The value of those abstractions lies in their capacity to generate new observations by design. Dunno about "validity".SpeedOfSound wrote:The validity of those abstractions is what is in question.
Metaphysics as an Error
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Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
I'll get you, my pretty, and your little God, too!
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Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
Validity may be too hard a word given the context here. I'll go with value.Surendra Darathy wrote:The value of those abstractions lies in their capacity to generate new observations by design. Dunno about "validity".SpeedOfSound wrote:The validity of those abstractions is what is in question.
Favorite quote:
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
Consider:SpeedOfSound wrote:My claim is that everything that we know about internal and external is from these simple empirical 'realities'. That is the same claim as the OP. But we can take these two words and make further abstractions. The validity of those abstractions is what is in question.
E (where E = empirical world).
Now, there are only three possible metaphysics to associate with E:
(i) E is the totality of all that is.
(ii) E is reducible to something else that is different to E. That is, something else is the essence of E.
(iii) E is not the totality of all that is, so that 'something' different to E also exists.
This is a matter of logic. Please don't come back with the usual counter that "human logic is limited and may be flawed", since it implies an ontology: that we are human... and that E is the totality of all that is. (You cannot use an ontology/metaphysic to refute the potential for doing metaphysics).
Logic can now add something definite regarding each of the three possibilities, above:
(i) Nothing [else] exists internally or externally to E.
(ii) E is an apparent event happening internally to whatever E reduces to. (E appears to exist but in fact reduces to something that is not E. Therefore, the appearance of E is an event happening within and to something else that is not E).
(iii) Something else exists externally to E.
For each potential metaphysic, these are just necessary truisms - simple logic.
It may be true that our first use of the concepts 'internal' and 'external' were as consequences of observing E, but this does not mean that those concepts cannot be used in metaphysical logic associated with E - you have no reason whatsoever to encage those concepts within E, forever. Indeed, as demonstrated above, those concepts must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
You simply cannot brush-off my earlier argument (or LI's, if he's using those concepts too), with the statement that you use here. In all seriousness, the talk about buckets and fish is simply unwarranted, irrelevant, and off the mark.
I should of course point out that the reasoning outlined above represents the basic approach to metaphysics. This is significant, given that we've been asked to show how one can even approach doing metaphysics. Perhaps now the relevance of my post that discussed the internal or external nature of 'the world' (E), should be noted - and finally addressed with more than derision and rhetoric.
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Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
No no! If I had not gone through that painful but simple exercise you never would have posted this:jamest wrote: In all seriousness, the talk about buckets and fish is simply unwarranted, irrelevant, and off the mark.
I don't think you could of posted any of it without the fish. So I consider this some progress. You have actually put forth some firm possibilities for metaphysics and it is clear how these three possible ideas about internal and external are related to their empirical words of origin. It should also be crystal clear to you how these words have become quite another kind of thing with your application of them.It may be true that our first use of the concepts 'internal' and 'external' were as consequences of observing E, but this does not mean that those concepts cannot be used in metaphysical logic associated with E - you have no reason whatsoever to encage those concepts within E, forever. Indeed, as demonstrated above, those concepts must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
I hope. If it isn't then we are going to have to keep working on it.
Favorite quote:
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
Re: Metaphysics as an Error
Another implied ontology, Jerome. Your basis for dispusting metaphysics cannot be based upon an assumed metaphysic - surely you can/will acknowledge this? That is, here, your comment about what brains do has ontological implications for brains - not to mention everything external to them.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I've mentioned causality erroneously extrapolated to metaphysics from empiricism but I also think that this can be seen as a cognitive illusion. We see causal relationships in our daily lives, and we are so used to recognising and using causation, that we believe that we believe that all of this must be caused as well. That is to say, our brains are wired to recognise causality even when there is no basis for it.
Further, your comment is illogical anyway, because you say that there is no basis for 'causality', whilst simultaneously attributing causality to the brain (its 'wiring' is the cause of us seeing cause).
The cause of seeing causality in the world? You cannot answer that question - your stance prevents it!
What you do need - given your stance on metaphysics - is to stop using a metaphysic to substantiate that stance.
I don't need any particular evidence for this claim,
You're not in a position to discuss the essence of causality, then. But the 'basic approach to metaphysics' that I outlined in my previous post, does facilitate consideration of 'causality'.
Again, consider:
E (where E = empirical world).
Now, there are only three possible metaphysics to associate with E:
(i) E is the totality of all that is.
(ii) E is reducible to something else (S) that is different to E. That is, S is the essence of E.
(iii) E is not the totality of all that is, so that S different to E also exists.
Regarding 'causality', logic can generate truisms for each scenario:
(i) Causality exists within E. That is, if E is the totality of all that is, then the constituent parts of E must be interacting with an order commensurate with that understood by science.
(ii) E has been caused by S (which might be a plural, at this juncture). This must be the case, because if E does not exist, except as an appearance reducible to S, there must be a reason (cause) for E.
(iii) Causality exists within E (see (i) for explanation). Alternatively, S is effecting/causing the order discerned within E.
In other words, as with the concepts of 'internal' and 'external', the concept of 'causality' must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
SOS, 'fish in buckets' = E.
Anything else of relevance, you will find in my two previous posts.
Anything else of relevance, you will find in my two previous posts.
- Comte de Saint-Germain
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
I 'dispuste' metaphysics on the basis of there being no evidence or argument for it - neither of which is 'metaphysical' in nature.jamest wrote:Another implied ontology, Jerome. Your basis for dispusting metaphysics cannot be based upon an assumed metaphysic - surely you can/will acknowledge this?Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I've mentioned causality erroneously extrapolated to metaphysics from empiricism but I also think that this can be seen as a cognitive illusion. We see causal relationships in our daily lives, and we are so used to recognising and using causation, that we believe that we believe that all of this must be caused as well. That is to say, our brains are wired to recognise causality even when there is no basis for it.
How's that, exactly?That is, here, your comment about what brains do has ontological implications for brains - not to mention everything external to them.
Who says there is no basis for causality? I think cause and effect are useful concepts within empirical reality. That doesn't mean that I believe it can be expected to be used in metaphysics.Further, your comment is illogical anyway, because you say that there is no basis for 'causality', whilst simultaneously attributing causality to the brain (its 'wiring' is the cause of us seeing cause).
The cause of seeing causality in the world? You cannot answer that question - your stance prevents it!
Of course not, I have no idea what it means..
I haven't.What you do need - given your stance on metaphysics - is to stop using a metaphysic to substantiate that stance.I don't need any particular evidence for this claim,
You're making metaphysical claims. I am not. You have no basis for these claims. This lack of basis is the topic here, not the claims themselves.You're not in a position to discuss the essence of causality, then. But the 'basic approach to metaphysics' that I outlined in my previous post, does facilitate consideration of 'causality'.
Again, consider:
E (where E = empirical world).
Now, there are only three possible metaphysics to associate with E:
(i) E is the totality of all that is.
(ii) E is reducible to something else (S) that is different to E. That is, S is the essence of E.
(iii) E is not the totality of all that is, so that S different to E also exists.
Regarding 'causality', logic can generate truisms for each scenario:
(i) Causality exists within E. That is, if E is the totality of all that is, then the constituent parts of E must be interacting with an order commensurate with that understood by science.
(ii) E has been caused by S (which might be a plural, at this juncture). This must be the case, because if E does not exist, except as an appearance reducible to S, there must be a reason (cause) for E.
(iii) Causality exists within E (see (i) for explanation). Alternatively, S is effecting/causing the order discerned within E.
In other words, as with the concepts of 'internal' and 'external', the concept of 'causality' must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
The original arrogant bastard.
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian
Re: Metaphysics as an Error
So you say, but you didn't answer the question.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I 'dispuste' metaphysics on the basis of there being no evidence or argument for it - neither of which is 'metaphysical' in nature.jamest wrote:Another implied ontology, Jerome. Your basis for dispusting metaphysics cannot be based upon an assumed metaphysic - surely you can/will acknowledge this?Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I've mentioned causality erroneously extrapolated to metaphysics from empiricism but I also think that this can be seen as a cognitive illusion. We see causal relationships in our daily lives, and we are so used to recognising and using causation, that we believe that we believe that all of this must be caused as well. That is to say, our brains are wired to recognise causality even when there is no basis for it.
Simply because you attributed causality of 'seeing causality in the world' to the wiring of the brain.How's that, exactly?That is, here, your comment about what brains do has ontological implications for brains - not to mention everything external to them.
You have no idea what 'causality' means? Yet find it useful for doing science?The cause of seeing causality in the world? You cannot answer that question - your stance prevents it!
Of course not, I have no idea what it means.
I've just provided a basis for doing/starting metaphysics, which didn't entail me having any specific metaphysic. You've ignored it, but I'll present it here again, in the hope that you respond:You're making metaphysical claims. I am not. You have no basis for these claims. This lack of basis is the topic here, not the claims themselves.
Consider:
E (where E = empirical world).
Now, there are only three possible metaphysics to associate with E:
(i) E is the totality of all that is.
(ii) E is reducible to something else that is different to E. That is, something else is the essence of E.
(iii) E is not the totality of all that is, so that 'something' different to E also exists.
This is a matter of logic. Please don't come back with the usual counter that "human logic is limited and may be flawed", since it implies an ontology: that we are human... and that E is the totality of all that is. (You cannot use an ontology/metaphysic to refute the potential for doing metaphysics).
Logic can now add something definite regarding each of the three possibilities, above:
(i) Nothing [else] exists internally or externally to E.
(ii) E is an apparent event happening internally to whatever E reduces to. (E appears to exist but in fact reduces to something that is not E. Therefore, the appearance of E is an event happening within and to something else that is not E).
(iii) Something else exists externally to E.
For each potential metaphysic, these are just necessary truisms - simple logic.
It may be true that our first use of the concepts 'internal' and 'external' were as consequences of observing E, but this does not mean that those concepts cannot be used in metaphysical logic associated with E - you have no reason whatsoever to encage those concepts within E, forever. Indeed, as demonstrated above, those concepts must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
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Re: Metaphysics as a possibility
E is all we know.jamest wrote:SOS, 'fish in buckets' = E.
Anything else of relevance, you will find in my two previous posts.
Favorite quote:
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
lifegazer says "Now, the only way to proceed to claim that brains create experience, is to believe that real brains exist (we certainly cannot study them). And if a scientist does this, he transcends the barriers of both science and metaphysics."
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
...and all ye need to know.
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
If there is reality beyond the empirical then we have no access to it and therefore can't know anything about it.Little Idiot wrote:We can ask the question, 'is it real?', 'how do we know if the physical world is or could be a computer simulation or a mental experience?'
To do this, we need to avoid the assumption that the physical is the only reality, which it may be, or may not.
To do this, we need to avoid the assumption that the emperical is all we've got - I know you will say 'ah but it is all we've got'; how do you know it is the only reality, which it may be, or may not.
There are fewer things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
- Comte de Saint-Germain
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
Sure. No idea why this is important. I've used this sort of empirical causality many times in this thread. The point is that there's nothing metaphysical about this sort of causality, and you haven't shown that it is.jamest wrote:So you say, but you didn't answer the question.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I 'dispuste' metaphysics on the basis of there being no evidence or argument for it - neither of which is 'metaphysical' in nature.jamest wrote:Another implied ontology, Jerome. Your basis for dispusting metaphysics cannot be based upon an assumed metaphysic - surely you can/will acknowledge this?Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:I've mentioned causality erroneously extrapolated to metaphysics from empiricism but I also think that this can be seen as a cognitive illusion. We see causal relationships in our daily lives, and we are so used to recognising and using causation, that we believe that we believe that all of this must be caused as well. That is to say, our brains are wired to recognise causality even when there is no basis for it.Simply because you attributed causality of 'seeing causality in the world' to the wiring of the brain.How's that, exactly?That is, here, your comment about what brains do has ontological implications for brains - not to mention everything external to them.
No, 'it' - your question. I don't understand your question. I don't understand what is metaphysical about empirical casaulity. You haven't shown it.You have no idea what 'causality' means? Yet find it useful for doing science?The cause of seeing causality in the world? You cannot answer that question - your stance prevents it!
Of course not, I have no idea what it means.
What's there to respond to? It's all very nice and well, but you haven't provided any basis or argument that you are capable of metaphysics. You haven't answered the question of this thread. You have simply assumed it - making yourself superfluous.I've just provided a basis for doing/starting metaphysics, which didn't entail me having any specific metaphysic. You've ignored it, but I'll present it here again, in the hope that you respond:You're making metaphysical claims. I am not. You have no basis for these claims. This lack of basis is the topic here, not the claims themselves.
Consider:
E (where E = empirical world).
Now, there are only three possible metaphysics to associate with E:
(i) E is the totality of all that is.
(ii) E is reducible to something else that is different to E. That is, something else is the essence of E.
(iii) E is not the totality of all that is, so that 'something' different to E also exists.
This is a matter of logic. Please don't come back with the usual counter that "human logic is limited and may be flawed", since it implies an ontology: that we are human... and that E is the totality of all that is. (You cannot use an ontology/metaphysic to refute the potential for doing metaphysics).
Logic can now add something definite regarding each of the three possibilities, above:
(i) Nothing [else] exists internally or externally to E.
(ii) E is an apparent event happening internally to whatever E reduces to. (E appears to exist but in fact reduces to something that is not E. Therefore, the appearance of E is an event happening within and to something else that is not E).
(iii) Something else exists externally to E.
For each potential metaphysic, these are just necessary truisms - simple logic.
It may be true that our first use of the concepts 'internal' and 'external' were as consequences of observing E, but this does not mean that those concepts cannot be used in metaphysical logic associated with E - you have no reason whatsoever to encage those concepts within E, forever. Indeed, as demonstrated above, those concepts must be integral to any of the three metaphysical outcomes that are possible in relation to E.
The original arrogant bastard.
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian
- Little Idiot
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
Why so?logical bob wrote:If there is reality beyond the empirical then we have no access to it and therefore can't know anything about it.Little Idiot wrote:We can ask the question, 'is it real?', 'how do we know if the physical world is or could be a computer simulation or a mental experience?'
To do this, we need to avoid the assumption that the physical is the only reality, which it may be, or may not.
To do this, we need to avoid the assumption that the emperical is all we've got - I know you will say 'ah but it is all we've got'; how do you know it is the only reality, which it may be, or may not.
That based on the assumption that the only possible way of knowing is by empirical - How can you possibly demonstrate that. Presumably if emperical method is the only way to know things, this question must be answered by using emperical method.
What about logical statements; say 'If a is a P and all Ps are Q, then a is Q'. (Can this be shown for all P's and Q's)
What about statements which cant be verified emperically, such as mathematical rules; say 'any odd number added to any even number will give an odd result' which is obviously true (and can easily be proven mathematically, yet to verify emperically beyond doubt would require an infinite number of trials.'
Last edited by Little Idiot on Mon Mar 01, 2010 8:21 am, edited 1 time in total.
An advanced intellect can consider fairly the merits of an idea when the idea is not its own.
An advanced personality considers the ego to be an ugly thing, and none more so that its own.
An advanced mind grows satiated with experience and starts to wonder 'why?'
An advanced personality considers the ego to be an ugly thing, and none more so that its own.
An advanced mind grows satiated with experience and starts to wonder 'why?'
Re: Metaphysics as an Error
Mathematics are basic empirical problems organized in the most abstract and developed way we could possibly have imagined.
It all started and is basically founded in empirical problems. How much are two apples plus two apples? Etc.
It all started and is basically founded in empirical problems. How much are two apples plus two apples? Etc.
- Little Idiot
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Re: Metaphysics as an Error
This shows that maths started in emperical problems, which is fine. We live in a world where this is practical and useful.Luis Dias wrote:Mathematics are basic empirical problems organized in the most abstract and developed way we could possibly have imagined.
It all started and is basically founded in empirical problems. How much are two apples plus two apples? Etc.
What this has no bearing on is that the same maths can be applied to non-emperical subjects too.
To use the quote from an RDF sig; 'maths is the part of science we could do if we woke up tomorrow and found the universe was gone'
This assumes we could wake up if the universe was gone; opps metaphysics again!
Last edited by Little Idiot on Mon Mar 01, 2010 8:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
An advanced intellect can consider fairly the merits of an idea when the idea is not its own.
An advanced personality considers the ego to be an ugly thing, and none more so that its own.
An advanced mind grows satiated with experience and starts to wonder 'why?'
An advanced personality considers the ego to be an ugly thing, and none more so that its own.
An advanced mind grows satiated with experience and starts to wonder 'why?'
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