Moderator: Only_Humean
turtle wrote:typist ---how well do you understand the evolution from non-life to life???
Typist wrote:turtle wrote:typist ---how well do you understand the evolution from non-life to life???
Can't say as do, how about you?
Typist wrote:And once the highly skilled mechanics understood how the mechanism works, they are satisfied, because this is the nature of a mechanic. This is all very useful indeed, truly it is, but....
This mechanical analysis doesn't touch the infinite scale questions.
The problem is, our ape genes are absolutely fascinated by social competition agendas, and so the simple truth that nobody is superior to anybody else is immediately rejected by all parties. This is the triumph of ancient primitive emotion over reason.
Then I have no reason to pay any heed to your assertion, surely?
You don't believe in God, based on a lack of evidence. Good work, no problem so far.
Now....
You don't believe in your ability to come to an answer to infinite scale questions, based on a lack of evidence of such an ability.

Only_Humean wrote:This mechanical analysis doesn't touch the infinite scale questions.
According to you, nothing does, or can. They are beyond logic, reason, comprehension. Ineffable/numinous. Correct?
That's a religious, not a philosophical assertion. You're welcome to offer it, but you can give no reason to accept it.
As Wittgenstein said, a nothing will do as well as a something about which nothing can be said.
There's no objective standard of valuation for these, though, so out of context "superior" is very difficult to use in a meaningful way.
The "philosophy is all social competition" line is often brought out, almost always by people who see themselves as the rare exceptional Seeker of Real Truth,
I've already given you the evidence. I can draw conclusions, etc etc., as I said a few posts back. Billions of people have answers regarding the existence or otherwise of God; they all have the ability. It seems that you are the rare exception
If by "infinite scale questions" you mean "meaningless propositions",
However, you can't very well use your conclusions on the subject to argue against anyone else's, and certainly not to embarrass them.
Typist wrote:Have you ever tried to talk to a Jehovah's Witness? The experience of talking to any committed ideologue is the same, including atheist ideologues. I've explained this 500 times. If 500 times didn't work, one more won't either. It's the simplest thing, and when you want to understand it you will.
That's a religious, not a philosophical assertion. You're welcome to offer it, but you can give no reason to accept it.
Then don't accept it, and go right on thinking you are qualified to know what does or doesn't lie at the heart of all reality, a term you can't even define.
The "philosophy is all social competition" line is often brought out, almost always by people who see themselves as the rare exceptional Seeker of Real Truth,
I've said repeatedly, repeatedly, repeatedly that none of us are vaguely qualified to know "Real Truth".
If by "infinite scale questions" you mean "meaningless propositions",
No, that's not what I mean. I mean theories about the nature of everything.
Look, what's tripping you up is how incredibly simple this is.
1) We can't define what reality is, how big it is etc.
2) So why would any of us know what does or doesn't lie at the heart of reality, this thing we can't even define?
Here's more simpleness. Have you considered how small the sample size is in the OP's thesis? Darwin's theory concerns life on earth. Are you aware of how unimaginably small the earth is, even in comparison to the known universe?
If I were to search my closet for dress shoes and find none, would it be reasonable to conclude that therefore dress shoes don't exist?

Typist, would you please explain your understanding of infinite scale so we can all be on the same page?
We humans have an observable universe the scale of which is so far unknown, as I understand it. Nor can we say whether or not there are other universes beyond ours.
I've also written about the 'mini-bangs' that have been observed within our observable universe and have wondered if those mini-bangs (small to us because of the distance from us at which they occur) weren't evidence of new universes at the moment of their creation--i.e., BBs.
Quantum physics deals with the activity of unseen matter. If QM and QP can establish patterns that remain constant throughout our universe, can't we assume they would remain constant in every universe?
IOW, universal theories, or the Laws of Nature, would be the same, not matter in what universe matter exists.
Because of the infinite scale of probable universes, it's difficult to conceptualize a creative God, unless the God is the creator of the "Laws of Nature."
God is a word and a word is a concept--"In the beginning was the Word,,,and the Word was God."
Imm, the OP explained why/how science--in at least one area-- has replaced the God Concept.
Ierrellus wrote:Add Mendel to Darwin and you get all these notions of teleology and predictability.
That is nihilism.Real truth is what's left over after you've chipped away the entire block of marble looking for the real truth.
Typist wrote:Ok, I'll play...
Real truth is what's left over after you've chipped away the entire block of marble looking for the real truth.
Typist wrote:Here's a version of that for science types. What words might best describe the overwhelming vast majority of the known universe?
That is nihilism.
Why? You gave a perfect example - the belief that there is nothing inside the block. The nihilist destroys truth with that belief so it is a self-fulfilling philosophy.Explain nihilism for the uneducated backwoods bubbas amongst us? You know, um, those people over there.
Why?
You gave a perfect example - the belief that there is nothing inside the block.
Typist wrote:I was referring to the assumption inherent in the example, that the truth is a "something". An easter egg hidden in the garden that we kiddies hope to find. And then when we find it we'll have it.
What if the truth isn't a "something"?
What if it's a "no-thing"?
You know, like 99.999999999999999999999999999% of the rest of reality.
Like that.
You have already demonstrated your mastery of nihilism. Others can learn for your excellent examples. I see no need to go pedantic.Typist wrote:Why?
Because I asked nicely? Because I walked right up to the edge of admitting there's something in the universe that I don't know, and you could have pushed me right off the cliff?
You gave a perfect example - the belief that there is nothing inside the block.
I was referring to the assumption inherent in the example, that the truth is a "something". An easter egg hidden in the garden that we kiddies hope to find. And then when we find it we'll have it.
What if the truth isn't a "something"?
What if it's a "no-thing"?
You know, like 99.999999999999999999999999999% of the rest of reality.
Like that.
James S Saint wrote:Yep. That would be nihilism."I looked and didn't see anything that I can identify as truth, therefor there is no truth."...and dat's da truth.
Actually it is "deconstructive nihilism".
Typist wrote:James S Saint wrote:Yep. That would be nihilism."I looked and didn't see anything that I can identify as truth, therefor there is no truth."...and dat's da truth.
Actually it is "deconstructive nihilism".
I didn't say we can't see anything we can identify as truth.
phyllo wrote:A real truth is based on what is and therefore it also is.
Typist wrote:99% [100%] of the time....
What's there?
What is?
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