Bodhi Dharma Zen
Advaitin
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
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Until about a year or so ago I called myself a Positivist. But I have moved to the position of Materialism as described above.
Why? care to explain more?
Until about a year or so ago I called myself a Positivist. But I have moved to the position of Materialism as described above.
And should use new words from a to z.Take for instance "god", or "good" and "evil" I believe we skeptics should propose new terminology instead of using such words, generally speaking of course.
But you have just made a very firm ontological commitment to the kind of stuff that behaves according to relational rules.
Jump right in, no apology necessary. Welcome to the forum!
The fact we have an imagination is not evidence the things we imagine exist. And the same is true for math. Would it exist if we weren't here? No. None of that supports the fact that if we imagine gods that is somehow evidence of gods.
I believe we have come close. Remember I was the only one who did not leap to conclusions about your "Theoretical Framework" and assume you were talking about Solipsism or Idealism?Ah Robin! Now we are talking! (I believe I have answered to your questions many times but we haven't arrive to this level of understanding before)![]()
Which is comparable to Quinean pragmatism.I don't know all phenomena is describable, it is an assumption, a place from where you can start to deal with phenomena in a coherent, orderly fashion (doing science for example).
First there is the rather simple consideration of incorporating the fact that there might be real randomness in the universe.Regarding your definition, care to explain more about 1?
Or the "mental events reduce to physical events". Both are statements devoid of meaning, unless "material" and "physical" are also defined.because I like your 2, in fact I like it a lot (you didn't resort to the classic "mental events are material".
Because I don't agree that Materialism has changed significantly since d'Holbach at least. d'Holbach denied that we could know the elements of matter, only the effect it had on our conscious experience. He simply stated that everything, including human minds behaved according to the laws of nature. The Churchlands say much the same thing.Now, my question to you would be: Why keeping the name "materialism" when it is carrying so much history on its back? What "material" and "materialism" mean have changed countless times throughout history!
Or at least get a clear idea of what we are talking about when we use them. In some ways this will simplify the argument.Take for instance "god", or "good" and "evil" I believe we skeptics should propose new terminology instead of using such words, generally speaking of course.
Actually as a result of something hammegk said. He said that Positivism was a cop-out and basically he is right.Why? care to explain more?
More accurately quarks, radiation, particles etc are elements in a mathematical model used to predict observations. Since mathematics is the most precise language we have then these things are the most precise thing we can say about or universe.Se above, quarks, objects, x rays and consciousness are constructs, deductions, the primitives are phenomena and such sets of relational rules. If you go further away (and yes, it can be done) you cease to relate to phenomena via language, and beyond language nothing can be said.
Tautological, I know, yet necessary sometimes.![]()
Why, the same difference between sharing and selling! Although today an appreciation of these differences typically don't exist.
... kind of like with Piscivore, I think on this thread. They are inferring something-- but I don't know what it is or how it differes from what the majority of us understand as naturalism/materialism/physicalism.
Well, I was also, until a piano was dropped on my head..I understand that he's skeptical of materialism...
My dear, nothing is worse than being married to everyone you talk to, and given how helpless you are to be nothing else, your disbelief in anything good makes perfect sense...but I have no idea if it's worth it to try and figure out why. Clearly he thinks this is a good way to be... but I can't make sense of it. I still think he's saying nothing--just using words to feel like he has "higher truth" than those "materialists" that "don't share his world view" (his words.)
I still can't tell what he means when he says he is skeptical of the materialist world view, but he is a naturalist. He says he has a different world view than the materialists. I consider myself both... and a rationalist and a skeptic. I don't believe in things for which there is no measurable evidence... no things which are indistinguishable from delusions. I believe there is are objective truths...
Supposely BDZ is different somehow and skeptical of materialism... but I can't tell what the hell it means. Maybe I'm skeptical of materialism.... what would that mean? Is he like Interesting Ian who believes there are natural explanations for things like souls or something that we just haven't discovered yet? Or does he just not know or care about the brain and how it generates consciousness? Or does he think the stuff we don't understand implies something that he's not saying or can't convey?
I understand that he's skeptical of materialism... but I have no idea if it's worth it to try and figure out why. Clearly he thinks this is a good way to be... but I can't make sense of it...
... I still think he's saying nothing--just using words to feel like he has "higher truth" than those "materialists" that "don't share his world view" (his words.)
I think whatever you believe in is so ambiguous and non-parsimonious that it allows you to believe in whatever you want. Same goes for Piscivore.
I believe we have come close. Remember I was the only one who did not leap to conclusions about your "Theoretical Framework" and assume you were talking about Solipsism or Idealism?
First there is the rather simple consideration of incorporating the fact that there might be real randomness in the universe.
The second is that we cannot assume that there is a unified mathematical model that will predict any observable phenomenon. It may be that there is, but we cannot assume that there is.
Take for example the old Interesting Ian question "are qualia causally efficacious?" I cannot say for sure whether they are or whether they are simply a side effect. If they were then it might be possible that there could be no mathematical model that could precisely predict behaviour from brain chemistry.
But even if there were no such model it would still be the case that behaviour follows deterministically from brain chemistry (ie quale follows deterministically from brain states, then behaviour follows deterministically from the quale), or to the extent that it did not, behaviour would be arbitrary.
Or the "mental events reduce to physical events". Both are statements devoid of meaning, unless "material" and "physical" are also defined.
Because I don't agree that Materialism has changed significantly since d'Holbach at least. d'Holbach denied that we could know the elements of matter, only the effect it had on our conscious experience. He simply stated that everything, including human minds behaved according to the laws of nature. The Churchlands say much the same thing.
From my point of view God, Dualism and Idealism all refer to the claim that there is at least one mental entity that is not a functional composite of non-mental entities.
Actually as a result of something hammegk said. He said that Positivism was a cop-out and basically he is right.
Also the debate that has gone on in JREF about libertarian free will and the dichotomy between the deterministic and the random has been part of my move. Seeing this argument in Hume more than 2 centuries ago was interesting.
Basically it was brought on by the train of thought started by the question "what is meant by 'physical'?'.
More accurately quarks, radiation, particles etc are elements in a mathematical model used to predict observations. Since mathematics is the most precise language we have then these things are the most precise thing we can say about or universe.
If there is no unified mathematical model that describes every observable then there are some things that we could not precisely say about the universe.
Only because you can't see what I'm talking about. And you've explicitly declined to discuss it further.
From my point of view God, Dualism and Idealism all refer to the claim that there is at least one mental entity that is not a functional composite of non-mental entities.
The material world is all there is. Consciousness is a pattern, that like constellations, only exist in some animal material brains
Then say it. No metaphors. Just say it. The shorter the better. I'll say mine.
The material world is all there is. Consciousness is a pattern, that like constellations, only exist in some animal material brains.
That's it. Your turn.