T
Touchstone
Guest
Well, “no more than a distributed brain pattern” is like saying a Monet painting is ‘no more than some paint of canvas’. Such a description misses the significance of the configuration, of the internal relationships and structures it contains.Does all your reasoning consist of related brain states which are determined by physical events over which “you” have no control - for the simple reason that “you” do not exist? (According to “you” the concept of a person is no more than a distributed brain pattern…)
Ipse dixit!We<>our bodies
I think you are totally confusing epistemology and ontology. Quine is talking about conceptual frameworks, not ontic distinctions (the map is not the territory). Have you read much Quine? There’s a nice treatment of Quine on this in *Gödel, Escher, Bach *from Doug Hofstadter that would be an interesting thread starter on this, if you suppose this says what you apparently think it does from Quine. They’re all concepts, and the difference is proved out by the expediencies garnered by empirical investigation. Or, abstractions are as “real” as the empirical enterprise validates.“Physical objects, small and large, are not the only posits. Forces are another example; and indeed we are told nowadays that the boundary between energy and matter is obsolete. Moreover, the **abstract entities **which are the substance of mathematics – ultimately classes and classes of classes and so on up – are another posit in the same spirit. Epistemologically these are myths on the same footing with physical objects and gods, neither better nor worse except for differences in the degree to which they expedite our dealings with sense experiences.” Two Dogmas of Empiricism - W.V.Quine
Necessity. I can not assume otherwise. Neither can you. Or anyone else.What you regard as “the real world” is a metaphysical assumption. On what do you base it?
You’ve now reached the Zen I’ve been pushing, thank you. That is why asking “is reality real” is a non-starter – it’s not falsifiable, and thus, saying it’s “true” is meaningless. It is axiomatic. A given.It is impossible to falsify because it is true! We can think the material world does not exist but we cannot think that we are not thinking. Or if we do we are insane…
But your ideas about the immaterial mind, and the supernatural are not necessary assumptions. They are totally optional. And yet, they are perfectly unfalsifiable. That’s a really terribly combination in terms of epistemology – unnecessary and unfalsifiable. We CANNOT view reality as “false”, that’s as meaningless an idea as “true” – it’s simply real. But “supernatural reality”, which I take it you are conceding to be unfalsifiable, here, is not something we are obliged to accept. The world coheres well without it, better than with it, in my experience, having tried supernatural Christianity and now materialism.
-TS