Seismosaurus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2003
- Messages
- 6,092
I don't know much about philosophy, but if one is a materialist then what about things like numbers, or happiness, or patterns? These aren't material things but they do exist...
I don't know much about philosophy, but if one is a materialist then what about things like numbers, or happiness, or patterns? These aren't material things but they do exist...
No. In fact there have been long discussions about this before. I have often challenged people to cite an actual Materialist philosopher who has held this position in the last 200 years.Yes, correct. Do you agree with this definition?
In philosophy, the theory of materialism holds that the only thing that exists is matter; that all things are composed of material and all phenomena (including consciousness) are the result of material interactions.
Why do you think "matter exists" is the default? What is matter?If the reason for not believing in deities is because there is no evidence for them, why would atheism believe any but matter exists?
That is a thread on it's own. If Materialism is a claim about what exists then that is a metaphysical claim.You lost me here. I don't understand why materialism is a metaphysical claim.
Yes, but that does not imply that anyone who believes the scientific method is the only reliable source to gain knowledge is necessarily a materialist. A implies B does not imply that B implies A.Materialists don't believe the scientific method is the only realiable source to test knowledge?
Well, I wouldn't agree with that definition of Materialism.So you are saying that to say that only matter exists is an absolute statement of truth, which cannot be compatible with pragmatic empirists?
Well of course you don't know the difference because you haven't read my proposal for what a minimalist Materialism would be. It is not really important because it was only raised as a discussion point.I don't know the difference, can you explain Robin?
Again, a thread in itself. Essentially Naturalism boils down to the claim that mechanistic explanations are, in principle, possible for anything and that there is no supernatural intentional force behind things. They are very much related positions, but not identical.I can't see the difference between naturalism and materialism. I'm sure there must be.
Why must atheists be pigeonholed?
If the reason for not believing in deities is because there is no evidence for them, why would atheism believe any but matter exists?
It's simple: A person that believes one supernatural thing does not have to believe ALL supernatural things. A person who disbelieves one supernatural thing does not have to disbelieve ALL supernatural things.
I think most people on this board decided that their beliefs should follow the evidence, and not other factors (tradition, dogma, authority). For these people, atheism is a result of that decision, and materialism is a result of it also.
There are other reasons that people could arrive at atheism, but most people here are rationalists, which leads to the other two.
Why must atheists be pigeonholed?
Cos they walk funny.
The same conclusion that leads to atheism should also lead to materialism? If not, why not?
Have they applied for a grant to develop their funny walk?
Yes, but it's not silly enough.
They are made of the firings of neurons in your brain.
Oh well, I have to stay home to wait for the new cooker anyway.
No. In fact there have been long discussions about this before. I have often challenged people to cite an actual Materialist philosopher who has held this position in the last 200 years.
Today Materialism will be one or other of the claims that any meaningful statement can a) be reduced to a statement about a scientific theory or b) can be eliminated and replaced by a statement about a scientific theory.
In fact I have often argued that if you follow the philosophic heritage of modern Materialism you find it is ultimately an outgrowth of Berkeleyan Idealism.
Why do you think "matter exists" is the default? What is matter?
That is a thread on it's own. If Materialism is a claim about what exists then that is a metaphysical claim.
Yes, but that does not imply that anyone who believes the scientific method is the only reliable source to gain knowledge is necessarily a materialist. A implies B does not imply that B implies A.
Well of course you don't know the difference because you haven't read my proposal for what a minimalist Materialism would be. It is not really important because it was only raised as a discussion point.
Again, a thread in itself. Essentially Naturalism boils down to the claim that mechanistic explanations are, in principle, possible for anything and that there is no supernatural intentional force behind things. They are very much related positions, but not identical.
I've known a Buddhist who believed in no gods, but still believed in the supernatural laws of karma and dharma.
Yes, I undestand. I'm just thinking that it's inconsistent.
One can believe the supernatural exists without believing that gods exist, because materialism is not the only possible reason a person might believe that gods don't exist.