RoboTimbo
Hostile Nanobacon
Oh deary me,
You have gone so far down the road of confining human existence to a proxy/veiled idealism that I can't see any way back out for you.
I agree that you have no sensible response.
Oh deary me,
You have gone so far down the road of confining human existence to a proxy/veiled idealism that I can't see any way back out for you.
I agree, I am approaching the topic of existence using normal language not well equipped for the task. "Generates reality right now" fits, as I am considering something outside time as we know it.
You have illustrated my point quite well. The last three options like The Flying Spaghetti Monster, unicorns and perhaps Bigfoot, are imaginary explanations and not worth examination. The others are and even if it can't be determined what it is, accepting that it is a mystery is more parsimonious than falling back on imagination.Odd analogy, and not a great one, I fear.
You clearly do NOT have to confine possibilities in any way.
But in seeking the true origin of the rusty metal object, it helps to limit oneself to the most reasonable, and likely, explanations first.
IOW, should you spend equal time going down each of the following paths...
It's an old metal toy
It's an old metal tool
It's an old metal piece of hardware
It's a piece of Bigfoot jewelry
It's from another dimension
It formed miraculously from the dirt in your garden as a sign
The law of parsimony would lead one to spend far more time researching and considering each of the first three as opposed to the last three.
That does not 100% rule out the last three as possible explanations, but seriously, do ALL possibilities deserve or get "equal time" from you?
There are numerous ways the analogy can be used. My primary point was that it is possible to discuss something unknown conceptually without asserting that what is being discussed does actually exist, or without being misguided, naive, or deluded.Or maybe I just missed the point of the analogy.
I have pointed it out numerous times. It hinges on one's response to this question;
Do you accept that it is possible for a human to represent something (x) which exists outside the mind, conceptually?
And that while the construction of that conceptual idea involves imagination, it does not follow that (x)does not exist, because its conception is to some extent imaginary?
Let me illustrate with an example, I found a rusty metal object in my garden when digging. I haven't cleaned it up yet and have no idea what it is.
Can I discus what it is?
And if so must I confine the possibilities to what fits our current scientific model?
You have illustrated my point quite well. The last three options like The Flying Spaghetti Monster, unicorns and perhaps Bigfoot, are imaginary explanations and not worth examination. The others are and even if it can't be determined what it is, accepting that it is a mystery is more parsimonious than falling back on imagination.
There are numerous ways the analogy can be used. My primary point was that it is possible to discuss something unknown conceptually without asserting that what is being discussed does actually exist, or without being misguided, naive, or deluded.
We are actually discussing something unknown right now(a rusty object). Now say that someone comes up with the notion that it is a prehistoric mobile phone. Something which can transmit a message over a great distance. Now pastafarians would be accusing them of creating imaginary scenarios and wishful thinking. Such as suggesting that prehistoric people were technologically advanced. Deluded indeed.
Parsimony would advise not jumping to such conclusions, as prehistoric people might have used numerous clever technologies which we do not know about.
Indeed it could even be a sonic screwdriver, could it not?
You have illustrated my point quite well. The last three options like The Flying Spaghetti Monster, unicorns and perhaps Bigfoot, are imaginary explanations and not worth examination. The others are and even if it can't be determined what it is, accepting that it is a mystery is more parsimonious than falling back on imagination.
There are numerous ways the analogy can be used. My primary point was that it is possible to discuss something unknown conceptually without asserting that what is being discussed does actually exist, or without being misguided, naive, or deluded.
We are actually discussing something unknown right now(a rusty object). Now say that someone comes up with the notion that it is a prehistoric mobile phone. Something which can transmit a message over a great distance. Now pastafarians would be accusing them of creating imaginary scenarios and wishful thinking. Such as suggesting that prehistoric people were technologically advanced. Deluded indeed.
Parsimony would advise not jumping to such conclusions, as prehistoric people might have used numerous clever technologies which we do not know about.
Indeed it could even be a sonic screwdriver, could it not?
Your problem is that you start with the baseless assumption that God is not imaginary. So I guess God is not imaginary just because you say he's not. You can get away with whatever assumptions you want when you're willing to ignore evidence. Strange how that works, isn't it?You have illustrated my point quite well. The last three options like The Flying Spaghetti Monster, unicorns and perhaps Bigfoot, are imaginary explanations and not worth examination. The others are and even if it can't be determined what it is, accepting that it is a mystery is more parsimonious than falling back on imagination.
and so if I say the rusty metal object might bee some kind of prehistoric mirror, it is just wishful thinking. Only scientific examination can inform me as to what it is?Things are imaginary (bigfoot, FSM) when you declare them imaginary and non imaginary(god) when you declare them non imaginary.
IOW "When I use a concept it means exactly what I want it to mean, no more and no less".
Are you saying these things exist? Might exist? Or are fancies of the imagination?Yes. The Unicorn, the Teapot, 'god', the Fairies in Your Garden, Jame Retief...etc.
Yes of course, its "reality", existence, is independent of the thoughts of the person imagining it.It does follow, however, that the fact that the thing has been imagined does not make it become non-imaginary. The act of imagining something does not make it real.
I don't like to use the word "real" here because we are discussing things that exist or not. Some things which don't exist might appear to be real, have some reality to them, this is ambiguous.What distinguishes the real from the imaginary?
So things only exist if humans have evidence of their existence?(There's that mean ol' evidence thing, again.)
There's that word again "reality". Do you mean reality is what is currently understood to be real by humanity's current scientific understanding?I cannot speak for whether you can, or not, but you certainly may. If you are honest, your ruminations about what it, in fact, is will be constrained by the tenets of reality.
I do propose that our scientific model is limited, will be superseded by more advanced models repeatedly in the future. Unfortunately when it comes to existence, our current scientific model is left wanting. It doesn't have a clue and I'm not referring to the kind of astro physics which speculates about singularity's and multiverses. These ideas are not addressing existence, they are addressing the origins of the physical matter we are familiar with. Existence is another issue, not addressed at all by science.Yest, it must--unless you can propose a new, improved, scientific model that explains how your imaginary thing is real while at the same time preserving our ability to explain what has already been demonstrated to be non-imaginary.
Yes like a prehistoric communication device.It is perfectly proper to ponder whether it is the buckle of a Confederate Scout possibles bag.
Quite, although, I see no problem with esoteric communicator.It is lax to imagine that it is the belt holster of the esoteric communicator by which the First Citizen of Atlantis and the God-King of Aztlan kept their thoughts in synch.
The human thought process.How it it, then that an imaginary concept dons the cloak of reality?
Here we are again, it only exists/is not imaginary, if humans currently have evidence of it? Anything else is deluded nonsense/wishful thinking?That cloak can only be purchased with the true coin of evidence. Without that, the imagined concept is, and will remain, imaginary.
One should look to distinguishing what is imaginary from what is rational, or what might exist independent of imagination.Like the Unicorn. Like 'god'. Like natal moment horology.
Don't jump the gun here.ETA: Capably ninja-ed by Fast Eddie B. Well said, sir!
and so if I say the rusty metal object might bee some kind of prehistoric mirror, it is just wishful thinking. Only scientific examination can inform me as to what it is?
I should not speculate until then, because I might be deluded.
I do propose that our scientific model is limited, will be superseded by more advanced models repeatedly in the future.
Unfortunately when it comes to existence, our current scientific model is left wanting.
It doesn't have a clue...
Are you saying these things exist? Might exist? Or are fancies of the imagination?
Yes of course, its "reality", existence, is independent of the thoughts of the person imagining it.
I don't like to use the word "real" here because we are discussing things that exist or not.;/ Some things which don't exist might appear to be real, have some reality to them, this is ambiguous.
So things only exist if humans have evidence of their existence?
You're beginning to sound like RoboTimbo, asserting a veiled/proxy idealism.
There's that word again "reality". Do you mean reality is what is currently understood to be real by humanity's current scientific understanding?
I do propose that our scientific model is limited, will be superseded by more advanced models repeatedly in the future. Unfortunately when it comes to existence, our current scientific model is left wanting. It doesn't have a clue and I'm not referring to the kind of astro physics which speculates about singularity's and multiverses. These ideas are not addressing existence, they are addressing the origins of the physical matter we are familiar with. Existence is another issue, not addressed at all by science.
Yes like a prehistoric communication device.
Quite, although, I see no problem with esoteric communicator.
The human thought process.
Here we are again, it only exists/is not imaginary, if humans currently have evidence of it? Anything else is deluded nonsense/wishful thinking?
One should look to distinguishing what is imaginary from what is rational, or what might exist independent of imagination.
Don't jump the gun here.
and so if I say the rusty metal object might bee some kind of prehistoric mirror, it is just wishful thinking. Only scientific examination can inform me as to what it is? I should not speculate until then, because I might be deluded.
What other method would you use?
and so if I say the rusty metal object might bee some kind of prehistoric mirror, it is just wishful thinking. Only scientific examination can inform me as to what it is?
I should not speculate until then, because I might be deluded.
Ask what color God is and I can't even be wrong.
Pink. But also invisible.
Pink. But also invisible.
Are you saying these things exist? Might exist? Or are fancies of the imagination?
Yes of course, its "reality", existence, is independent of the thoughts of the person imagining it.
I don't like to use the word "real" here because we are discussing things that exist or not. Some things which don't exist might appear to be real, have some reality to them, this is ambiguous.
So things only exist if humans have evidence of their existence?
You're beginning to sound like RoboTimbo, asserting a veiled/proxy idealism.
There's that word again "reality". Do you mean reality is what is currently understood to be real by humanity's current scientific understanding?
I do propose that our scientific model is limited, will be superseded by more advanced models repeatedly in the future. Unfortunately when it comes to existence, our current scientific model is left wanting. It doesn't have a clue and I'm not referring to the kind of astro physics which speculates about singularity's and multiverses. These ideas are not addressing existence, they are addressing the origins of the physical matter we are familiar with. Existence is another issue, not addressed at all by science.
Yes like a prehistoric communication device.
Quite, although, I see no problem with esoteric communicator.
The human thought process.
Here we are again, it only exists/is not imaginary, if humans currently have evidence of it? Anything else is deluded nonsense/wishful thinking?
One should look to distinguishing what is imaginary from what is rational, or what might exist independent of imagination.
Don't jump the gun here.