UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
OK, I feel like it's time to challenge Lifegazer.
Lifegazer has spent many hundreds of hours trying to convince the denizens of the JREF that materialism is wrong. I wish to suggest that this is in fact an irrelevant argument, and here is why. Instead of arguing until the end of time about the correctness/incorrectness of materialism (based upon philosophical-logical arguments) perhaps we ought to consider how it affects our view of the world if we were to accept that materialism is false.
For the purposes of this thread, let us assume two things :
1) Idealism is true.
2) The observable/observed world behaves exactly as if Materialism is true.
Now, these two assumptions should please everybody. It pleases Lifegazer, because it saves him from trying to convince everybody that materialism is false. And it pleases the JREF skeptics because it renders the falsity of materialism a total irrelevance.
Science is the investigation of the observable Universe by repeatable methods. The fact that nobody has claimed Randis money, and the fact that nobody can ever provide experimental evidence that materialism is false strongly support assumption number 2. The observable world always behaves as if materialism is true, regardless of whether or not it is actually true.
The mind-body problem, and all the other logical proofs against materialism (e.g. Jackson, Chalmers) do not change (2), they merely support (1).
My question to Lifegazer is as follows :
If in fact Idealism is true, but the observed Universe behaves exactly as if materialism is true, then how should this change our behaviour, our ethics and our morality? What is the relevance of idealism being true if the Universe behaves exactly as if materialism is true? Does it change the way we carry out scientific investigation into the obserable Universe? I mean - if the observable Universe always behaves as if materialism were true, then what difference does it make to science that idealism is actually true? Does it change the way we decide what is right and wrong? How does ontology affect ethics?
Please can people responding to this thread stick to the questions that have actually been asked. I am only interested in discussing the hypothetical consequences of my two assumptions being true. I am not interested in defending those assumptions. That has been done to death already. I wish to demonstrate that Lifegazers entire approach is completely irrelevant. Any person who allows themselves to be drawn into a discussion about the veracity of the assumptions is allowing themselves to be driven by the agenda I am attempting to demonstrate is pointless.
Lifegazer has spent many hundreds of hours trying to convince the denizens of the JREF that materialism is wrong. I wish to suggest that this is in fact an irrelevant argument, and here is why. Instead of arguing until the end of time about the correctness/incorrectness of materialism (based upon philosophical-logical arguments) perhaps we ought to consider how it affects our view of the world if we were to accept that materialism is false.
For the purposes of this thread, let us assume two things :
1) Idealism is true.
2) The observable/observed world behaves exactly as if Materialism is true.
Now, these two assumptions should please everybody. It pleases Lifegazer, because it saves him from trying to convince everybody that materialism is false. And it pleases the JREF skeptics because it renders the falsity of materialism a total irrelevance.
Science is the investigation of the observable Universe by repeatable methods. The fact that nobody has claimed Randis money, and the fact that nobody can ever provide experimental evidence that materialism is false strongly support assumption number 2. The observable world always behaves as if materialism is true, regardless of whether or not it is actually true.
The mind-body problem, and all the other logical proofs against materialism (e.g. Jackson, Chalmers) do not change (2), they merely support (1).
My question to Lifegazer is as follows :
If in fact Idealism is true, but the observed Universe behaves exactly as if materialism is true, then how should this change our behaviour, our ethics and our morality? What is the relevance of idealism being true if the Universe behaves exactly as if materialism is true? Does it change the way we carry out scientific investigation into the obserable Universe? I mean - if the observable Universe always behaves as if materialism were true, then what difference does it make to science that idealism is actually true? Does it change the way we decide what is right and wrong? How does ontology affect ethics?
Please can people responding to this thread stick to the questions that have actually been asked. I am only interested in discussing the hypothetical consequences of my two assumptions being true. I am not interested in defending those assumptions. That has been done to death already. I wish to demonstrate that Lifegazers entire approach is completely irrelevant. Any person who allows themselves to be drawn into a discussion about the veracity of the assumptions is allowing themselves to be driven by the agenda I am attempting to demonstrate is pointless.