senses. Technologies that are the only way to experience new worlds, new realities, learn more and speculate better
:chin:
I do agree that philosophy is super powerful. I like it so much!! Reading the right philosopher at the right time of your life with the right mood is a mystic experience
:-)
Plato's dialogues, Hegel's dialectic, the great positivists like Hume, our dear Hobbes... infinite list of great thinkers... should we include Derrida? Yes, why not (kidding).
But we have to recognize it is like listening to music, it doesn't help better understanding the world. It helps building a critical way of thinking, scrutinizing reality but not generating knowledge if it doesn't take into account scientific method and scientific language.
Contemporary technologies are the ones that shape our understanding of the world and how we experience it (biology and AI are challenging the foundations of our laws and ethics, as one example).
Material vs Immaterial fight: of course there are "things", "concepts", "values" that are abstract and part of the subjective human world that refer to human matters that exist thanks to humans and that will disappear with humans. Those "things" are anyway "material" in the sense that are coded in our minds through
symbols embedded in our biology, within our brains and our brains manipulate them continuously, conscious and unconsciously (let's be humble again, mostly unconsciously), same way my brain is working right now to write this post.
So let's be honest, yes everything resides in the world, in the material or quantistic, or however you want to call it using this colloquial language but let's be humble and recognize we are just:
nature that thinks
nature that one day found itself in a mirror
and started to walk and explore to survive time
by walking and exploring it met a second mirror
and those 2 mirrors look at each other
and infinity was raised
we humans are drowning in that infinity
while nature continuous its time.