Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
Yes.Lifegazer said:
Your senses-of-things are not things in themselves. There's a distinction to be made between a thing and the perception of a thing. You squire, only experience perceptions-of-things. Do you understand?
This is confusing. Why do you think my senses have a cause? And even if they do, my sense-of-things involves two separate aspects: First, my senses. Second, the event of my senses having something to sense. I could have senses, but never sense anything. What is the cause of the inputs to my senses?Because of this, you are in no position to discuss the acausality of any thing. Why? Because you can only confirm the existence of the sense-of-things, which are not things in themselves, but which all have a cause since your senses have a cause.
But how can any other philosophy be different? In an idealist philosophy, there has to be a source of experience, and that source follows laws (otherwise everyone would have random, unrelated experiences). Whatever assumptions science has to make about the external world, these same assumptions are necessary in idealism. It's simply a question of where you place the source of the laws.And so, any conclusion pertaining to the acausality of things relates to the existence of things apart (and therefore external) from the sense-of-things.
Consequently, this conclusion requires a belief in a world-apart from awareness. Thus, since science has made such a conclusion, she has expressed an unfounded bias for such a world.
Science is guilty of unfounded philosophical-bias.
Science requires reform.
~~ Paul