You are claiming that the complicated tautologies arrived at through mathematics are classifiable as "knowledge", when all of them are "statements". This is a misunderstanding of how mathematics is developed. You cannot make any valid statement in mathematics that is not consistent with the axioms. All you've demonstrated here is that you are not a mathematician. You've defined "axiom" idiosyncratically. Why are you trying to discuss this with anyone else.
Insistence that there are "other ways of knowing in addition to the empirical" is
occultism. This is not a branch of metaphysics. Furthermore, you are attempting to smuggle in occultism by misapplying mathematical and philosophical language. Only on the internet, is what I say to that.
All this without writing down even an alternative definition of "knowing" or of "reality" or of "reliability" that allows for occultism. The empiricist has determined on the course of referring to the empirical, and not using words that have not been defined.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote: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.
Yes, you are correct, Little Idiot. CdSG has written a parody of the
metaphysician occultist who claims the veil of the empirical as the gateway to higher knowledge.
Little Idiot wrote:This is how we tell Sage from imposter, the ones who know reality from the ones who think they know reality.
And like clockwork, the occultist takes umbrage that anyone dare not to respect his "sagacity". I would use "sagenessness" but we've been around the block now with "consciousnessness" and "obviousnessness", and proof by induction is not what we need at this point.
Surendra Darathy wrote:All we get from the wibble-heads metaphysicians is the rhetorical question, "What lies out there beyond the empirical?"
Well, here goes another occultist, using a word like "totality" without first defining it. Do we understand why he does this? Of course! Jamest does not know what it means either, and has fallen on the hard times of "making shit up". "Totality" is a bullshit word used by occultists, and has not really ever been used to enhance the reputation of a metaphysician.
If I had to take a shot at "totality of the empirical" it would be "everything we can talk about empirically" such as the outdoor temperature registered on a thermometer two people can locate independently and stand before it face to face, without asking what a "face"
really is. It's a
face, that's what it is. What your nose is in the center of.
jamest wrote:because if the empirical realm is [also] something else than that which can be observed to exist, then metaphysics is free to do its work therein without transgressing beyond the parameters of that realm.
But the empirical is not something else. It involves being willing to confront the evidence face to face, as it were. Nothing else will do, for empiricism. Occultists may have a different opinion, but they haven't shown they can sensibly (!) talk about the occult. What they've shown is that they are willing to
make shit up about the occult.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote: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.
Making shit up about the occult and calling it metaphysics is not to speak of the occult as a metaphysician. Little Idiot and jamest have not shown that they understand yet that "reality", for example, is not a word used by empiricists except to say that it constitutes the subject of our discourse as empiricists. It's a simple tautological definition, and the obvious likeness of identifying "reality" with "the subject of our discourse as empiricists" without obfuscation is the attraction of empiricism to empiricists. There. Reality is defined for the purpose of investigating the world. Not only that, "reality", the "world" and "the subject of our discourse as empiricists" are bound, methodologically. The method has been specified without obfuscation: Study that which is available to our senses and our instruments.
The pie missing from the windowsill is not available to our senses at present. Our memory of putting the pie in the windowsill, assisted by an annotation in a lab notebook, reminds us that we put the pie in the windowsill. If we solipsistically doubt that the methodology of the annotation and the memory it jogs are reliable, yes, we might as well just go hunting ghosts.
No, James. Metaphysical scepticism is based on a decision not to decide what anything
is. Defining what something
is requires ontology, an underpinning of metaphysics. On the other hand, an "unlimited view of what the empirical realm
is" constitutes one of the preliminary wibbles of occultism, and is not even metaphysics, because it focuses on delimitation of discourse about
everything. In other words, it commences to
make shit up about what can be discussed.
That has to go into Surendra Darathy's Big Book of Little Aphorisms.
jamest wrote:We've reached the crux of the debate here
Oh, the
momentousnessness of it all.
Bob Dylan wrote:But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come, when we have shuffl'd off this mortal coil...
Shakespeare wrote:The ghost of electricity howls in the bones of her face....
The reason for this is two-fold. First it is because we restrict ourselves to the empirical in order not to have to make shit up about dreaming and waking in the form of faulty analogies. We connect "knowing" and "reality" and "empirical" in a tightly-bound tautology, and the only shit we make up are the interpretations of physical theory. However, we know when we do that we are doing interpretation. It is like interpretive dance, and we realize that as hairless apes, we like to dance without really knowing why, and furthermore, some of us have decided that "why" is a nonsense question.
No one in his right mind "argues against possibility". We simply decline to talk formally with occultists about it. We're not arguing with you formally yet, James. You have yet to present a formal argument against which to contend. You seem to think that because someone is engaging you in conversation that you are conducting a formal debate. How silly.
The point is that metaphysics can actually be employed to discuss the essence/reality/definition of the empirical realm
You can start doing this any time you are ready. Ex recto assertion about what employments metaphysics can find are not the same as the fruits of those labors, which the empiricists recognize as idleness.
All that is needed to produce a statistical analysis, is a field of observation devoid of chaos.
You have such a minuscule apprehension of the scope and constraints of science that I cannot dignify your remark with further analysis. It is not my job to instruct you in the philosophy of science. If you think a scientific study of cartoons as such is legitimate, you are sadly mistaken. We can study the effects of cartoons on people scientifically, but the study of cartoons
sui generis is a study of a sort of literature, and is not science. I'm surprised at the provinciality of your remarks here. Yes, occultists and paranormalists purport to do statistical analyses of non-observations; this is well-known, and paranormalists are laughed at by scientists.
Ah, another aphorism. I'm going to have to buy a new disk drive before this is over. Hopefully, it will be the last fish.
Little Idiot left out the part about where the axioms are presented. The axioms themselves are not empirical, but the
presentation of them, in order to arrive at a discourse of mathematics, is empirical. Sure, one may do mathematics by oneself, as a masturbatory exercise in knowledge obtained without recourse to the empirical, but that leaves knowledge locked up in a single skull, exactly the situation we avoid by going the empirical route. The solipsistic definition of "knowledge" is not any kind of knowledge. It leads one to look for the Secret of the Universe occulted somewhere within the digits of pi. Presentation of axioms is an attempt to begin a conversation. It is not surprising that the occultists in this thread are reluctant to present axioms, in favor of making shit up, such as that empiricism goes about saying what anything "is".
To put it bluntly, James, this is incorrect. Epic fail is fully-engaged for you.
Once one starts in with "something" one is already doing metaphysics, if the goal is the ontology or essence of "something". To a scientist, it's just data. People try to do metaphysics on the data, and this wibbling goes quite beyond the interpretation of the data within the context of a theory. The interpretation of theories is metaphysics, and no one has shown that it is possible to do this kind of activity productively (in the sense of producing further data).
No, epic fail again, James: It is you who is making shit up. Science is not in the business of proving anything. The idea that cognition is reducible to brain states is an hypothesis, for which evidence is being gathered, empirically.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Science doesn't speak of mind states, it speaks of mental states, which is a functionalist approach to describing the brain in more abstract terms - it does not mean that one is making metaphysical claims. Much of this is faulty perception of the science of psychology. Merely because idealists appropriate the mind does not mean that mental states necessarily are states of the mind, rather than empirical constructs. I understand that this may be confusing to some, but that doesn't mean it is relevant to this thread.
Reiteration always helps, when working with remedial learning situations and contexts.
jamest wrote:Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:No, it really isn't. It's materialism when it is suggested that this 'physical reality' or 'empirical reality' is 'real' or exists. This discussion won't progress very far if you can't discern between metaphysical statements and non-metaphysical statements..
You don't seem to understand the implications of attributing the brain with being
the cause of 'experience' (where experience = thought/perception/feeling etc.). The implication IS that the brain is real, or else how would IT cause experience to happen?
Nobody but you is talking about "causes" in a metaphysical sense. Or, for that matter of "experience", which is already a metaphysical term, and is the one you want to get around to wibbling about. The brain is an empirical object. It's "ultimate reality" is not in discussion scientifically. Correlation is not causation. The correlation is empirical, and comprised of "data". Behavior is empirical. "Experience" is not. And with your renewed wibble about "experience" we are exactly back to where we fucking started in with you, when you brought your talk of "experiencers" before us, a long, long time ago, in a
galaxy forum far, far away. Use the force, James.
"Attributing the brain with being the cause" of 'experience'". Such locutions must be preserved for posterity.