tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post6491134381713689232..comments2024-03-28T12:34:14.649-07:00Comments on dangerous idea: Ross's Immaterial Aspects of ThoughtVictor Repperthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10962948073162156902noreply@blogger.comBlogger27125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-45654492102588978662013-01-06T11:09:07.909-07:002013-01-06T11:09:07.909-07:00Correction: "Two Sorts of Naturalism" wa...Correction: "Two Sorts of Naturalism" was never published in a journal. It's first appearance was in a collection of essays honoring the late Phillipa Foot called "Virtues and Reasons."Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12030785676230758243noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-91956714966748545792013-01-05T20:28:33.616-07:002013-01-05T20:28:33.616-07:00The rights to the article are probably still held ...The rights to the article are probably still held by the journal in which it was first published. I have it in a collection of essays called <i>Mind, Value, and Reality</i>.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12030785676230758243noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-61860547652021824592013-01-05T15:07:21.017-07:002013-01-05T15:07:21.017-07:00Hm, is there a link to this "Two Sorts of Nat...Hm, is there a link to this "Two Sorts of Naturalism" paper? I can't seem to find it on Google. Is it even online at all?ingx24https://www.blogger.com/profile/03336709510575904262noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-22522820769274973052013-01-05T13:53:39.337-07:002013-01-05T13:53:39.337-07:00Addendum: 'Naïve realism' being, more or l...Addendum: 'Naïve realism' being, more or less, a naturalistic position.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12030785676230758243noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-77890263592463938912013-01-05T13:49:38.865-07:002013-01-05T13:49:38.865-07:00i. Now we've ventured off the path to discuss ...i. Now we've ventured off the path to discuss whether an eliminativist can be a realist about science and/or mathematics. (I'm taking eliminativism and materialism to be rough equivalents.) That's an entirely different topic from whether or not a naturalist can be a Platonist about mathematics. Naturalism <i>isn't necessarily</i> the same as eliminativism, though there are variants of naturalism that <i>are</i> eliminativist. For more on this, cf. John McDowell's "Two Sorts of Naturalism".<br /><br />ii. Full consistency between naturalism and Platonism can be achieved easily with a less constrictive notion of existence. Such a line of argumentation was directly pursued by Hilary Putnam in <i>Ethics without Ontology</i>, but mathematical and ethical realism are generally features of naïve realism.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12030785676230758243noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-24243255388024343692013-01-05T12:39:27.755-07:002013-01-05T12:39:27.755-07:00Of course, a consistent materialist can't even...Of course, a <i>consistent</i> materialist can't even allow for such things as "internal representations", since they can't allow for anything existing other than blind, mindless particles bouncing off each other by the laws of physics.ingx24https://www.blogger.com/profile/03336709510575904262noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-55923771572525005092013-01-05T12:11:40.415-07:002013-01-05T12:11:40.415-07:00A fully consistent materialist naturalist should d...A fully consistent materialist naturalist should deny that abstract objects exist. They would say that mathematics is merely a part of our internal representation of the world. <br /><br />That is something that the argument from reason challenges, since the internal representation has to have a connection to the world that makes it valid, and that connection cannot be purely material for fear of regress. Williamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12533263841520213358noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-54354052352678664472013-01-05T10:01:18.825-07:002013-01-05T10:01:18.825-07:00That depends, William: do you think one can be a n...That depends, William: do you think one can be a naturalist <i>and</i> a Platonist regarding mathematics?Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12030785676230758243noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-52444003327995738952013-01-05T00:41:42.309-07:002013-01-05T00:41:42.309-07:00Can a consistent naturalist also be a Platonist? ...Can a consistent naturalist also be a Platonist? Williamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12533263841520213358noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-61297072706302787662009-12-06T17:14:27.449-07:002009-12-06T17:14:27.449-07:00"Of course wants to avoid "abstract idea..."Of course wants to avoid "abstract ideas" but he needs a way to account for mathematical/geometricsal reasoning, which requires that we attend to, even if we cannot seperate, distinct properties that are necessarily connected.<br /><br />Anyway, its hard to see how one makes sense of the informative character of the necessity claim Re: equiangular and equilaterial.<br />if you do not recognize their distinctness. otherwize it would just be A=A"<br /><br />I don't have a view on whether triangularity = trilaterality, but I think that I have a view about the informativity of identity. In general, if you buy Frege's arguments, the relationship between the sense of a term and the referent of a term is many-one and so you wouldn't reason from the fact that A=A to the conclusion that any statement that is true because A=A would be uninformative. I don't think that this has anything to do with my commitment to materialism, naturalism, etc...Clayton Littlejohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05596200828134402805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-2526322681065072312009-12-05T09:17:20.224-07:002009-12-05T09:17:20.224-07:00"The property of being a trilateral and the p..."The property of being a trilateral and the propert of being a triangle might be the same property."<br /><br />That is an extremely interesting claim that I would say is false. But my reason is not one you would accept I think.<br /><br />Even Berkeley agrees that you can attend to different properties of a thing when they are necessarily connected. I think he even gives the triangle example. Of course wants to avoid "abstract ideas" but he needs a way to account for mathematical/geometricsal reasoning, which requires that we attend to, even if we cannot seperate, distinct properties that are necessarily connected. <br /><br />Anyway, its hard to see how one makes sense of the informative character of the necessity claim Re: equiangular and equilaterial.<br />if you do not recognize their distinctness. otherwize it would just be A=A<br /><br />I said I don't think you would agree with this reasoning because I assume as a materialist you are not doing first person phenomenology and discount the results of such introspection.<br />("materialists" like Galen Strawson are different, but the variety of materialism GS proposes is an odd and much more plausible version) Same goes for the early identity theory proposed by Feigl<br /><br />Just a Rant: if we would only go back and read Husserl, Russell, Moore, H H Price, Sartre, etc.<br /><br />Hell, even A J Ayer<br /><br />Very different philosophers, but all in agreement that we have to start where we are, first person experience.Gordon Knighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03223834584232283601noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-70875822952340253462009-12-04T16:44:49.926-07:002009-12-04T16:44:49.926-07:00"Is # 2 supposed to be necessarily true? or j..."Is # 2 supposed to be necessarily true? or just some probability claim."<br /><br />I'd say necessity, it's an account of event identity and individuation.<br /><br />"What does it mean to say "under different descriptions" Don't different descriptions pick out different properties?"<br /><br />Not obviolsyl always. The property of being a trilateral and the propert of being a triangle might be the same property. At any rate, I don't think that matters because events probably have to be multi-propertied things if there could be informative identity statements concerning events & different descriptions typically pick out different descriptions. <br /><br />"Not to mention, just what definition of physical/material are you using? Last I checked, even among materialists/physicalists that very question was a big debate - with the only thing generally agreed upon being that the physical/material is non-"mental"."<br /><br /><br />Double edged sword.<br /><br />"mental events not being able to be characterized in non-intentional terms is a point many "immaterialists" are trying to make"<br /><br />Fine, but I think that that's a liability. Someone like Descartes thought we had no access to mental substance apart from access to its modes and attributes via introspection. Plausibly, mental substances would have more to them than some bundle of the modes and attributes we could known about via introspection. So, plausibly there would be things true of mental substances that described what was happening with the mental substance that did not employ intentional descriptions and so the question arises as to whether it's a big deal for the substance dualist that we cannot derive descriptions of the intentional from descriptions of the mental substance that don't make reference to its intentional features (e.g., those aspects of mental substance that are causally relevant to the production of and sustaining of mental processes). Myself, I'd say that it's not such a big deal but that's why I think it's a cheap objection to the materialist.Clayton Littlejohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05596200828134402805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-74120090686560195372009-12-04T06:54:42.989-07:002009-12-04T06:54:42.989-07:00Clayton:
Is # 2 supposed to be necessarily true? ...Clayton:<br /><br />Is # 2 supposed to be necessarily true? or just some probability claim.<br /><br />Its true I suppose that I don't know that the causal premise is false. But there are not that many things I know<br /><br />I don't know that there is not a LP in my IPOD that has the same causal relations that the mp3 machinery has. <br /><br />What does it mean to say "under different descriptions" Don't different descriptions pick out different properties?Gordon Knighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03223834584232283601noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-75572096313931826402009-12-03T16:46:15.357-07:002009-12-03T16:46:15.357-07:00David: I have analyzed the terms naturalism and ph...David: I have analyzed the terms naturalism and physicalism, and maintain that although they aren't precisely interchangeable, materialism suffers in dealing with, say, the phenomenon of reason, the other suffers as well.Victor Repperthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10962948073162156902noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-80250278462369149292009-12-03T16:29:30.348-07:002009-12-03T16:29:30.348-07:00I rather think that mental events not being able t...I rather think that mental events not being able to be characterized in non-intentional terms is a point many "immaterialists" are trying to make, not a deficiency. Are you really suggesting that the "immaterialist" strategy across the board is to explain mental events in terms of non-intentional 'stuff' - but that this 'stuff' is simply something different than 'the material'? If so, I'd like to know who's making that argument.<br /><br />Not to mention, just what definition of physical/material are you using? Last I checked, even among materialists/physicalists that very question was a big debate - with the only thing generally agreed upon being that the physical/material is non-"mental".Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-30519687635824605612009-12-03T16:07:12.245-07:002009-12-03T16:07:12.245-07:00"Thinking of the mind as a thing analogous to..."Thinking of the mind as a thing analogous to material objects is a phenomenological mistake."<br /><br />Yes, I agree but that's because thinking of the mind as an object/substance is a mistake. The dualist can say that we have no conception as to how material events characterized in non-intentional terms could be mental events, but that's because we have no idea as to how events characterized in non-intentional terms could be mental events. It doesn't matter whether these are events that happen to a material substance or an immaterial one. That's why there's nothing here that can be to the advantage of the immaterialist.<br /><br />Here's an argument for you anti-materialists. <br />(1) You don't know that it's false that for every description of a mental event there's a description physical event with the same causes and effects.<br />(2) If event description D1 picks out an event that has all and only the same causes and effects as the event picked out by event description D2, these descriptions pick out the same event (under different descriptions).<br />(C) You don't know that it's false that every mental event is, inter alia, a complicated physical event.<br />(3) You know that if every mental event is a physical event, materialism is true.<br />(C2) You don't know materialism about the mental ins't true.<br /><br />Have at it.Clayton Littlejohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05596200828134402805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-49988770977384810272009-12-03T14:18:25.939-07:002009-12-03T14:18:25.939-07:00David B. Ellis,
One thing I'm curious of. Do ...David B. Ellis,<br /><br />One thing I'm curious of. Do you see the materialist naturalists making the clarification you're speaking? My experience is that they also tend to act as if "naturalism = materialism". That's just one problem though, but still, I think the problem is deeper and probably not as clear cut.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-44957010643769888202009-12-03T14:14:34.101-07:002009-12-03T14:14:34.101-07:00Clayton,
So what is demonstrated is that intentio...Clayton,<br /><br />So what is demonstrated is that intentionailty cannot be naturalized<br /><br />There is intentionality<br /><br />Therefore, materialism is false<br /><br />Thinking of the mind as a thing analogous to material objects is a phenomenological mistake. If there is an ego, its not a container that houses 'thougths" But even if there is no ego, there is still consciousness which is intentional and perhaps just a sui generis (baring some future plausible reduction)Gordon Knighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03223834584232283601noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-39172647040075171932009-12-03T12:24:09.479-07:002009-12-03T12:24:09.479-07:00And who cares how words are used? Our views stay t...<b><br />And who cares how words are used? Our views stay the same regardless of what words describe them.<br /></b><br /><br />At the expense of clear communication. Not to mention that it's an excuse to dismiss a much broader conception by attacking a narrower one.<br /><br />If one has an effective argument against materialism one does not necessarily have an effective argument against naturalism (a naturalism who is a neutral monist, for example, can shrug ans say "so what" to an argument that only addresses materialist versions of naturalism).David B. Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09468191085576922813noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-47166853602669505592009-12-02T23:04:53.660-07:002009-12-02T23:04:53.660-07:00"The conclusion is that no physical process o..."The conclusion is that no physical process or sequence of processes<br />or function among physical processes can be adding, squaring,<br />asserting, or any other thinking at all"<br /><br />That's Ross' conclusion. I wonder whether anyone thinks that this is true of only physical processes or only of processes that can be characterized in non-intentional terms. It seems like causal pathways in an immaterial substance would have the same content fixation problems as causal pathways in a physical substance.Clayton Littlejohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05596200828134402805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-24988670363103407032009-12-02T20:51:54.397-07:002009-12-02T20:51:54.397-07:00David,
The problem is, the way a word is usually ...David,<br /><br />The problem is, the way a word is usually used can't be the wrong way to use it. A lot of naturalists who are materialists use the words interchangeably. <br /><br />And who cares how words are used? Our views stay the same regardless of what words describe them.philip mhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03966414858455732474noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-38430397154199521482009-12-02T20:47:54.259-07:002009-12-02T20:47:54.259-07:00I really tire of seeing the word "naturalism&...I really tire of seeing the word "naturalism" used as if it meant the same thing as materialism.David B. Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09468191085576922813noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-89567093888995558782009-04-05T11:01:00.000-07:002009-04-05T11:01:00.000-07:00Interesting piece here by Ed Feser on this subject...Interesting piece here by Ed Feser on this subject...might be worth a post of its own, Victor.<BR/><BR/>http://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2009/04/give-me-that-old-time-atheism.htmlRob Gnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-56758531298011238442009-04-04T18:40:00.000-07:002009-04-04T18:40:00.000-07:00So, VR, why are you so shy about seeing and/or sta...So, VR, why are you so <I>shy</I> about seeing and/or stating that the AfR is an absolute logical defeater for atheism?Ilíonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15339406092961816142noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10584495.post-27522371144553283362009-04-04T03:34:00.000-07:002009-04-04T03:34:00.000-07:00I hadn't read that journal article before. Thanks...I hadn't read that journal article before. Thanks for the great reference.<BR/><BR/>Here's how I would distill some of his argument:<BR/><BR/>Physical objects have a contingency, such that, it's possible that they be different than they are....or to not exist at all. For instance, I can imagine my hand having four fingers and no thumb. Or no fingers at all. In other words, there's no "necessity" in the physical makeup of my hand. In fact, I could lose my hand, altogether, and still be me.<BR/><BR/>This is not true of formal logic or mathematics. Their "forms" carry a "necessity", such that, there cannot be a counterfactual instance of, say, "A=A" or "Either A or non-A" or "If A=B and B=C, then A=C".<BR/><BR/>And the reason "why" is because it's impossible to think any other way. So, if there really were counterfactuals of logic, then we could never apprehend or comprehend what they were, because we can only think within the bounds of those "forms of thought", by which, we are inescapably disposed to think.<BR/><BR/>In fact, our entire system of language and ability to communicate is founded upon these necessary logical starting points. Hence, we could not even begin to express what such "counterfactuals of logic" were.<BR/><BR/>Since material objects carry no such <I>necessity</I>, then it appears that "mind", governed by those necessary principles of thought, is not identical to "matter". For, while I <I>can</I> conceive of my hand being different than it is, I cannot conceive of my "conceptual abilities" being different than what they are.<BR/><BR/>Since material objects are categorized as "contingent", and the principles of reason are regarded as "necessary", the "mind" and "physical objects" are not identical.<BR/><BR/>That's what I took away from the Journal article.Gregorynoreply@blogger.com