jamest wrote:Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Conformist or contrarian.. They're both missing the point. We walk our path, through the snow, through the ice and high mountains. No one shall steal after us.. Our very feet have effaced the path behind us, and over it stands written: Impossibility. How many little idiots does our culture have, how many Jamest's? How many more will it produce? I dare assert that they are countless! One could bridge Europe with the Americas with their cadavers.
There is but one Comte de Saint-Germain living today. His predecessors were false, his heirs are none. If I am not God, if I am not Nietzsche, it is because they were not yet ready to be me.
I am the most exemplary human being to every walk upon this Earth. None of this, none of these verbal imitations of what I feel, of what I breathe, of what it is to be me.. None of this, as arrogant or narcissist or 'ego-driven' as it sounds comes close to the claim that one has insight into the very fabric of the cosmos.. That one perceives beyond perception, that one reasons beyond reason. I make no claims to the transcendent, to the divine, to read in the Stars their ultimate making; To break the veil with the prism of my mind and gaze upon the face of God.
It's very hard to take you seriously, oh exemplary one. For now, I'll treat it as banter.
Of course you can't take me seriously. You wouldn't know what that meant. You are as ignorant about the Esoteric as you are about philosophy. The first is more excusable than the latter in the context of this discussion, but both will impair your ability to understand what is being said here.
To "reason beyond reason" - the question is, why reason is confined to the empirical alone (aka science)? I don't remember seeing you do anything other than assert this.
I've never said that reason was confined to the empirical. Rather, I don't trust reason at all. The only reason why I think why reason can be applied to the empirical is because it produces modestly reliable results. It's on the basis of this reliability that I trust it. If you wish to extend it to the metaphysical, you will have to show how it is reliable, you will have to find some way of 'verifying' these claims - or propose some manner of falsifying them, if you will.
As I've said elsewhere, the failure in this assertion, is that it fails to define 'the empirical realm' with any precision. Rather, it assumes that the empirical realm is nought but the objects/things which constitute it, separated by space-time. But this is something which I think we need to discuss, because it goes to the heart of everything that is wrong with your scepticism.
So, please do us the honour of clarifying your thoughts.
The empirical realm is not composed of objects or things. It is composed of facts - empirical data - that is structured by empirical constructs to make reliable predictions that aid us in navigating it.
Edit: see my next post, first.
Then post your next post first.
jamest wrote: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.
No, he hasn't mentioned existence yet. Roadrunner erroneously believes that the definition of anything necessitates the definition of existence. Clearly, Roadrunner has not read - or at least not understood Kant. Existence, Kant reminds us, is not a necessary property, but a state. Without Kant, Roadrunner - YOUR project - is doomed. I have already directed you to the ontological argument, with Kant's critique.
C: And?
This is not what I - or others - would reply. It shows that either you do not understand the argument, or insist on watering down our argument at critical points. Either you falsely or you deliberately construct a strawman. Neither contribute to the discussion.
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.
Finally, this sort of speculation is all well, but there is no way for C or R to know that the analogy of cartoon applies to them, whether it is a valid mode of thinking about metaphysics. The same goes for the Matrix and other such examples. You choose this as an analogy to metaphysics, but you can not demonstrate how it is analogous to metaphysics. You can't base the analogy on anything. You are claiming that it is 'like' this, but you can't establish that likeness!
C: Have you got any proof of this?
Again, you don't understand the topic. This question is entirely unimportant and is not asked.
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 anything beyond the empirical realm" depends precisely upon what constitutes that realm.
For clarification - I have never not understood your argument. I understand perfectly what you mean. In fact, I could make your argument a whole lot better and shorter and more eloquent than you could. That does not mean - at all - that you understand me. You've shown you can not even reproduce my argument faithfully in your supposed analogy, which is flawed because it is abusive of analogies. Analogies must have some likeness between A and B (an analogy denotes a relationship of similarity between two 'concepts'/'things'/'whatever') and this likeness is not shown. This makes analogies impossible to use, and all language impossible to use for metaphysics. We can not speak of it, in other words.
jamest wrote:Supplementary to the above - for anyone not "skimming over the boring bits" - it should now be obvious why metaphysics is still possible. Why? Because if we cannot know anything beyond the empirical realm - and that realm is not just defined in terms of what can be observed to exist (and there is no reason to define it thus, as previously discussed) - then we can now know more than what can be observed to exist, as long as 'that thing' is integral to whatever the empirical realm is.
The implied tool for knowing, of course, is reason, as opposed to just observation.
Your argument goes to far on faulty assumptions of counter-arguments. It's a mushy mix of badly used concepts and abused words. I can not address this part of your post. It is too convoluted.
An approach to metaphysics is faciltated by an absolute scepticism that does not just define the empirical realm in terms of what can be observed of it. After this is understood, one should re-read my posts about 'E', from yesterday. Because, imo, those posts - read in conjunction with tonight's posts - really do resurrect metaphysics from its assumed death.
Not sure what you mean by this.
Explicit in each of my posts tonight, is the flawed and ontologically-associated claim that 'the empirical realm' is nought other than those things which appear to interact therein. This is a biased, limited and naive opinion of what that realm actually is. It's as biased, limited and naive as defining a Road Runner cartoon, as "two critters running around in a desert".
Nor what you mean by this. I'm tempted to suggest you should stick to cartoons.
Little Idiot wrote:Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Conformist or contrarian.. They're both missing the point. We walk our path, through the snow, through the ice and high mountains. No one shall steal after us.. Our very feet have effaced the path behind us, and over it stands written: Impossibility. How many little idiots does our culture have, how many Jamest's? How many more will it produce? I dare assert that they are countless! One could bridge Europe with the Americas with their cadavers.
There is but one Comte de Saint-Germain living today. His predecessors were false, his heirs are none. If I am not God, if I am not Nietzsche, it is because they were not yet ready to be me.
I am the most exemplary human being to every walk upon this Earth. None of this, none of these verbal imitations of what I feel, of what I breathe, of what it is to be me.. None of this, as arrogant or narcissist or 'ego-driven' as it sounds comes close to the claim that one has insight into the very fabric of the cosmos.. That one perceives beyond perception, that one reasons beyond reason. I make no claims to the transcendent, to the divine, to read in the Stars their ultimate making; To break the veil with the prism of my mind and gaze upon the face of God.
I have to assume this is humour, since it certainally meets the criteria; it is very funny.
I have a scary feeling that you are actually serious, but not even your ego is that fat and self-agrandizing, is it?
This isn't hearts, you know.. You don't win when you get every single post wrong.
The original arrogant bastard.
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian