L
Leela
Guest
I wonder if you could think of your materialism in a way that would distinguish it from scientism. For example, is it enough to say simply that everything can be described in physical terms and avoid saying that everything always should be described in physical terms? Why priveledge any particular mode of description as the essence of what things really are? For example, are the things that a physicist says about tables any more true than the things that a carpenter says about them? We need not argue which one of these sets descriptions is the one true account of The-Way-Things-Really-Are when both sets of descriptions in addition to the one a poet or artist or furniture mover might give can all peacefully coexist and serve different sorts of human purposes. Why should the scientist insist that everyone must participate in her purposes and use her descriptions? Isn’t such insistence exactly what anoys us about theists and their demands that we all serve their God in enacting their religious moral code as law? It’s a rhetorical question. I’m not suggesting that this is what you are insisting. I am just offering a way to avoid reductionism and scientism while keeping the power of material descriptions for controlling and predicting our environment.I do identify myself as a materialist, which is a term I understand to mean that all that is real and actual for us is reified in space/time/energy/matter (often referred to as “STEM” in materialist circles). That’s a good nutshell summary right there, but given the exchanges that go on here, typically, it’s worth pre-empting misunderstandings by pointing out that STEM represents the context for all that I can reasonably defend and understand as real and actual, but there is no a priori rule for me or my materialism that something “beyond” in an immaterialist sense cannot obtain, or exist in some coherent way that just remains unknown that this point.
As a matter of reasoning then, I’m open to whatever holds together as the best performative model of reality, including a model that integrates immaterialist elements, if needed. The way the world around us falls out, though, models that integrate immaterialism fail badly in contrast to materialist models.
It’s possible that reality could have been such that immaterialism was coherent and compelling, so far as I know. The actual world isn’t like that, so far as I can see, and the more one looks at the real world, honestly and in a disciplined way, the more the materialist model prevails, and immaterialism fails.
That makes me a “post facto” materialist, then, I guess. I don’t being there, haven’t begun there, or rule the supernatural out. Those notions just don’t cut it, where materialist paradigms, problematic as they are in many respects, fare much, much better.
-TS