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Metaphysics The ultimate nature of existence. Relationships between mind and matter, substance and attribute, fact and value. Why are we here? Is there a God? What is substance? Real or not?

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  #41 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 05:24 PM
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Re: What is life?

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
I literally have no idea what you are talking about. Familiar with the prejudice or falsity of what scientific axiom?
The axiom of a single perpetual truth for instance, the axiom to the effect that scientific laws apply universally and perpetually.

This is at odds with ordinary human experience; and not even confirmed by scientific research; everything changes, and there is no way to measure anything without affecting that which you measure, and this is the current thinking of respected physicists, not a poetic rambling.

They struggle endlessly to make it all fit together only to be cheated at the last minute by some irksome little particle that refuses to behave itself.

"I could be bounded in a nutshell, and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams."

(Hamlet: Act II, Scene II)


--- RH.
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  #42 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 06:12 PM
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Re: What is life?

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Originally Posted by perplexity View Post
The axiom of a single perpetual truth for instance, the axiom to the effect that scientific laws apply universally and perpetually.

This is at odds with ordinary human experience; and not even confirmed by scientific research; everything changes, and there is no way to measure anything without affecting that which you measure, and this is the current thinking of respected physicists, not a poetic rambling.

They struggle endlessly to make it all fit together only to be cheated at the last minute by some irksome little particle that refuses to behave itself.
I am still not understanding you. What is it about the scientific axiom "An object released in midair without other intervention will fall to the ground" that is prejudiced and false? More, what is it about this axiom that is "at odds with ordinary human experience"? That you invoke quantum mechanics to make a point about "ordinary human experience" is only stating the obvious, but the implications and palpable effects of quantum mechanics are indeed not "at odds with ordinary human experience". Or are Hiroshima and Nagasaki unknown to you? Of course there are metaphysical speculations in science, String Theory among them; but even with such speculations, there are elements of predictability and repeatability that provide ponderable assessment to their claims. Or is their heuristic value a problem for you? I'm afraid that resorting to poetry and insisting it isn't poetry and citing Shakespeare to affirm a point is not on that account a reasoned rejoinder. Help me here: What is it about gravity, Coriolis, Doppler effect, Boyle's Law, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle and a host of other hum drum quotidian phenomena which prompts you to say that they are prejudiced and false? Because to do so serves your weltanschauung of karma and Eastern theistic belief?
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  #43 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 08:30 PM
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Gravity

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
I am still not understanding you. What is it about the scientific axiom "An object released in midair without other intervention will fall to the ground" that is prejudiced and false?
That is an observation. If you observe that something falls to the ground a thousand times it is then a reasonable conjecture that on the next occassion it will do the same. That is indeed how it seems to work. Believe it or not, we had already noticed.

If you then intend to go on to suppose that the very same principle of gravity operates in the same way for all time, in the entirety of the known Universe if not beyond, then I demand to be told how you would hope to know so. That is what they did with the flat Earth. It looked flat enough for as far as they could see or imagine, so they assumed that it was flat forever.

And what then is gravity? Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self, said to be known by what it does rather than what it is, an invocation of the principle of reverse causality.

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
More, what is it about this axiom that is "at odds with ordinary human experience"? ...... Of course there are metaphysical speculations in science, String Theory among them; but even with such speculations, there are elements of predictability and repeatability that provide ponderable assessment to their claims.
I have no problem with predictablity or repeatability. To the contrary, that is exactly how I think of what is usually called a truth, in terms of probability.

An axiom on the other hand is anything but a matter of predictablity. It is something supposed to be absolute and taken completely for granted, a limit even to what you may well call the metaphysical speculation of science, equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God, and serving the very same purpose in most respects, to provide a sense of parental security, notwithstanding the perplexity that the unfortunate victim would otherwise be subject to.

--- RH.
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  #44 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 10:29 PM
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Re: Gravity

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Originally Posted by perplexity View Post
That is an observation. If you observe that something falls to the ground a thousand times it is then a reasonable conjecture that on the next occassion it will do the same. That is indeed how it seems to work. Believe it or not, we had already noticed.

If you then intend to go on to suppose that the very same principle of gravity operates in the same way for all time, in the entirety of the known Universe if not beyond, then I demand to be told how you would hope to know so. That is what they did with the flat Earth. It looked flat enough for as far as they could see or imagine, so they assumed that it was flat forever.

And what then is gravity? Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self, said to be known by what it does rather than what it is, an invocation of the principle of reverse causality.



I have no problem with predictablity or repeatability. To the contrary, that is exactly how I think of what is usually called a truth, in terms of probability.

An axiom on the other hand is anything but a matter of predictablity. It is something supposed to be absolute and taken completely for granted, a limit even to what you may well call the metaphysical speculation of science, equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God, and serving the very same purpose in most respects, to provide a sense of parental security, notwithstanding the perplexity that the unfortunate victim would otherwise be subject to.

--- RH.
I disagree with every characterization you have made. In fact, I disagree with every statement you have made. Now what? Shall we come back in and start over? I think not.
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  #45 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 11:22 PM
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Re: Gravity

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
I disagree with every characterization you have made. In fact, I disagree with every statement you have made. Now what? Shall we come back in and start over? I think not.
"characterisation" is your own characterisation, a remarkably subtle ad hominem but an ad hominem none the less.

Do you think I just sit here and make it all up, ad hoc?

Perhaps you could start with this, one step at a time:

Axiom

–noun
1.a self-evident truth that requires no proof.
2.a universally accepted principle or rule.
3.Logic, Mathematics. a proposition that is assumed without proof for the sake of studying the consequences that follow from it.
[Origin: 1475–85; < L axiōma < Gk: something worthy, equiv. to axiō-, var. s. of axioûn to reckon worthy + -ma resultative n. suffix]


--- RH.

Last edited by perplexity; 10-07-2006 at 11:42 PM.
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  #46 (permalink)  
Old 10-07-2006, 11:52 PM
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Re: Gravity

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Originally Posted by perplexity View Post
"characterisation" is your own characterisation, a remarkably subtle ad hominem but an ad hominem none the less.
RH: "Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self."

RH: "An axiom on the other hand is anything but a matter of predictablity. It is something supposed to be absolute and taken completely for granted, a limit even to what you may well call the metaphysical speculation of science, equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God, and serving the very same purpose in most respects, to provide a sense of parental security, notwithstanding the perplexity that the unfortunate victim would otherwise be subject to."

These are your feelings on the matter. They are not my feelings on the matter. To argue feelings is pointless. This is a philosophy forum, not a support group; I really do not care that you feel gravity is "a belief akin to God" or that you feel that an axiom is "equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God". What I do care about is your attempting to traffic statements of sentiment as statements of fact. You do this exclusively to the absense of reasoned redress, as if your feelings on the matter should somehow settle the matter. Have you ever once articulated a response based on anything else? Is everything to you a function of how you stand in relation to it personally? That is why discussion with you is pointless; you are as a petulant child who stamps his feet and insists that his mere utterance should suffice. And I fear that you may next wish me into the corn field.
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Originally Posted by perplexity View Post
Axiom

–noun
1.a self-evident truth that requires no proof.
2.a universally accepted principle or rule.
3.Logic, Mathematics. a proposition that is assumed without proof for the sake of studying the consequences that follow from it.
And how is it from this that you reason "Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self" or that an axiom is "equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God"? Or is this rather how you personally feel about axioms? Would an atheist agree with your characterizations? Would Newton? Again, I doubt you would know reasoned argument if it bit you in the face.

Last edited by NoAngst; 10-08-2006 at 01:10 AM.
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  #47 (permalink)  
Old 10-08-2006, 09:57 AM
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Re: Gravity

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
RH: "Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self."

RH: "An axiom on the other hand is anything but a matter of predictablity. It is something supposed to be absolute and taken completely for granted, a limit even to what you may well call the metaphysical speculation of science, equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God, and serving the very same purpose in most respects, to provide a sense of parental security, notwithstanding the perplexity that the unfortunate victim would otherwise be subject to."

These are your feelings on the matter.
To the contrary, no matter how often you may prefer to insult me with your alternative characterisation, the fact of the matter is that my propositions were derived logically, intelligently, by observation and analysis, and are thus defensible in the same terms.


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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
You do this exclusively to the absense of reasoned redress, as if your feelings on the matter should somehow settle the matter. Have you ever once articulated a response based on anything else?Have you ever once articulated a response based on anything else?
You yourself, Mr NoAngst, had already admitted that I am better fit than anybody to know my feelings.
Now you presume to know my feelings better than I do.
Your difficulty would therefore appear to be to know your mind.

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
Is everything to you a function of how you stand in relation to it personally? That is why discussion with you is pointless; you are as a petulant child who stamps his feet and insists that his mere utterance should suffice. And I fear that you may next wish me into the corn field.
That is your assertion not mine, the straw man that you prefer to impose for want of a wider repertoire and an appreciation of my argument. "petulant" does nothing to address the issue.

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
And how is it from this that you reason "Gravity is a belief akin to God and the Human Self" or that an axiom is "equivalent to a religious fundamentalist's reverence for God"? Or is this rather how you personally feel about axioms?
Nothing to do with feelings, if it looks like a duck and walks and talks like a duck, then I call it a duck.

As a matter of fact there is nothing to prove the existence of Gravity, nor anything to explain it apart from the observation of the resultant effect of it, the same as a God or the supposition of the Conscious Self.

Something falls to the ground so you invent a name for something supposed to cause the effect.

Others feel the same need to invent a name as if to account for a cause of the life they experience.

To my mind the causes and the purposes are therefore equivalent, a logical deduction, not an emotional predisposition.

I would rather suspect that the emotion in effect here is your very own. I dare to challenge a sacred belief so you immediately wish to declare me a heretic in order to burn me at the stake, spared from all the bother of a fair trial.

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Originally Posted by NoAngst View Post
Would an atheist agree with your characterizations? Would Newton? Again, I doubt you would know reasoned argument if it bit you in the face.
Ask Newton.

You are the one with the characterisation, the perpetual ad hominem.
Except to be patient I'd be more inclined to report your abuse.

-- RH.

Last edited by perplexity; 10-08-2006 at 10:27 AM. Reason: spelling
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  #48 (permalink)  
Old 10-08-2006, 02:15 PM
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Re: What is life?

Actually scientists have identified a partical (i think is the correct term)that is 'gravity' so it is a scientific truth. Just thought id add my pennys worth.
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  #49 (permalink)  
Old 10-08-2006, 03:06 PM
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Re: What is life?

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Actually scientists have identified a partical (i think is the correct term)that is 'gravity' so it is a scientific truth.
"particle"!

A "truth" invented to fill the need or discovered by adventure?

Proof, please.

--- RH.
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Old 10-08-2006, 05:27 PM
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Re: What is life?

Ok but im going to have to dig it up, I have to find the information on it, I saw it on a documentry a few times. But it does exist. A devout fundermentalist born-again evangelic pal of mine once said that ''Atoms dont exist, all those things under a microscope are made up by man to try and explain life with out God'' obviously hes mistaken, but are you suggesting the same arguement but for a different purpose?
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