hammegk,
Gee, and here I thought metaphysics involved the use of logic.
Try thinking through the two possible and binarily incompatible monist positions, and see which one more closely mirrors your thinking about "what-is". Is that not a viable exercise? Truth? No. Best thinking? Yes!
What makes you think there are only two? There are an infinite number of possible, but mutually exclusive, monistic positions. Materialism and Idealism are just the only ones that are intuitively compelling.
Furthermore, neither of them more closely mirrors my thinking about "what is", because my own position is perfectly compatible with either of them. More to the point, the metaphysical assumptions that Idealism and classical Materialism make are completely superfluous to my position. They add nothing of meaning to it.
If I start with an Idealistic or Materialistic metaphysical basis, and then add on the axioms of science, I am no better off than if I just start with the axioms of science. The metaphysical speculation adds nothing useful. There is no way for me to verify that the metaphysical claims are correct, and no difference that the truth or falsehood of those metaphysical claims could ever make to me. They are, in the truest sense of the word, completely irrelevant.
I am interested in knowing that which is knowable. I have no interest in pretending to know things which are unknowable.
Like masturbation, perhaps pleasant, but otherwise sterile.
~~ Paul
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mental, yes, perhaps pleasant, yes, but sterile? I think not. Your choice of which answer you deem correct -- mind, or matter -- should define the questions posed for examination by the scientific method.
On the contrary, such metaphysical speculation cannot have any relevance at all to the questions examined by the scientific method. At the most, it effects our choice of words when talking about science, but it does not have any effect on the content.
Any question is fair game for science. That is, assuming there is really any question at all.
~~ Paul
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yup. Unfortunately the validity of your answer to "is there really any question at all" may at times be defined apriori by your choice in the mind-matter dichotomy...
No, it is defined by whether or not the question can be meaningfully expressed within the language of the logical framework of science. If it can, then science can attempt to answer the question (it may or may not be able to do so in practice). If it cannot, the question has no meaning within the context of science.
The only thing which limits the range of topics that the scientific method can be applied to, is the axioms of the scientific method itself. When you allow your metaphysical preconceptions to dictate that a particular area of study is "off limits" to science, then you are essentially doing the same thing as a fundamentalist who claims that God put the dinosaur bones in the ground to test our faith.
Dr. Stupid