dafydd
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- Feb 14, 2008
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You're spouting nonsense again.
We're used to that. And he accused me of posting gibberish and promised to give some examples. None have been forthcoming.
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You're spouting nonsense again.
No, it requires careful, cautious, rigorous examination, not flowery psuedo-poetry.
Only if there is a great vista of "facts" to be illuminated.
Fire or friction are not necessary for illumination, nor is a lens necessary to perceive a "fact".
You're spouting nonsense again.
Why would nature be 'up to' anything? It is just there. Reality is reality.
Plus the fire which resulted in the formation of the lab bench, the human body and the thinker therein.
Let me see if I understand BDZ’s point of view…
BDZ says the Sophisticated Scientist understands that what is real cannot be explained by science, but it doesn’t matter what reality is, as long as things and events act in a way that IS explainable by science we can still use our scientific model because it has proven to be useful to do so.
He goes on to assert that the Naïve Scientist is one who still holds onto the “belief” that the descriptions and measurements of Scientific Knowledge are actually “real” and not only a “model”.
He equates this Naïve point of view with a Religionistic or Theological POV based upon faith alone.
BDZ’s Sophisticated Scientific point of view effectively places ontology into the category of woo.
Because it has no effect on the Scientific Model in the same way the existence or non existence of a supreme being would have no effect on the Scientific Model.
So if you accept the Sophisticated Scientific POV, then you no longer have to worry about defending the basis of all Scientific Knowledge that says “it is ASSUMED that NATURE exists”, which is an ontological assertion.
This is how I see BDZ’s argument, which by the way is still based within the world view of “Scientific Knowledge”
I, for one, ain’t buying it.
For one thing it still does not address the question of why the assertion “It is assumed that Nature exists” is an assumption and not a Scientific Fact or a Scientific Theory, which should shed some light onto this question.
And, the question everyone wants answered is, if Scientific Knowledge is ultimately based upon non verifiable assumptions, why do we still FEEL that we can KNOW what is REAL?
When Dr. Johnson kicks his rock and says “I refute it thus”, he KNOWS the rock is real, but he cannot come up with a Scientifically acceptable explanation for his experience of reality.
Thanks for your time.
Chunol
Plus the fire which resulted in the formation of the lab bench, the human body and the thinker therein.
Why would it not be up to something?
Observe nature, wherever you look things are up to something in one way or another are they not?
You present an interesting argument, however if one delves deeper into this fog, one realises that the impermeability of this fog is also an aspect of mind and darkness or lack of light is a more appropriate analogy.
If an extremely bright light is brought into a dark place, it will illuminate a great vista of "facts". Where as if the same light is brought into a fog, it will be a very bright white out.
Illumination requires fire or friction, and a lens with which to perceive the "fact"
But facts are only known when they are, well, facts. The analogy would work for predictions, because it would light the (probable) position of a new buoy. Thanks for it.
The position of a new buoy can be confusing and lead you out to sea rather than into the harbor.
(See how easy that is?)
Why do skeptics boards attract crazy people? Is it because we actually talk to them as opposed to ignoring them?
Yes. It is beyond the scope of scientific inquiry. But there is a hidden assumption in your words, that "reality is something". Scientific endeavor, (and layman endeavor for that matter), deal just with phenomena (perceived facts) and then make models to navigate them (world views). Now, key issue: One model is believing that a concrete reality is something beyond our models, and that our models "touch" it.
No “hidden assumption” here, just two ways of interpreting the same concept.
Assumption in the sense that I am using it, means that Science accepts the premise (assumption) “Nature (the universe, cosmos, world) exists”, even if it cannot be proven scientifically or logically.
ALL Science (and laymen) accept and act as if Nature exists (Nature is something) even if they cannot prove it using the methods of science and logic.
“Assuming Nature exists” in the sense that I think you are using it, would mean that science is saying Nature doesn’t exist (because it cannot be proven by science / logic), but science just goes ahead and assumes that it does.
BDZ..
Indeed, you have read it well. Thank you for that. A fact is a fact, what's "behind" that fact (god's imagination, matter or dreams of a butterfly) is irrelevant, simply because we are "trapped" in phenomena.
Are we trapped in Nature?
BDZ....
The experience would be real, it constitutes the fact. The rock is a construction. I hope this clear things a bit.
I agree that the experience would be real, however the "fact" is only the description or explanation of the event, not the "event as experienced"
Am I getting warmer?
thanks for your time.
Chunol
What does it mean to assume that nature exists? How would the world be if nature did not, in fact, exist?Assumption in the sense that I am using it, means that Science accepts the premise (assumption) “Nature (the universe, cosmos, world) exists”, even if it cannot be proven scientifically or logically.
ALL Science (and laymen) accept and act as if Nature exists (Nature is something) even if they cannot prove it using the methods of science and logic.
I certainly appreciate good analogies and well-placed metaphors in poetry, song, and literature; it is hard to demonstrate appreciation of your contributions because when you do attempt them, they are generally neither well-chosen, well-placed, nor well-expressed. You are not alone on these forums in that respect. The object of analogy and metaphor is to clarify and illuminate by providing comparison through similarity, not to confuse, obscure, or distract.You have not demonstrated much use or appreciation of metaphor or analogy. I doubt you would appreciate the meaning the analogy used here.
Yes, for many creatures there is just a rectangle that gets in the way. Or for termites, it could be food, or for a murderer it could be the nearest dangerous object to hand.
There is no material property called TV.
Not in my garden, oak, sycamore, apple and the usual.In which there is a tree of life?
Not in my garden, oak, sycamore, apple and the usual.