A priori synthetic statements

JustGeoff said:
Er....yes you have definately lost track of my position. I never claimed time and space could be spoken of as independent concepts... :con2:

I was pointing out that you had claimed that time and experiences could be spoken of as independant concepts, but that you had not presented a compelling argument for this.

Nope. I haven't got a clue what you mean. What's the point of a physical non-physical thing? You are simply saying "No non-physical physical things exist!". Great. You expect me to argue with that? :D

Okay, go back and read this part of the thread again if you need to. The point I was making is that there is no evidence for anything other than atoms doing their thing in the brain/the mind, which is why we make the a posteriori judgement that odds are there is nothing else going on. You got sidetracked into quibbling about whether non-physical stuff would be "in" the brain or not, which is really neither here nor there for either of our positions.

This presupposes that I should want to convince you or believe that Randi's money is winnable, and that it is desirable that someone should win it. It's a sort of "them and us" bunker mentality. "Either you're a materialist or your a woo-woo! If you're a woo-woo then claim that million or stop your lying!"

I see the whole situation as rather more complex than that. I'm not interested in trench warfare.

You are the one labeling this discussion as trench warfare in bunkers, not me. I call this a friendly philosophical discussion where the idea is to examine each other's ideas. The point stands, however, that if you have a posteriori evidence for non-physical stuff then this is amazing news and we need more details. If you claim to have made such an amazing discovery, but limit your explanation of this discovery to vague remarks about things being "rather more complex than that", then you should either explain yourself or expect scepticism.

We simply don't know whether some sort of non-physical causality exists. We don't know it does, and we don't know it doesn't. We might be able to state that if it does exist, it never turns up conclusively under laboratory conditions - but given the intrinsic nature of what we are discussing, that alone doesn't mean we can conclusively state that it doesn't exist. In short, there has been no resolution to the philosophical debate concerning free will, and if you don't think that is true I suggest you go here:

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctytho/dfwIntroIndex.htm

As I stated earlier all of my a posteriori beliefs are probabilistic rather than absolute, so while I am currently inclined to file non-physical causality with Thor and fairies at the bottom of the garden I would be happy to revise that inclination if evidence arose. Evidence please.

(I don't think we should get sidetracked into a free will debate. I suggest starting another thread if it is something you wan to pursue).

I don't have a single set of foundations. I am anti-foundationalist, precisely because I think all sets of foundations are shaky. Yours included.

Evidence and/or argument please.

Sure. But I admit more things as evidence than you do. I suspect I have a rather different concept of "truth" also.

Okay, please explain what you do mean by evidence and truth. We are not going to get very far until you do.

So you claim to teach it, and you also suggest it is a waste of time studying it. That's a bit weird, isn't it?

I tutored Philosophy at university, and I probably will again in the future, but I never tutored anyone in metaphysics. Philosophy is a big, big subject and yes, in my opinion some aspects of academic philosophy are only worth studying as historical curiousities.

My academic background is not something I bring up, generally, because my statements should stand or fall on their own merits. I only ever mentioned it on this board once years ago, in response to a very rudely phrased claim by Ian that I was "an idiot who doesn't understand the most elementary philosophy", and I have vaguely regretted outing myself ever since.
 
Paul

However, it does make a difference to the way you think about other philosophical questions, and these affect the way you think about lots of things.
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Such as?

Philosophy of science for a start. And philosophy of religion.

It provides you with a different shaped piece of the jigsaw which may later prove useful if you are looking for bigger pictures. If you just hang on to materialism it "cramps your thinking" in all sorts of other areas. You can be left with a one-track mind.

quote:
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You can't sensibly argue that without qualifying it in such a way that it once more doesn't make any difference. You can argue that the metamind is the only thing which exists provided you also argue that

a) human minds are part of the metamind

and

b) the "physical world" exists directly in the metamind whereas human minds are dependent on sense data. Our minds are are "embedded" in physical reality in a way that the metamind itself isn't.
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Why argue this instead of:

quote:
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You can't sensibly argue that without qualifying it in such a way that it once more doesn't make any difference. You can argue that the physical world is the only thing which exists provided you also argue that

a) human minds are physical

and

b) the "external physical world" exists directly in the physical world whereas human minds are dependent on sense data. Our minds are "embedded" in physical reality in a way that low-level physical reality itself isn't, just as with any emergent property.
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Then you would be arguing for property dualism. I only reject that on the grounds that it is cumbersome and I find it intuitively unappealing. I don't bother arguing with property dualists though. It seems like a reasonable position to take.
 
Kevin

Okay, please explain what you do mean by evidence and truth. We are not going to get very far until you do.

We aren't going to get very far anyway. I have no interest in trying to convince people who are as commited to their beliefs as you are to open up a bit. You fall into the category I would label "scientistic", and I have learned by experience that direct challenges to scientistic thinkers are a waste of time. Life's too short. I'm not lifegazer. I know when to stop banging my head against a brick wall.

To all:

I wrote an article for a new online philosophy magazine which covers in detail some of the reasons why I think the stuff we are talking about in this thread does matter. The site should be coming on-line in the next few days and I will provide a link to send some traffic over there. But I have two exams before friday so I think I will leave this for now.

Geoff
 
JustGeoff said:
We aren't going to get very far anyway. I have no interest in trying to convince people who are as commited to their beliefs as you are to open up a bit. You fall into the category I would label "scientistic", and I have learned by experience that direct challenges to scientistic thinkers are a waste of time. Life's too short. I'm not lifegazer. I know when to stop banging my head against a brick wall.

Judging by the ratio between views and posts on this forum, lurkers probably outnumber posters. So even if I refuse to acknowledge a lucid and rational argument for your position, presumably a greater number of lurkers will be impressed. If that matters.

I do think it's a little bit offensive to accuse me of being a brick wall when you have mostly avoided trying to justify your position. I have explained in moderate detail my beliefs and their justifications, giving you ample opportunity to criticise any intellectual missteps, and it seems a little evasive to avoid doing the same yourself just on the basis that those grapes would probably be sour anyway.

I wrote an article for a new online philosophy magazine which covers in detail some of the reasons why I think the stuff we are talking about in this thread does matter. The site should be coming on-line in the next few days and I will provide a link to send some traffic over there. But I have two exams before friday so I think I will leave this for now.

Fair enough too. Exams are much more important than this. Good luck with them.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:


The claim that consciousness is non-physical (or non-observable) is a posteriori claim which requires justification. You have provided none. It is also a claim which is easily demonstrated to be false, unless you define consciousness to be something which does not affect your behavior in any way, in which case what you are calling "consciousness" isn't what anybody actually thinks of as their consciousness, and isn't anything which any of us have any reason to believe we have....


...The same is true for consciousness, as evidenced by the fact that there is no aspect of your consciousness which you know about which does not in some way affect your behavior.


...In order for this to be true, there would have to be aspects of your consciousness which you know about, but which are incapable of affecting your behavior. There aren't, so you are simply wrong.

For all...

David Chalmers gives an argument that showns inconsistencies in adopting the type of view that Stimpson J Cat is proposing here

I wonder if any proponents of what Chalmers calls the "phenomenal concept strategy" could comment on his paper?
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
Okay, go back and read this part of the thread again if you need to. The point I was making is that there is no evidence for anything other than atoms doing their thing in the brain/the mind, which is why we make the a posteriori judgement that odds are there is nothing else going on.

Odds on if you're a p-zombie, sure.
 
Interesting Ian said:
I have no idea what you mean by "emergent" phenomenon. Either we can derive consciousness from physical processes in the brain, or we cannot. If the former it is not emergent, if the latter it is not materialism.

Non-reductive materialist positions entail epiphenomenalism.
Reductive materialist positions entail the thesis that no-one is, or has ever been conscious, including oneself.


I meant property emergentism not 'substance' emergentism, consciousness might just be another [material] property of the brain due to its huge complexity (the brain seems to be one of the most complex systems in the universe). A property which is truly emergent, that is it cannot be 'deduced' from the functioning of the constitutive parts, the firings of the singular neurons (unlike solidity and so on which are emergent but can still be deduced from QM). This means that consciousness is, qualitatively speaking, more than the sum of its parts (the architecture of the neural network, where individual neurons do not seem to have mental like properties).

This is not so absurd, as a matter of fact there are many scientists who believe that there are laws of complexity that emerge only at very high levels of complexity, laws irreducible to 'lower' levels. The laws governing consciousness might be just such complexity laws, though strictly speaking matter alone could cause consciousness. This is a serious possibility that cannot be overlooked, though of course there is still plenty of space for property dualism, protopsychism, Libet's conscious mental field (a variant of interactionist dualism), idealism or even true, cartesian, 'substance' dualism.
 
davidsmith73 said:
David Chalmers gives an argument that showns inconsistencies in adopting the type of view that Stimpson J Cat is proposing here

I wonder if any proponents of what Chalmers calls the "phenomenal concept strategy" could comment on his paper?

I am not sure there are any such people here, as the article certainly does not attack my position and I am fairly sure it does not attack Stimpson's either.

To quote from the article:

There is a related strategy that I will not be discussing here. This is the type-A materialist strategy of appealing to psychological features to explain why we have false beliefs or mistaken epistemic intuitions about consciousness (see, for example, Dennett 19xx and Jackson 2003). In its most extreme form, this strategy might involve an attempted psychological explanation of why we think we are conscious, when in fact we are not. In a less extreme form, the strategy might involve an attempted psychological explanation of why we think there is an epistemic gap between physical and phenomenal truths when in fact there is not.

In other words, if you decline to buy in to the discussion of what is conceivable in the first place the article is not relevant to your position.

I think that such discussion is ultimately futile because our ideas about conceivability are not known to be reliable guides to what is possible let alone what is actual in difficult cases. I'm happy not to have an explanation of why people like Interesting Ian are convinced their consciousness is somehow immaterial (or whatever), given that there is no evidence for their beliefs. Similarly since I am happy with a probabilistic belief that the mind is just a pile of atoms doing their thing, I have no need to absolutely rule out other possibilities.
 
Geoff said:
Philosophy of science for a start. And philosophy of religion.

It provides you with a different shaped piece of the jigsaw which may later prove useful if you are looking for bigger pictures. If you just hang on to materialism it "cramps your thinking" in all sorts of other areas. You can be left with a one-track mind.
So far, no example of a difference between idealism and materialism. Do you have one? How is idealism multi-track, while "materialism" is one-track?

Then you would be arguing for property dualism. I only reject that on the grounds that it is cumbersome and I find it intuitively unappealing. I don't bother arguing with property dualists though. It seems like a reasonable position to take.
How is there anything dualistic about my statement at all? Let me repeat it:
You can't sensibly argue that without qualifying it in such a way that it once more doesn't make any difference. You can argue that the physical world is the only thing which exists provided you also argue that

a) human minds are physical

and

b) the "external physical world" exists directly in the physical world whereas human minds are dependent on sense data. Our minds are "embedded" in physical reality in a way that low-level physical reality itself isn't, just as with any emergent property.
All I'm saying is that we can make a distinction, along a spectrum, between low-level physics and the higher-level behavior that emerges from it. This is no more dualistic than your distinction between the Metamind and the individual minds within it.

Is there any way that Ian and Geoff could discuss what we actually believe, rather than constantly shoe-horning us into some predefined philosophy?

~~ Paul
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
I'm happy not to have an explanation of why people like Interesting Ian are convinced their consciousness is somehow immaterial (or whatever),

What does the word "somehow" mean in this context? You're misusing the word. It would be correct to say that you believe that consciousness is somehow material. After all, I am just accepting consciousness for what it is. If it exists then it necessarily is immaterial because no sense can be made of the notion that it is somehow material. It's not just that there is no evidence that it is material, the whole notion is simply incoherent.

given that there is no evidence for their beliefs.

I do not need empirical evidence. I am directly aware of my own consciousness and am directly aware it is of a characteristically differing kind of existent from trees, chairs, tables and whatever.

Moreover we know that consciousness cannot be accommodated within reductionist science unless we equate consciousness with either the neurons firing or the function they perform. But of course this is absurd. Hence consciousness is necessarily immaterial. At the very minimum you would need to provide some pretty strong evidence and reasons for not accepting the crashingly obvious.
 
metacristi said:
I meant property emergentism not 'substance' emergentism, consciousness might just be another [material] property of the brain due to its huge complexity (the brain seems to be one of the most complex systems in the universe). A property which is truly emergent, that is it cannot be 'deduced' from the functioning of the constitutive parts, the firings of the singular neurons (unlike solidity and so on which are emergent but can still be deduced from QM). This means that consciousness is, qualitatively speaking, more than the sum of its parts (the architecture of the neural network, where individual neurons do not seem to have mental like properties).

I don't understand how it can be more than the sum of its parts and yet still be material.

This is not so absurd, as a matter of fact there are many scientists who believe that there are laws of complexity that emerge only at very high levels of complexity, laws irreducible to 'lower' levels.

Then name some.


Of course I accept the prima facie possibility of such emergence. I don't think it could be described as being material though. It seems such consciousness would need to be an epiphenomenon -- i.e not entailed by the laws of physics.
 
Ian said:
Moreover we know that consciousness cannot be accommodated within reductionist science unless we equate consciousness with either the neurons firing or the function they perform. But of course this is absurd. Hence consciousness is necessarily immaterial. At the very minimum you would need to provide some pretty strong evidence and reasons for not accepting the crashingly obvious.
Proof by "of course this is absurd." Quite similar to proof by "now a miracle occurs."

~~ Paul
 
Interesting Ian said:

I do not need empirical evidence. I am directly aware of my own consciousness and am directly aware it is of a characteristically differing kind of existent from trees, chairs, tables and whatever.

I agree. But because experience is non-physical existence it is immune from being coherently described to others in terms of logical relationships. Hence why we always end up at the same spot in this type of discussion. The materialists demand a coherent definition of non-physical experience, but that cannot be given. However, I know, as does Ian and others, of such existence. Materialists would too if they could only realise it themselves. Non-physical existence cannot be explained to someone else like I could explain physical entities to someone else.
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Proof by "of course this is absurd." Quite similar to proof by "now a miracle occurs."

~~ Paul

Why is it similar? A "miracle" I assume refers to a set of physically definable events. Unless you mean something else by "miracle"? Ian is not talking about a set of physically definable events.
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
So far, no example of a difference between idealism and materialism. Do you have one? How is idealism multi-track, while "materialism" is one-track?

I don't have time to get into a long discussion on this right now - and it would certainly be a long discussion. At least two areas where it would make a difference are the interpretation of quantum effects such as entanglement (which causes problems for materialists, but not to idealists) and with the arguments surrounding parapsychological statistical positive results and the "experimenter effect" whereby there are repeated differences in the results of certain experiments dependent on who carries them out, but nobody can agree whether this is itself a parasychological phenonemenon or down to some sort of error which the skeptics cannot actually locate. Classic example of this is the Schlitz/Wiseman remote staring experiments.

IMO, the grounds for rejecting the evidence is metaphysical incredulity - the skeptics are simply unable to bring themselves to believe the results could be anything other than a mistake (or fraud), even though they can't find that mistake. This sort of behaviour is absolutely typical for progression in science, as described by Kuhn. Given that in this case it's not just an established scientific belief being overturned but a cherished metaphysical belief, it's not surprising the results are rejected. Doesn't mean there weren't any results, because there were.


All I'm saying is that we can make a distinction, along a spectrum, between low-level physics and the higher-level behavior that emerges from it. This is no more dualistic than your distinction between the Metamind and the individual minds within it.

Ah, I think I see the miscommunication. Our minds would have to exist "within the metamind" in two seperate senses. Our brains exist directly in the metamind as part of the physical structure of the world. Our minds, whilst being informationally equivalent to our brains, are not the same thing as our brains. We have direct access to our minds - but not our brains.
 
Geoff said:
IMO, the grounds for rejecting the evidence is metaphysical incredulity...
Look, Geoff, really, idealism doesn't make psi any easier to comprehend than does physicalism. No one has described a mechanism for psi under any metaphysic. The idea that everything is mind just makes it easier for you to blithely accept psi than does the idea that everything is "material," because, gee whiz, it's already mind all the way down, so psi just falls out without any effort.

But it doesn't just fall out if you actually endeavor to explain how it works, because with either metaphysic you have to discover the mechanism.

~~ Paul
 
Ian,

How do you define "physical realm"?
It's the realm that reductivist science studies.
Reductivist science? The only science I know of studies all empirically observable effects. Since consciousness clearly affects the brain (at the very least, if it is not brain activity it certainly affects brain activity), it clearly falls into this category. I don't know what you think "reductivist science" is, but I rather suspect that it is some bizarre misinterpretation of science which you think actually represents what scientists do.

It is either that which constitutes our sensory qualia, or that which is able to relate the patterns in our sensory qualia as part of our ongoing experiences.
I have never heard of any scientist attempt to define the category of things which they study in terms of metaphysical terms like "qualia". It is quite clear that you are basing your definition of "physical realm" of a misconception of science, and that therefore what you are calling the "physical realm" has absolutely no relevance to the question of whether science can actually study something.

I am well aware of what it requires, and I have argued that if consciousness is not the same as brain processes, but nevertheless affects such processes, then such consciousness would not be physical because the causal power of consciousness does not equate to consciousness itself.
Then you are defining consciousness to have aspects whose existence you could not possibly know about, which is self-contradictory given what the word "consciousness" is actually supposed to refer to. By definition, there can be no aspects of your consciousness which you are not aware of, and all of the aspects which you are aware of affect your brain activity in some way.

In other words such interaction between consciousness and brain processes would be interactive dualism rather than materialism.
What do interaction dualism and materialism have to do with any of this? It does not matter to science one little bit whether materialism, or interaction dualism, or some other form of monism or polyism is true. It makes no difference to science. As far as science is concerned, all that matters is the interactions, not some mysterious ontological status of the things which are interacting.

Even if some form of interaction dualism is true, science simply doesn't care. It's all physical as far as science is concerned. In fact, science cannot even tell the difference. Science just sees interactions, and attempts to understand and describe them.

Of course such interactive dualism is perfectly compatible with the idea that consciousness has its genesis in the brain and there is no "life after death". If you define such a position as a materialist one, then ok. But those who call themselves materialists would not normally subscribe to such an interaction. It seems to me that downward causation is not compatible with materialism.
Why do you keep bringing up materialism? Nobody hear is defending what you call materialism.

Well, you are correct that metaphysical positions cannot be known to be correct a priori. Nor can they be known to be correct a postiori.
Right, so brain/consciousness correlations do not constitute knowledge that the latter are the result of the former? I agree.
Wrong. That is an epistemological position, not a metaphysical one. That is, unless you define "consciousness" in such a way as to implicitly assume that some set of metaphysical claims are true. But there is no reason to do so. In fact, doing so actually makes no sense, since in order to determine whether those metaphysical claims are true in the first place, you need an epistemological system, and your definition of "consciousness" serves as some of the axioms of that system. It amounts to nothing more than begging the question.

But the hypothesis that consciousness is a set of brain processes is not a metaphysical hypothesis. Not unless your definition of "consciousness" implicitly stipulates that it includes aspects which cannot be empirically verified.
My understanding of consciousness does stipulate that and more. That is to say there are not only aspects of consciousness which cannot be empirically verified, but the whole of consciousness cannot be empirically verified.
Does your definition of the term "consciousness" implicitly require this? If so, then see above. If not, then it is still the case that the hypothesis that consciousness is a set of brain processes is not a metaphysical hypothesis. It is an epistemological hypothesis. Your claim that consciousness cannot be empirically verified is also an epistemological claim. Metaphysics does not even enter into it at this point. It is simply a question of what is knowable and how we can know it. Now, you may have concluded that consciousness cannot be empirically verified based on metaphysical assumptions, but that does not mean that my hypothesis is a metaphysical one.

All we can empirically do is discover relations between particular types of conscious experience and particular activity in the brain.
And? Why do you maintain that such evidence cannot be used to construct and test a falsifiable model of consciousness in terms of brain activity? After all, that is all it means to say that consciousness is a set of brain processes.

I do not have a definition of consciousness. I do not thi . . . . nay I know it is not possible to define.
I think you may be confused about what is meant by "definition" in this context. You seem to think that by "definition" I mean "complete description". I don't. The definition of a term is simply the set of criteria for stipulating what the term refers to. If you truly do not have a definition for the term "consciousness", then when you use it, you are just babbling nonsense.

I directly experience consciousness. My inner qualitative subjective feel is my consciousness,
See, that is a definition. It stipulates what you are referring to. Incidentally, nothing about the above definition logically implies that consciousness cannot be a set of brain processes. That is a posteriori judgement.

and it is quite distinct from tables and chairs and electrons.
So is combustion, so what?

Indeed there is no similarity whatsoever. Given that it is utterly different from all physical things, I see nothing to be gained in labelling it as physical.
It is not utterly different from all physical things. On the contrary, it has in common with all other physical things precisely the one characteristic which all physical things share: that it interacts with other physical things. That is the only necessary and sufficient criteria for something being physical, and it is the only characteristic which all physical things share.

Whether we call consciousness physical or non-physical doesn't alter the fact that felt qualitative experiences have nothing in common whatsoever with rocks or tables.
And whether we call it physical or non-physical doesn't alter the fact that it interacts with other physical things, and can be studied scientifically through the process of empirical observation.

We only infer consciousness from our behaviour. This is in contrast to various physical entities which we indirectly observe.
Again, you are demonstrating your lack of understanding about how science, and epistemology in general, work. All known characteristics of all physical entities are inferred. There is no such thing as direct observation in the sense you are using it here.

The reality of physical things is exhausted by the role they play in some fruitful theory describing the world. There is nothing more to an electron than such a role. But consciousness is not constituted by its causal powers. Rather it is constituted by raw experiences.
You are simply assuming here that theory could be constructed which successfully describes all aspects of our experiences. You have not provided any justification for asserting this.

I could as easily claim that there is some "meta-electron" which has all of the physical properties of the "electron", but which may not be exhausted by that scientific description. I have no more reason to believe that consciousness has such non-physical properties than I do to believe that these "meta-electrons" do. The mere fact that consciousness is "constituted by raw experiences", does not in any way imply this.

Huh? Why on Earth not? Consciousness affect behavior. I can therefore conclude all sorts of things about consciousness by observing behavior.
Hang on. So what can you conclude about the consciousness of a boulder as it rolls down a hill?
What kind of nonsense is that? What I can conclude is that boulders don't have consciousness at all.

Obviously nothing, so why are human beings special?
Because we have brains. :rolleyes:

They ought not to be according to materialists.
Complete BS, and totally irrelevant, since nobody here is defending what you call materialism.

If we can infer nothing about a boulder's consciousness by observing its behaviour, then by the same principle we can infer nothing about the consciousness of other people by observing their behaviour.
That's like saying that since I can't infer anything about the orbital dynamics of a chicken from its behavior, that we can't infer anything about the orbital dynamics of planets by observing their behavior. It is complete nonsense. Why you would imagine that the notion that consciousness is physical should somehow imply that all things have it, is completely beyond me. It is quite possibly one of the most idiotic things I have ever heard you suggest.

Other peoples bodies behave as they do because of physical laws just as much as the rolling boulder does, or indeed any other physical process in the Universe.
Yeah, and? Why should that imply all physical processes are conscious?

What a complete load of nonsense. Come on, Ian. I know you aren't this stupid.


Dr. Stupid
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Look, Geoff, really, idealism doesn't make psi any easier to comprehend than does physicalism.

Nice bit of armwaving. :D

I don't agree.

No one has described a mechanism for psi under any metaphysic.

Er, lots of people have. Try looking up Peter Lloyd. What none of them can do is test it.

There is a great deal of literature on this subject, much of which isn't worth reading.

The idea that everything is mind just makes it easier for you to blithely accept psi......

The rhetoric is running thick and fast, today..... I haven't "blithely" acceped anything at all, it just suits your purposes to make it sound that way. You think I just woke up one day, decided I was bored of being a skeptic, and "converted" to woowooism?

than does the idea that everything is "material," because, gee whiz, it's already mind all the way down, so psi just falls out without any effort.

No, that's not what I said either. The difference is that with non-materialistic metaphysical systems some types of what is called "psi phenomena" seem less impossible. They don't just "fall out". But the door is left open for them, instead of being locked shut.

But it doesn't just fall out if you actually endeavor to explain how it works, because with either metaphysic you have to discover the mechanism.

Sure, you have to understand the mechanism. However, there is no reason to assume that "the mechanism" follows the same sorts of rules that physical mechanisms follow. It may be a very different sort of "mechanism" altogether. It may be a "mechanism" which plays havoc with the normal methods of empirical investigation. In fact, if it existed, it would have to be just such a "slippery" mechanism or it would have been nailed down a long time ago.

Geoff.
 

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