Post
by jamest » Tue Mar 02, 2010 12:33 am
What is the empirical realm? This is a significant question, because I think that the definition itself is the cause of metaphysical scepticism.
Let me provide you with an analogy, to highlight my concerns. Suppose that Wile. E Coyote (C) and Road Runner (R) declared a truce and have decided to have a philosophical chat. Of course, the topic eventually moved to that of metaphysics and we'll say that C favoured the relativist position whilst R believed that metaphysics was possible:
C: We cannot know anything beyond this cartoon realm. Everything we know and all of the concepts we have devised, relate directly to this realm. Therefore, the prospect of doing metaphysics seems impossible.
R: But what is this [cartoon] realm? You are defining it, in its totality, as those things that appear to exist, for us both.
C: And?
R: Well, firstly, you have no reason to define it thus. Implicit in your claim, is that this realm is thoroughly defined as those things that appear to exist therein.
C: But what else could it be?
R: At this juncture, that doesn't matter. What matters, is that you cannot thoroughly define a realm as 'those things that appear to interact therein' without excluding the possibility that they are reducible to something else, or that there is some integral aspect of this realm that is not observable. For example, for all you know, you and I might be reducible to a complex usage of inks and paper, by some unobservable artist. That is, in such a case, the empirical realm would have to be thoroughly defined as those things that can be observed as an effect of inks, orchestrated to yield that effect, by some unobservable artist.
C: Have you got any proof of this?
R: Perhaps, but for the time being, let's concentrate upon your debatable definition of what this realm is. I say that you have no credible reason to define this realm as you have. Indeed, in my opinion, it reeks of a hidden ontology commensurate with the philosophy of 'cartoonism' (read as: 'materialism').
C: But you cannot prove that I'm wrong. and that there is some "unobservable artist".
R: But you're missing the point. That point being, that your definition of the empirical is debatable. Therefore, when you say something like "we cannot know anything beyond this empirical realm", what you say depends EXACTLY upon what that empirical realm is.
Do you understand this analogy? Basically, I'm saying that the claim "we cannot know anything beyond the empirical realm" depends precisely upon what constitutes that realm.
Last edited by
jamest on Tue Mar 02, 2010 6:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.