Phenomenology doesn t force us to choose between these two but instead puts them together in a much more radical way than the mere cobbling of ‘inner feeling’ and ‘outer things’.
There is only a ‘hard problem’ if one begins from a science which ignores the subject’s perspective ( relativity and qm only take the subject into account as another physical object , which is not what I’m talking about )
and a subject whose ‘values’ are irrelevant to the understanding of ‘external’ reality. — Joshs
There is only a ‘hard problem’ if one begins from a science which ignores the subject’s perspective — Joshs
But if I cringe at Peterson’s treatment of certain philosophers — Joshs
have a hard time understanding the basic premise. The idea that there was once some kind of "golden era" or "an enchanted time" when people took religion seriously (including actually believing in God) seems alien to me. — baker
There are several mysteries which seem essential to the philosophical quest; the existence of God, free will and, life after death. — Jack Cummins
Incorrect. Climate science is clearly empirical. — Wayfarer
The way I put it is that religious fundamentalists appeal to science to prove the existence of God. Scientific materialists appeal to science to argue the non-existence of god. — Wayfarer
the pop-intellectual-science types wrongly appeal to the prestige of science in support of their generally lousy arguments. — Wayfarer
Did God ever live? — baker
But there are also lumbering dimwits in religious and new-age circles. It doesn’t discriminate. :-) — Wayfarer
It’s significant that you perceive this criticism as ‘hatred’. Says something, I think. — Wayfarer
I was hoping for more from you but that's just me I guess. I get what you're saying - every situation has its own unique features that preclude any attempts at generalization - and I'm with you on that score. Nevertheless, isn't it rather mysterious that the laws of nature which are, scientists claim, universal in scope should give rise to a world in which no laws seem to cover all cases? Going by your responses, you seem interested enough in this topic and so, I would like to submit a request to you and it's to find, if you're up to the task, some rationale why a solid bedrock of universal laws (the so-called laws of nature) should give rise to a world (the world where sayings are meaningful) in which there are no such laws (each saying is applicable in different situations and no saying covers every situation) at all? — TheMadFool
Now, if I maybe so bold, your task is to provide an explanation similar to the one I did for heavier-than-air flight i.e. try and come up with how the "apparent" disharmony of mutually contradictory sayings is an illusion and that there's actually an underlying harmony. — TheMadFool
I guess me not being a "Jungian" to any degree – I abhor psychotherapy, like psychoanalysis & behaviorism, and any other psychological practice which is not rooted in contemporary brain science or cognitive neuroscience (I've done graduate work in cognitve psychology and respect approaches like CBT immensely) – the notion of "finding a viewpoint which is satisfactory from our psychological point of reference" is anathema to me as specimen of pseudo-philosophy (i.e. "psychologism" as per Husserl). — 180 Proof
The point is, it addresses your question of 'what is not grounded in the physical'. It's a question that doesn't have an easy answer, but then, you did ask! — Wayfarer
Check out this discussion. — Wayfarer
but you're resigned that it should all come to naught on your watch? — counterpunch
What methodological naturalism is particularly unsuitable for , I would argue , is the understanding of myriad psychological phenomena ( , etc). For these domains I prefer a radical constructivism. — Joshs
Btw, please don’t tell me you prefer Jordan Peterson to Nietzsche. — Joshs
I suspect the brain is analogous to a receiver~transmitter in some basic respect, rather than an originator of information. — Wayfarer
That would be is antithetical to Nietzsche’s thinking. — Joshs
Physicalism ought be avoided.
Physicalism is the view that only the description of the world provided by physicists is true.
Physicalism is an all-and-some theory, describing a haunted universe.
It pretends to be part of the body of knowledge called physics, but it is not canon.
It can be spotted by identifying areas of overreach, such as "it is as meaningless to view the universe as composed of parts". — Banno
I am a philosophical anarchist (when I must think :)) because I believe that if you get any more than a few people together, all hell breaks loose. The best hope for man remains his individual spiritual development.
And I am not sure I would agree with your assessment that man is inherently good. Again, I believe the best hope in this regard is to minimize group activity. The history of the world is replete with horror after horror in the name of every damn thing. Individuals can only do so much harm whereas groups are capable of unspeakable crimes committed on a regular basis. — synthesis
Whatever meaning we find is a meaning we create. — Fooloso4
Do you know of any philosopher who is actually anti-science in the way you mean it?
— Joshs
Perhaps Wittgenstein. Although it may be more of an attack on scientism. — Fooloso4
It seems to lack the, how shall I put it, oomph factor I'm looking for. — TheMadFool
've seen this claim before and I really doubt it is even possible (I know this is irrelevant to the rest or your post, sorry). — emancipate
I don't think there's a scientific account of why those kinds of talents ought to exist, not even to mention that musical genius has no obvious connection to biological adaptation. Not that I'm saying I have a better theory, other than some vague sense of there being a collective consciousness of some kind, that takes birth in such forms. But I would never try and persuade anyone of the truth of such an idea. — Wayfarer
Can you do both at the same time? — TheMadFool
hat they contradict each other is still an unresolved problem. — TheMadFool
recommend her much more concise Platonic work The Sovereignty of Good. — 180 Proof
Do you happen to know the reference? — ernest meyer
