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Old 04-28-2002, 01:09 AM   #21
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"This leaves us with only perspectives and interpretations, and none of them unchangeable or consistent with one another. The downside is that there is no hope for convergence of these perspectives, so no absolute knowledge is to be had. "--Ender

Are you saying that it is not possible for people's perspectives to converge on an issue, where their perspectives relate to their experience of their environment for example? Or, that the convergence is not any evidence for a perspective being 'better' or 'closer to a true understanding' than another?

Is the explanation of a sick man's illness in witch-doctor terms no better than the explanation from a western doctor? They of course have different vocabularies, and their experience may be no more than their perspective, but where would this leave what might be seen as deficiencies in the explanatory vocabulary of illness the witch doctor has. Is it that the witch doctor's fiction is less useful? If so, I wonder how we define useful?

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Old 04-28-2002, 03:27 AM   #22
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Hello Agnostic Pope! Thank you for addressing my post. I figure the best way to learn is to take a controversial standpoint and argue with those of deep-seated convictions. Since most of your post wasn't too contentious, I will address only what you found to be objectionable:

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Agnostic Pope: I personally reject the postmodernist view that every distinct perspective (or "interpretation") of the world is equally valid. Down that path lies an inability to make moral judgments, and the consequence of that inability is the devolution of human society back into the animal existence from whence we evolved.
I think here you overreact by misidentifying perspectivism with postmodernism, and pull an Ayn Rand by making a sweeping generalization over a very broad category. When you stated postmodernism, which critical theory were you referring to: deconstruction, poststructuralism, second-wave feminism, new historicism, cultural materialism, postcolonialism, black critics, queer theorists?

I already addressed Intensity why perspectivism isn't necessarily out-and-out relativism above.

As for your moral outrage against the relativistic tenets in postmodernism, that's a topic deserving its own thread. In a nutshell I deny your implication that morals are objective. I stated this elsewhere:
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The dichotomy of “good” and “evil” are relative concepts that are contingent upon the greater end of the individual life form, and are merely aspects of power that the individual exercise in order to maintain their existence/position/place in the world. Machiavelli was right- for all intents and purposes “good” and “evil” are expedients for acquiring supremacy.
Do you have an opinion of Alasdair MacIntyre's After Virtue?

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Agnostic Pope: I would agree that the realism of Bertrand Russell has been properly challenged.
By who? What realism? Don't you mean logical atomism? Bertrand Russell never published a true, working theory of knowledge, due to Wittgenstein's acidic criticism.

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Agnostic Pope: Accordingly, I would assert that "absolutes" and "reality" exist, even if humans never know (or "fully know") them. Accordingly, I would not hesitate to answer "Yes!" to the classic question of: "if a tree falls in the forest, and nobody hears it, does it make a sound?"
If you told Berkeley that, the old bishop would shrug and mutter something along the lines- "there aren't any trees."


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Agnostic Pope: Once again, I would assert that if a tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, then it will still make a sound. We can passively observe "order" being assembled out of "chaos" throughout the viewable universe (roughly 10 billion light years in radius). It defies logic to claim that no real order exists in the absence of human ability to perceive that order.
What are your thoughts of the Kantian program? Or do you commit to the same epistemic fallacy Intensity does?

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Agnostic Pope: I cannot disagree with this paragraph of yours any more than totally, and I am in total disagreement with your fundamental assertion here. Yes, the universe may well be indifferent to the concerns of humanity. But still, the universe provides the very structure which nourishes our well-being.
And so we have the Agnostic Pope's sketch of the mind- completely passive and inert. Am I right? If not, then the activity on the brain's part in assessing the raw data is precisely what I am arguing about- that the mind imposes certain constraints (whatever they may be) upon reality in order to render it intelligible.

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Agnostic Pope: And the universe is not in any way tyrannical if it is, in fact, the source of our very existence.
This statement is incoherent. How exactly does a "tyrannical" universe does not entail the "source of our existence?" A tyrannical state does provide for its constituents, as long as they did not violate certain restrictions. I think I smell something very dank here- something related to pantheism.

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Agnostic Pope: As Carl Sagan observed, we are all "star stuff," our very being constructed by the process of evolving order out of chaos, layer upon layer, from the original chaos of the stuff out of which the "Big Bang" was formed, on through the chaos of the early universe, where only energy existed, and down through the early generations of stars that were used to rapidly form complex atoms within their nuclear furnaces.
This is a massive non-sequitur. How does this follow that the universe is not tyrannical?

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Agnostic Pope: As Dennett says in Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life, nature does operate in an orderly fashion, creating higher levels of "order" out of lower levels of "chaos" through the application of "law-like behavior." The arguments Dennett advances in favor of modern evolutionary theory work just as well (from a philosophical perspective) on the evolution of our "Big Bang" space/time continuum.
I have not read that book, but I have very little respect for Daniel Dennett and his pedantic treatment of the consciousness. Dennett as well as you and as well as I are stuck behind a biological perspective that evaluates nature as "orderly." Order is necessary for our livelihood- but in no way does that guarantee its validity. This is a symptom of the belief in that 2300 year-old platonic doctrine, that truth is divine. The solution to the problem of truth may not be at all the supposed 'holy grail' of epistemology.

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Agnostic Pope: In a totally arbitrary and non-lawlike universe, I would expect irregular behavior to be the norm. I would expect people to vanish into thin air at any unexpected moment. Similarly, people would appear out of thin air. These sorts of irregularities DO NOT HAPPEN! Thus, there is at least "lawlike behavior" within our universe.
You overlook the enormous part of how our human nature arranges the raw data of the external world to make it intelligible. After all, Kant did say that reason was the fabrication of the intellect.

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Agnostic Pope: Finally, I find it necessary to directly challenge your conclusion that "There is no order and a fortiori no moral order in the universe." The argument for order in the universe is given in brief, above. We humans would not exist without order in the universe. We are the latest result of the building-up of order from an earlier state of chaos.
Calling evolution an orderly process is questionable- the causal mechanism of evolution is simply that- an anthropomorphic description. That we are here is merely a matter of luck. Suppose an asteroid did not wipe out the dinosaurs? (assuming the extremely high level of iridium in the sediments around 65 million years ago is sufficient grounds for an asteroid impact)

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Agnostic Pope: Humans have created a new dimension upon which evolutionary forces can operate: the dimension of the human mind (a dimension of mental rather than physical facts). Moral order exists as a creation of mankind for the better survival of our species. If moral order didn't enhance our ability to survive, it would have died out long ago. The conclusion that moral order doesn't exist is the most odiferous of assertions of the postmodernist worldview.
Beep beep- my strawman fallacy just went off. I stated that the universe does not have a moral order- not that man has no moral order. In your rush to refute postmodernism, you've read me sloppily. Plus, where in the "official postmodernist doctrine" that says moral order does not exist?

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Agnostic Pope: I view such postmodernists as the lead character in Lynard Skynard's song That Smell. In point of fact, the denial of moral order is an attempt to destroy human society, and it leads to death, destruction, and horrible suffering.
Bollocks. When you do read some postmodernists, come back and substantiate your sweeping assertions next time with actual passages.

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Agnostic Pope: On the good side, moral order is our own creation, and as such, it is under our control. But the overall control for human moral order is what it contributes to human survival as a species. Again, the reason for the existence of moral order is the Darwinian idea that it adds to the fitness of humanity to navigate over an ever-changing fitness landscape. Because this is true, moral order is an inherent part of what it means to be human.
I could go existential on you but I'm dog-tired. So i'll let this slide for the time being.

~WiGGiN~

[ April 28, 2002: Message edited by: Ender ]</p>
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Old 04-28-2002, 03:44 AM   #23
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Originally posted by boneyard bill:
<strong>We still have no knowledge of anything "outside" of our personal experiences. </strong>
This is the essential claim made by Luntley in <a href="http://www.secweb.org/bookstore/bookdetail.asp?BookID=692" target="_blank">Language, Logic and Experience</a>, and after carefully considering his arguments, I'm willing to grant him that much. Luntley then claims that shared human knowledge cannot extend beyond the arena of what at least one human has experienced at one time or another, and that seems to also be a reasonable claim. Finally, Luntley explains that, properly construed, this is the sole extent of the argument advanced by Dummett, himself, and the other anti-realists against realism, and that granting this line of reasoning (as I do) has substantial implications for classical logic as it negates one of the foundations of the Principia by Russell and Whitehead. In essence, anti-realism denies that there is a fixed (determinate) reality that exists independant of our ability to investigate it, and once that point is granted, classical logic falls because logical negation cannot be asserted. In mathematical terms, anti-realism denies that ((A) or (not A)) always equals one when all that is available to human experience is (A). This denies the validity of the "Excluded Middle" and "Bivalence" (for more on this, see Floy E. Andrews, <a href="http://www.mun.ca/animus/1996vol1/andrews.htm" target="_blank">THE PRINCIPLE OF EXCLUDED MIDDLE THEN AND NOW: ARISTOTLE AND PRINCIPIA MATHEMATICA</a>).

But just because something is unknown or indeterminate, that does not imply that it is entirely lawless. Casting out the logical manipulations asserted by the Law of Contradiction, the Law of Identity, and the Law of the Excluded Middle (all of which are merely interdefinitions that collapse into one another) does not eliminate any of the other laws of logic, and there is clearly plenty left for us to work with. Accordingly, it goes too far to claim (as Ender does) that there is nothing but subjectivity upon which to build a worldview. No, we can record and transmit our personal experiences, and we can assign coefficients of probable validity to each such transmitted experiential description. We do not have to begin with such scepticism that we refuse to assign ANY coefficient of validity to the experiences of others! Indeed, for us to do so is to, at the same time, claim that our own experiences are invalid to all others for any useful purpose. That is an extreme form of scepticism that belongs in the trashcan right on top of pure solipsism.

Likewise, just because the universe might currently appear to us to be operating in a way that appears to be modeled by chaos theory does not, in fact, prove that the universe is chaotic, and neither of these ideas in any way prove that the universe is "operating under blind chance." Such assertions are clearly outside of human experience and accordingly they cannot be take seriously.

== Bill
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Old 04-28-2002, 03:56 AM   #24
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Hey Bone, welcome back to the mosh-pit of high-faulting 20 dollar words!

Quote:
Boneyard: But then, doesn't Nietszche lead us to mysticism. If all knowledge is perspective, then all knowledge is grounded in the self. If we can dissolve the self, we can apprehend the world in its immediacy, as neither subject nor object. I'm sure Nietszche was familiar with mysticism, but I'm not aware of what he said about it.
Nietzsche did not have a favorable opinion of the self, (he thought it a grammatical fiction) nor did he subscribe to a mind-body dualism. Since Nietzsche was a thoroughgoing skeptic and a naturalist, the prognosis on mysticism is not very good. But I found this <a href="http://skepdic.com/cabala.html" target="_blank">link</a> that states for Nietzsche, "mysticism is nihilism's expression of the will to power." Personally this sounds like a superficial interpretation.

As for "apprehending the world in its immediacy" that is a phrase of phenomenology, and indicates a bedeutung. Someday i hope to do a phenomenological reading of Nietzsche and rehabilitate some concepts for a possible programme of my own- with bits of Sartre, Hume, and the linguistic flavor of Wittgenstein.

Most of the other commentators aren't much help- but F. A. Lea makes an interesting conjecture: "...that the value of things is always a human value, prescribed by one generation and inherited from it by another, was the contention he had pitted against the metaphysicians: he could not relinquish it now, and at bottom he did not want to relinquish it. This is what constitutes his unique distinction. In no other philosopher is mysticism of so high an order combined with absolute skepticism." F. A. Lea goes on to comment on his unique combination of "mysticism" with skepticism that it cannot be called religious, much less "pantheistic."

In a letter he wrote "Music is an echo of states, the conceptual expression of which was mysticism: a feeling of transfiguration and illumination on the part of the individual. Or rather the reconciliation of internal antinomies in something new, the birth of a third reality."
Another letter, on the definition of a mystic: one who "has enough and too much of his own happiness, and seeks out a language for his happiness because he wishes to give away."

~WiGGiN~
(edited to add: On your question of Logic- have you read this <a href="http://iidb.org/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=21&t=000242" target="_blank">thread?</a>

[ April 28, 2002: Message edited by: Ender ]</p>
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Old 04-28-2002, 09:51 AM   #25
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boneyard bill

"Really? So what is important is that we maintain faith in our theories, not whether or not the theories are right."

This would not be my interpretation, of course. Explanatory theories explain things by relating them to our experience of the world, not to a world as it is in itself. Reality, then, is what we experience, and not something we can never experience. Notwithstanding this, I do appreciate that there are two aspects of this experience, one, which, as above, _refers_ to a world which exists in itself. Thus, if we have some faith that a theory is a valid one, we would expect that all anomolies are explainable by positing entities responsible for it (much as we did, on the basis of a faith in Newton's theory of gravitation, when we proposed the existence of yet observed planets on the basis of anomolies in the orbits of those planets which we could observe). However, such a proposition about entities can only be serviceable if it can be related to our observations. The standard model in particle physics is the outcome of such researches. Despite this model, however, to the extent to which it applies to what I'm referring to as reality, such entities have an effect on us principally because we are not concerned with their individual welfare, but only in their collective welfare, where individuals are importantly indistinguishable, and this requires us to make use of statistical models.

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Old 04-28-2002, 10:34 AM   #26
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Intensity...

"This is only sensible in non-chaotic systems."

In systems subject to deterministically chaotic behavior, the ordinary (linear) deterministic models break down to the extent that such chaos exists, since initial conditions can never be made precise enough in practice. More globally, however, if we can find certain "attractors" there is some merit to the determination of global effects. For example, we currently have a two-week weather prediction barrier, but this does not necessarily prevent prediction of climate changes over a longer period. Such models are of course statistical, not fully deterministic.


"Presented? By who?"

Well, in another context I probably would have chosen "represented" rather than "presented" but as you apparently require that if something is presented it must be presented by some agent, let me substitute "represented" to mean the way the world is experienced by us humans.

"Who explains anomalies using chance?"

Many people do, I think. I think this may be the origin of beliefs in fatalism. However, what I was referring to is rather that our basic human instinct is to assume there is a comparable cause for every signficant event in our lives (anomolies), despite that chance plays a significant role that a careful researcher would need to rule out.

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Old 04-28-2002, 11:08 AM   #27
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In Will and Ariel Durant's sensitive portrayals of philosophers one meets the "all too human" aspect of great thinkers. Imagine Nietzche, sitting at a piano. His fingers do not fall upon recognizeable chords. He says to his interviewer, "I, too wrote good books once."

In their youth Neitzche and Kierkegaard both visited brothels. To what extent is Kierkegaard's angst related to his sense of guilt? To what extent is Nietzche's "death of God' related to a corkscrew-shaped worm that destroyed his sense of order and replaced it with chaos?

Ierrellus

[ April 28, 2002: Message edited by: Ierrellus ]
edited for spelling

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Old 04-28-2002, 05:18 PM   #28
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Ender writes:

Quote:
Nietzsche did not have a favorable opinion of the self, (he thought it a grammatical fiction) nor did he subscribe to a mind-body dualism.
That sounds a whole lot like mysticism to me. At least it sounds like Buddhism which is the mysticism I am most familiar with. I don't quite get the point of your response. You seem to be saying the Nietzsche was, and was not, a mystic. Of course, Nietzsche would probably resent being classified in any case. But it seems to me that Nietzsche's critique of Western philosophy is nothing but Buddha's critique of Hinduism and Vedanta (the Buddha, or at least Buddhism, also denied the validity of inference. Are you familiar with Nagarjuna?). Only Nietszche stopped at the critique and produced nothing positive.

On the question of logic. Thanks for the thread. I do think I had read parts of it at least, but I didn't remember your response to the initial post. But aren't you excessively enthusiastic about Nietzsche? Is his critique of logic saying anything more than Kant said when he claimed that logic cannot produce new knowledge? Isn't Nietzsche just picking up where Kant left off and saying that Kant couldn't solve the problem because the problem can't be solved?

But let me get to my main point. It isn't Nietzsche's critique of logic which I object to so much as his hostility to concepts and abstractions. Because what seems implicit in his critique is that concepts and abstractions don't refer to any thing real. Well, it's true. The text doesn't refer to anything outside of itself. But when we create a new word we have, at least sometimes, expressed a new relationship. Now what is there to reality except relationships. So when we expand the text, through an abstraction or a concept, have we not learned something new about the world?

Admittedly, this isn't "ultimate truth" but if our effort is intellectually honest it isn't arbitray either. It isn't a faux Chinese taxonomy. If I come to realize the commonality of all human beings and invent the word "humanity" to express that, I am uttering neither an ultimate truth nor a falsehood. And I am, contrary to Kant, discovering something new.

So logic is, as Nietzsche claimed, an imperative. There must be no contradiction in my definitions. But it is a necessary imperative to allow us to discern new relationships. But it is relationships, not things, that world is all about.

I think Nietzsche was right to belittle our attempts to reify these concepts, but I think he is wrong to belittle the concepts themselves. And that, of course, is also my complaint with Post-modernism. Of course there's nothing outside the text because discovery takes place by alteration and expansion of the text itself.

[ April 28, 2002: Message edited by: boneyard bill ]

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Old 04-28-2002, 10:31 PM   #29
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Quote:
Bone: That sounds a whole lot like mysticism to me. At least it sounds like Buddhism which is the mysticism I am most familiar with.
Does that mean whoever denies the Cartesian self is by default a mystic?
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Bone: I don't quite get the point of your response. You seem to be saying the Nietzsche was, and was not, a mystic.
I apologize for not giving you a straight answer- given that there's no horse's mouth to be found! I wanted to get out what the commentators said and where did Nietzsche mention the word mysticism in his writings first before I could present my understanding. I would have to figure out what you meant by "mystic" and see if that concept can be superimposed on his philosophy, and how much is contorted in that ratiocinative process.
He was a deeply skeptical naturalist, whose all-inclusive description of the ceaseless forces in the universe as "will to power" could be interpreted as a variant of mysticism. You seem to be looking for an authoritarian reading of Nietzsche. Most readers fall into two camp- one that sees a consistent system, and the other sees a mass of contradictions.
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Bone: Of course, Nietzsche would probably resent being classified in any case. But it seems to me that Nietzsche's critique of Western philosophy is nothing but Buddha's critique of Hinduism and Vedanta (the Buddha, or at least Buddhism, also denied the validity of inference. Are you familiar with Nagarjuna?). Only Nietszche stopped at the critique and produced nothing positive.
Do you view the Ubermensch, the will to power doctrine, the Eternal return of the Same and amor fati negative concepts in Nietzschean philosophy? And would you mind explaining what the Naagarjuna is?
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Bone: On the question of logic. Thanks for the thread. I do think I had read parts of it at least, but I didn't remember your response to the initial post. But aren't you excessively enthusiastic about Nietzsche?
Yes, I'm a huge fan.
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Bone: Is his critique of logic saying anything more than Kant said when he claimed that logic cannot produce new knowledge? Isn't Nietzsche just picking up where Kant left off and saying that Kant couldn't solve the problem because the problem can't be solved?
Sort of. Like Nietzsche, Kant maintained that the assorted structural features that we think are inherent in the world are actually only our ways of thinking about the world, and so they lack objective residency. Kant had argued that there are "things-in-themselves" that lie independent of time, space, and causality. But Nietzsche takes this much further with the feeling that there was a world which remained over that fluctuated like the black sea, chaotic relative to our distinction and maybe to all distinctions but there nevertheless. According to Will to Power 500 he thought that sensations and interpretation were inseparable.
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Bone: But let me get to my main point. It isn't Nietzsche's critique of logic which I object to so much as his hostility to concepts and abstractions. Because what seems implicit in his critique is that concepts and abstractions don't refer to any thing real. Well, it's true. The text doesn't refer to anything outside of itself. But when we create a new word we have, at least sometimes, expressed a new relationship. Now what is there to reality except relationships. So when we expand the text, through an abstraction or a concept, have we not learned something new about the world?
No, we have learned something new about other words- something the old words lack is fossilized as a deferred conceptualization in the new word. Whether language does accurately reflects reality is really a moot point, an attempt to step beyond the text. In addition I think language has superfluous baggage that comes with it-a metaphysics of the world that it inescapably describe (which is chaos or becoming or will to power). And there's no other language to serve as a vantage point for a possible meta-analysis.
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Bone: Admittedly, this isn't "ultimate truth" but if our effort is intellectually honest it isn't arbitray either. It isn't a faux Chinese taxonomy. If I come to realize the commonality of all human beings and invent the word "humanity" to express that, I am uttering neither an ultimate truth nor a falsehood.
Ah, freezing the meaning of a word. This assertion is exposed, nakedly to Nietzsche's critical accusations of "fiction" or "invention" and as a Verdinglichung of grammar, where the grammatical subject of your sentence is transformed through the "mythopoetic" working of the understanding of man into the substance of the world.
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Bone: And I am, contrary to Kant, discovering something new.
I question your reading of Kant here, and the apparent loose employment of the word "logic." Kant never argued against the possibility of gaining new knowledge. I am afraid your entire polemic against Kant is a strawman.
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Bone: So logic is, as Nietzsche claimed, an imperative. There must be no contradiction in my definitions. But it is a necessary imperative to allow us to discern new relationships. But it is relationships, not things, that world is all about.
Transferring the crown of philosophy from epistemology to sociology is what postmodernists have succeeded in the 20th century.
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Bone: I think Nietzsche was right to belittle our attempts to reify these concepts, but I think he is wrong to belittle the concepts themselves. And that, of course, is also my complaint with Post-modernism. Of course there's nothing outside the text because discovery takes place by alteration and expansion of the text itself.
I just bought myself two books on pomo- The Postmodern Theory and The Postmodern Turn.
~WiGGiN~
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Old 04-29-2002, 07:17 AM   #30
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Quote:
Intensity: How can you know what the world really is without relying on what is perceived and conceptualized?
Ender: You cannot. This is exactly the sort of nonsense Kant dispelled in his negative programme in the Critique. The pretensions of reason led many great thinkers before Kant to reach certain philosophical positions that lay beyond the bound of sense (whatever does not presuppose spatio-temporality).
If reason led many great thinkers before Kant to reach certain philosophical positions that lay beyond the bound of sense, does that in itself mean reason is pretentious or unreliable?

How can we know that we cannot rely on what we perceive? Its what keeps us alive. We have tested perception and found it to work. Should we stop relying on our perceptions and conceptualizations just because some thinkers got deluded?

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Intensity: Isn't "what the world really is" a conceptualization?
Ender: Many stories
You haven't answered my question Ender. We dont get to decide how the earth should rotate. We dont get to decide how planets should be arranged. If that is not the real world, what is the "real" world? And whatever "real world" you hold - isn't it still a conceptualization?
Statements of knowledge and statements of being (as far as the epistemic fallacy is concerned) is an unnecessary bifurcation that doesnt give us any "higher" ground. As far as the ontic fallacy is concerned, I have not ignored cognitive and social mechanisms by which knowledge is produced. I am just asking what is so bad about conceptualization and perception and why cant we rely on them as a means of understanding the world (for our purposes like space travel - they have worked very well).
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Ender, previously: I am arguing that there is no fact of the matter that could be ascertained by an accurate understanding of the universe in itself but only a bunch of rival interpretations.
Intensity, previously: This depends on what "an accurate understanding of the universe" entails - who gets to decide that its accurate - on what basis.
Ender:Safeguard that little defenseless scientific method, for the philosophers have gotten out of the lunatic asylum again! Guard it to the death!
That is your response?
little defenceless scientific method?
Quote:
All I see is changes in methodology on how to ascertain knowledge. What do you think of Paul Feyerabend, the radical philosopher of science who pushed for epistemological anarchism?
I dont see the relevance of this. However I dont know anything about Paul Feyerabend that I can talk about. Ender, I don't have a philisophical background. I am a computer programmer.
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Intensity, earlier: As you said earlier, the universe is in an eternal flux...So, what does "an accurate understanding of the universe" entail?
Ender There are only appropriate perspectives for the beholder, and nothing more. How can one begin to account for the shark's perspective in the language of the sea lion's? The 20th century pop culture artist in the language of an ancient Egypt slave? The grounds you seize for evaluating knowledge has always been and always will be a subjective one predicated by one's value system.
The grounds people seize for evaluating knowledge is not subjective on ones value system. When a christian doctor is told there is a tenth planet, he will not refer to the book of proverbs. He will check from scientific sources. If he is told his senator has resigned, he will check with other politically informed sources.
His value system will not come into play when he is evaluating these kinds of knowledge.
In any case Ender, we are not just looseley discussing knowledge, we are discussing knowledge about the universe, not personal preferences of dispositions. Value systems adress moral questions ours is not a moral subject so your idea is misplaced.
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Do you value pragmatism? Science's your bitch. Is it authoritarian doctrines? The fundamentalist chanting room is down the hall.
You don't sound sober at this point. I will leave it at that.
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Intensity: What are these rival interpretations?
Ender: Competing ideologies, world-views, metaphysical systems, and whatnot!
What are these competing ideologies? Please provide an example. Try to relate it to the nature of the cosmos as far as chaotic vis-a-vis ordered is concerned.
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Intensity: Ender, I am not propounding a teleological interpretation of the universe. And I assert that detecting order in the universe does not amount to pantheism and there is a huge difference between assigning purpose or cause and detecting or acknowledging order.
Ender: Elucidate on the "huge difference," please. Aren't you mistaking "order" in the mathematical models of reality, and not reality in itself?
"huge difference"
acknowledging order: Ah, the earth rotates on its axis each rotation takes 24 hours. The nine planets revolve around the sun.

assigning purpose: The earth rotates on its own axis because God spun it. OR the earth rotates on its own axis so that we can have day and night.

As intelligent beings, we have a sense of what
Order exists irrespective of what mathematical models of reality propound pigs havd been known to shit at one corner and sleep in the rest of the sty. That is order.
Plants have been known to grow towards light phototrophically. That is order. Order being a state or a sequence or arrangement of successive things or events.
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Intensity: I deny any belief of any grand plan in the scheme of things. Therefore you will not find it necessary to refute pantheism, materialistic atomism or determinism.
Ender: You're not my only prey on this question
really? **looks around**
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Ender, previously: There is no such position that enables any possible judging, measuring comparing or sentencing the entire universe, because that is a superfluous perspective that lies outside of life and nature, one that is not afforded to living creatures such as ourselves.
Intensity, previously: Aah! a true student of Neitzsche! This position is as self refuting as saying there are no absolutes. You are saying that there are no facts: only interpretations. But that statement itself, is an interpretation, so why should it be treated as a fact? Its a claim to a higher ground without earning it or demonstrating that its a higher ground. As such, its just grandiose posturing without any epistemological basis.
Ender: I was denying that there is such an objective view of reality independent of delimiting perspectives- in fact a total emancipation of every viewpoint is a self-referential paradox that gets nobody anywhere and creeps closer to a paralogism...
Ok, then we are in agreement. But even then, your previous statement remains a paralogism - you said the task of "judging, comparing or sentencing the universe... is a superfluous one that lies outside of life and nature, one that is not afforded to living creatures such as ourselves."
It was a baseless statement, for the arguments I gave before - which you either refute or admit error in your thinking.
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Naturalism is the cut off point of the inherent relativism in perspectivism.
I agree - I'd say though that you are, in a sense, preaching to the choir.
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The universe does not "lend" itself to measurement until we configured a mythology of physics to produce practical results. We are capable of self-deception, more-so than other creatures.
*after reading sth on Feyerbend*
I can see you have this anarchist approach to empiricism as an epistemological approach.
What about physics is a mythology? I still hold that creating laws of physics does not amount to anthropomorphism because we do not assign those "laws" to phenomena, but use them to study those phenomena. Explain the part of physics that you find mythological.
The fact that we are capable of self-deception does not mean we should not have any confidence in our cognitive and deductive abilities.
So what point do you mean to make by underlining mans potential for self-deception?
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The greater the intellect, the worse off the possibility for errors
No, the greater the intellect, the less the possibility of errors.
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In addition to the fact that no creature has our sensory capacities
Not true, a dogs sense of smell is way behond that of man.
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that or our unique biological assessment of reality- that superimposing our inventions (language) upon another lifeform's perspective is all-too-typically anthropomorphic.
I don't agree that they are anthropomorphic. We do not superimpose our perspective on other phenomena or ascribe human motives to them. Unless you care to provide examples.
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One reason why I elevate science above metaphysics is probably the same as yours- that the fictions of science is useful, that it contributes to human vitality and helps us becomes lord of the Earth. But science hasn't discovered truth- because there is none to discover!
I agree on you on the first point, but not on the latter. There is a lot to discover for example whether wormholes can exist. I dont know what you mean by "the truth" but I know there is "the truth" concerning questions about where homo sapiens came from, life in other planets or universes, and how the universe came to be. We may have the truth or we may not have it. But there must be a truth about those questions including the possibility that they are wrong questions to ask.
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Intensity: In any case, aren't all creatures living? (your argument implied we are only living creatures and should leave the task to other creatures)
Ender: Where am I denying that? I wrote "...a superfluous perspective that lies outside of life and nature, one that is not afforded to living creatures such as ourselves."
If its not afforded to living creatures - its afforded to non-living creatures. Or its afforded to no-one.
Unless you want to talk of half-living creatures.
This is a thesis-antithesis situation that you created by that statement.
Unless you care to elaborate.
I mean, if someone says "such things cannot be afforded by poor people such an ourselves", it follows that they can be afforded by rich people unlike ourselves.
You specified the living aspect of our being. You implied we get disqualified on that basis.
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Intensity: By that same breath you say "There is no such position ..." you assume that position for who are you to know it?
Endersnorts* I see clear through your attempts at rehabilitating objectivity. And who are you to ask for objective grounds from a subjective assessment? Again, God is dead. Unless you'd like to prove me wrong that there is such a position, that there is a God's eye of the entire universe?
God is not dead. Non-living things cannot die. There is no "Gods eye" perspective of the entire universe because God does not exist.
It's a pipedream philosophers "masturbate" about.

Who am I to ask for objective grounds from a subjective assessment?
I am someone who is confronted by someone who claims there is an objective view.

Even if Gods view existed, it could be true or correct but still subjective. Because we don't share that view. But he doesn't, therefore it doesn't and therefore is a non-issue.
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Intensity: Even then, your argument could cut both ways if there indeed existed creatures outside our universe. If they are outside our universe, then they cannot see and perceive what we perceive. If they can, then they are in our universe.EnderI can't make heads or tails with this comment.
Since you made a turnaround on the position you took earlier, I will leave it at that. In summary, I meant if other creatures existed outside our universe, there is no reason why their viewpoint should be superior to ours besides the fact that it would be different. You seemed to relegate our viewpoints to subjective and inaccurate snaps of reality and implied its futile for us to even try to comprehend the world.
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Intensity: So your argument fails.
EnderNo your predictable stab at equating perspectivism with relativism fails.
Please explain how I equated perspectivism with relativism.
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Intensity: I do not disagree with much of this but I do not see why they found it necessary to bifurcate the "original" from the "phenomenal" world.
EnderEasy. Take away the sensory data you have of an object, and what do you have left? If you do not perceive the object (the minute you avert your eyes from it) what does it look like? The Berkeleyan question remains- how do we conceive of unperceived matter? His idealistic solution sucked, though. Are the properties of the object the entire object? The color the shape, the weight, the texture, the smell, the taste are all conceivable apart from the object- which leads to the question whether the empirical properties of the object is all there is, or is it founded on something else.
If you take away the sensory data from the object(which you cannot), you still have the object but it has not been perceived. If you do not have any sensory data from the word go, then the object does not exist at all.
This so called real world cannot be real to those who do not perceive it. Its like the christians saying that Jesus spoke to them. That is not real to the atheist.
Perception creates reality. Reality can exist without perception, but it remains unreal until its perceived.
Reality is the sum of human experience and knowledge. From the subjective, we create the objective.
As to "how do we conceive of unperceived matter?", we don't. The so called unperceived matter are figments of the imagination (like the IPUs) and are not having any practicality.
Thanks for the link, I will read it.
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Spoken like a dyed-in-the-wool empiricist. Are you cognizant of the problems of the empirical worldview?
Only too well. In spite of its flaws, its our best bet in understanding reality and testing knowledge.
However, you would do well to state them. Otherwise your statement sounds like an attempt at casting doubt - where doubt would be unwarranted.
But I am not an empiricist, its just one approaches that I find reliable in life.
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Intensity: The "original" - is epistemologically useless unless its conceptualized. I would say that the original is the lemon and the phenomenal is the juice.
EnderNice metaphor in defense of causality.
I am flattered.
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Ender, previously:A host of Nietzschean commentators have argued that he maintained the view that the world in itself is a "becoming" "chaos" a world devoid of definition or organization. The parameters of our perspective imposes order upon this irrational " becoming" and contributes to our chances for survival.
EnderNo comments on this section?
They appeared just below...you seem to have got them.
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Intensity, previously: Personally, I find Neitzches' description of the world as chaotic to be baseless...But I find no support for his arguments (if you know of any, I would appreciate a pointer).
Ender*outraged* Just what do you mean by "support" unless you caricaturize "chaos" to prefigure your disagreements?
I mean evidentiary proof. I mean you don't just wake up in the morning and then just because you had bad coffee, you say the universe is chaotic.
Where is the evidence for this chaos - Neitzches claim?
In summary, we learn nothing from what he says other than the fact that a great thinker is making a claim. Everyone can make a claim.
Chaos would be lack of apparent order (at least during Neitzsches time).
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EnderPhenomenological evidence? Do you know how strange, -incoherent even- that question is? It is the equivalent to my asking of phenomenological evidence of your experience of reading this post.
Neitzsche was adressing a universal feature (chaos) - it is incoherent to ask in which part of the universe he observed this chaos? If its incoherent to ask, is it then coherent to swallow everything he said just because he was a great thinker? Since you seem at a loss of any knowledge of any evidence he gave,
I take it he gave no evidence of the chaos then?
Reading this post can not constitute phenomenological experience. Its a subjective human act. Planets crashing against each other would be phenomenological experience.
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In the hopes of a "naturalization of humanity" Nietzsche was committed to a thoroughgoing naturalism in his epistemology and ontology, as well as the "de-deification of nature" that denies the "pre-given world" and results in perspectives/interpretations and the entities internal to them.
Thanks for the info.
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Intensity: About "labyrinthe path", I could say something following a path of infinite possibilities could appear to be following a labyrinthe path while it actually isnt. Our "linear" thinking is what makes us find them to be following a "labyrinthe path".
enderIf so, why safeguard linear, hierarchical thinking?
I am not safeguarding anything.
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Assuming there is a God, the omnimax kind (generic Judeo-Christian version) the universe has inherent purpose, order, and a goal- by virtue of the definition of God's omnimax capabilities. Our standards of knowledge is pitiful and utterly worthless in evaluating omniscience!
To this (philosophical constructions of God), I would say there is a God people want, and there is the God/ Gods that are written about in religious books (the so-called scriptures).
I think the former is a figment of the imagination (man creating what he isn't then labelling everything he isn't - God and putting him in the sky) and the latter is the one worthy of analysis.
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I agree, I don't find Leibniz' or Spinoza' theodicies really convincing. It's a sneaky way to refute an opponent by using your opponents' premises against them.
*relieved* Thank you.
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EnderGod is omnipotent. He knows better on which one of infinite possibilities is the best of all! Leibniz is responsible for popularizing this maxim: "this is the best of all possible worlds." Russell countered his idol with this: "this is the worst of all possible worlds."
What does he need the infinite possibilities for if he already knows the best one?
If we know about the incompatible arguments properties, why should we find and argument that starts with "God is omnipotent" worthy of consideration? Because it was propounded by Leibniz?
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I find this your weakest assertion so far. If laws are meant to guide us, how are they NOT anthropomorphisms for our sake?
I am flattered that this is my weakest.
They only become anthropomorphisms when we ascribe human motives, characteristics or behaviour to them. Which we havent done.
When we say action and reaction are equal but opposite, we dont imply the colliding bodies are sentient. When we say the earth rotates on its axis, that doesnt ascribe human characteristics to the earth.
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Contingencies convenient for survival is order, of course. I am in complete agreement.
Thank you. But you do not agree that there is order in the universe?
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Intensity, previously: Morality is a preserve of sentient and highly intelligent beings.
EnderMorality is at bottom sentimentality and precedes scientific utility.
Wow, nice turn of phrase.
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In objectivity, truth and knowledge requires states of affairs that remain distinct and durable over time. Obviously you are searching for finality, a fixed state of meaning whereas the 'truths' of interpretations only become. Plus I do not think "truth" is something that lies in a final determination according to a fixed set of criteria, but merely the pregnant pause between battles of perspectives that has no final victor.
I agree with you completely.
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~Theothanatologist~
Revert your moniker - what the heck.
Boneyard Bill
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But I think you completely miss the point. What if the problem isn't the measuring instruments? What if identical initial conditions do, in fact, produce widely divergent effects over time? How do we know the problem is simply the inability to measure the initial conditions? We simply assume that. I think even the chaos theorists assume that this is the problem.
In the presence of that problem, the experiment is flawed. Thus it cannot be conclusive.
I am glad we are in agreement over this matter.
Owleye
I read your post, thanks for the clarification. Since we are in agreement, I dont have any issues I would like to raise with you
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