Log In   or  Sign Up for Free

Philosophy Discussion Forums | A Humans-Only Club for Open-Minded Discussion & Debate

Humans-Only Club for Discussion & Debate

A one-of-a-kind oasis of intelligent, in-depth, productive, civil debate.

Topics are uncensored, meaning even extremely controversial viewpoints can be presented and argued for, but our Forum Rules strictly require all posters to stay on-topic and never engage in ad hominems or personal attacks.


Discuss philosophical questions regarding theism (and atheism), and discuss religion as it relates to philosophy. This includes any philosophical discussions that happen to be about god, gods, or a 'higher power' or the belief of them. This also generally includes philosophical topics about organized or ritualistic mysticism or about organized, common or ritualistic beliefs in the existence of supernatural phenomenon.
By Alias
#312602
anonymous66 wrote: June 4th, 2018, 10:17 am @Alias
Are you admitting that you realize there is no current explanation for the existence of life, and the appearance of complexity? And you're okay with that?
I admit - if admission is the correct term - that I don't know what-all explanations for life and complexity are in circulation at the moment. There must be thousands, some more plausible than others.
What happens if I'm not okay with that that?
Favorite Philosopher: Terry Pratchett
#312614
Alias wrote: June 4th, 2018, 10:35 am
anonymous66 wrote: June 4th, 2018, 10:17 am @Alias
Are you admitting that you realize there is no current explanation for the existence of life, and the appearance of complexity? And you're okay with that?
I admit - if admission is the correct term - that I don't know what-all explanations for life and complexity are in circulation at the moment. There must be thousands, some more plausible than others.
What happens if I'm not okay with that that?
It seems to me that the explanations and evidence we currently have are sufficient for us to say that we know that the universe is something like 13.7 billion years old and that we know all life evolved through the process of natural selection from a common ancestor. I wish there was an explanation 1. for how it is it that life came from non-life, and 2. for how it is that complexity was introduced into life (an explanation for how it is that complexity arose from simple single-celled life). It's my understanding that we can't yet explain those 2things.
By Alias
#312628
anonymous66 wrote: June 4th, 2018, 1:07 pm I wish there was an explanation 1. for how it is it that life came from non-life,
There is no shortage of theories, but you don't have to pick one and stick with it just yet.
https://www.khanacademy.org/science/bio ... ns-of-life
Russell’s hypothesis proposes that the transition to life was brought about by a peculiar geophysical and geochemical process called serpentinization—a process that played out on and just beneath the surface of our very young planet’s ocean floor in the “Hadean” epoch more than 4 billion years ago.https://www.igb.illinois.edu/article/cr ... ight-exist
https://phys.org/news/2017-11-theory-li ... rdial.html
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 ... 160756.htm
Experimentation continues apace.
2. for how it is that complexity was introduced into life (an explanation for how it is that complexity arose from simple single-celled life).
https://www.wired.com/2014/08/where-animals-come-from/
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 ... 082646.htm
https://ask.metafilter.com/15365/Is-the ... -organisms
It's my understanding that we can't yet explain those 2things.
Depends whom you mean by "we".

And you didn't answer my question:
If I'm dissatisfied with anything less than a final, definitive answer, what are my options?
I could start my own research.
I could wait until somebody competent comes up with one.
I could accept not knowing.
I could turn to religion.
I could throw a tantrum or go on a hunger strike or fall into a terminal depression.
I could make up a self-contained, circular argument, hang it in mid-air, and say: There, that's an explanation.
Favorite Philosopher: Terry Pratchett
#312631
Mosesquine wrote: March 29th, 2018, 2:05 pm (1) All things that are complex were designed.
(2) The world we live in is a thing that is complex.
Therefore, (3) The world we live in was designed.
That God entity is really the simplest most non-complex thing of all. So certainly it didn't need to have been designed or created by anything.


I say that the universe is so infinitely vast that it's full of virtually all possibility, and complexity is certainly part of that universe of possibilities,... naturally and logically.
User avatar
By Felix
#312632
Thinking critical: "Reason, purpose and intention it seems are simply not a necessary property of existance."
Me: "Not necessary for existence, but necessary for life and it's evolution."
Alias: Why? Life tries every available option, discards what doesn't work and keeps truckin'.
Trying options is an aim, the will to live itself is an intention, purposeful activity or "teleology" is integral to life - birds building nests, termites building mounds, etc., etc. A human business license is not required to engage in purposeful activity.
#312635
Felix wrote: June 4th, 2018, 7:09 pm Trying options is an aim, the will to live itself is an intention, purposeful activity or "teleology" is integral to life - birds building nests, termites building mounds, etc., etc. A human business license is not required to engage in purposeful activity.
In some cases, I think you're confusing "purposeful" with instinctual or genetically programmed through the age old process of: only what worked got passed on to the next generation.

And "the will to live" is not an intention, it's an objective. "Trying options" is an intention (not an aim). But then, evolutionary trial and error, so-to-speak, doesn't involve any deliberate intention, so therefore there is no literal "trying" going on.
By Alias
#312638
Felix wrote: June 4th, 2018, 7:09 pm Trying options is an aim, the will to live itself is an intention, purposeful activity or "teleology" is integral to life - birds building nests, termites building mounds, etc., etc. A human business license is not required to engage in purposeful activity.
Trying options is a metaphor.
Once they're complex enough to have a will to live, individual life-forms have their own hopes and plans.
That doesn't apply, however, to the processes of life, let alone the process whereby life arises and evolution operates.
Evolution is not a thinking entity. It has no ideas, intentions or aims. It's just something that happens to living things in the reproductive cycle. Genetic drift and mutation are not menus from which Evolution chooses options. They're accidents that happen inside living cells and show up as variations in the offspring. Some give a slight advantage to the creature they happen to; some kill the bearer, some make it vulnerable - all are without design, purpose or intent. We don't see the process. We don't see the variants that were not viable 3 million years ago or last week. We only see the ones that have persisted - and even a lot of those don't make much sense from an engineering standpoint: they've survived through the accidents of environmental conditions, the state of the competition, available resources at the given moment, etc, etc. A whole long chain of random accidents.

Everything that could happen did happen. We see what survived; we are what survived and we like to see ourselves as the great and wonderful thing it's all been meant to produce all along.
We're not. We're the victims/beneficiaries of accident.
Favorite Philosopher: Terry Pratchett
User avatar
By Felix
#312665
Alias, practically everything you've said is speculation with no explanatory value.
"Once they're complex enough to have a will to live"
All living organisms have a will to live, but not a conscious will.
"Everything that could happen did happen"
Well excuse me, I didn't realize you are omniscient and know everything that happened over the course of Earths history, and therefore can confidently make such an assertion!
By Belindi
#312667
Felix wrote:
Well excuse me, I didn't realize you are omniscient and know everything that happened over the course of Earths history, and therefore can confidently make such an assertion!
You too learn from experience , your own and other people's.There is no other way to learn.

Inanimate objects , ideas, and universals don't purpose.

All living organisms have a will to live, but not a conscious will.
The will to live as it affects most plants and animals is biological. The will to live in the case of humans (with apologies to crows, Border collies, dolphins and so on) is nurtured by culture. Culture and its appendage, language, are that facet of nature from which all our conceptualisations depend.
#312672
I just wanted to go back to the reason I posted in this thread in the first place.
Mosesquine wrote: March 29th, 2018, 2:05 pm The teleological arguments are, by definition, the arguments for theism such that the things in the world are created by purposes (i.e. telos, in Greek), or sometimes called 'design arguments for theism'.
The OP assumes that all teleological arguments are arguments for theism. However, it has come to my attention that Thomas Nagel is an atheist who rejects theism, and yet he is pursing the possibility that teleology may do a better job than materialistic evolutionary naturalism, to explain our world.
#312675
Alias wrote: June 4th, 2018, 6:13 pm And you didn't answer my question:
If I'm dissatisfied with anything less than a final, definitive answer, what are my options?
I could start my own research.
I could wait until somebody competent comes up with one.
I could accept not knowing.
I could turn to religion.
I could throw a tantrum or go on a hunger strike or fall into a terminal depression.
I could make up a self-contained, circular argument, hang it in mid-air, and say: There, that's an explanation.
It sounded to me like you were saying something like, "Don't ask why... just have faith that the answer to anything we can't currently explain will be one that will fit within a physicalist explanation." But maybe I misread you?
I just read a paper titled Consciousness regained? Philosophical Arguments for and Against Reductive Physicalism by Thomas Sturm, PhD. The question he explored is whether or not consciousness and mental states can be reduced to the physical (consciousness is another reason that teleology appeals to Nagel). Sturm came to the conclusion that it's not time to give up on physicalism, but also remarked, "The chief function of skepticism is to sharpen our reasoning, and to avoid both dogmatism and naivety...""Dogmatism would be to assume that reductive physicalism must be true and defended, come what may."
By Alias
#312676
anonymous66 wrote: June 5th, 2018, 8:39 am [What happens if I'm not okay with the available explanation? ]
It sounded to me like you were saying something like, "Don't ask why... just have faith that the answer to anything we can't currently explain will be one that will fit within a physicalist explanation." But maybe I misread you?
Or maybe it's not me you were reading.
Such evidence as we currently have are all the explanations we have. Whether we like it or not doesn't change any facts.
..The question he explored is whether or not consciousness and mental states can be reduced to the physical
And if they can't be "reduced" (from what quantity and/or quality to which lesser quantity and/or quality?), then what?
Sturm came to the conclusion that it's not time to give up on physicalism,
...in favour of what avenue of inquiry?
but also remarked, "The chief function of skepticism is to sharpen our reasoning, and to avoid both dogmatism and naivety...""Dogmatism would be to assume that reductive physicalism must be true and defended, come what may."
And... What came?
How does one go about exploring, let alone quantifying, the non-physical?
(other than making **** up?)
Favorite Philosopher: Terry Pratchett
#312678
Alias wrote: June 5th, 2018, 9:46 am ...in favour of what avenue of inquiry?
Something that is anti-reductionistic when it comes to consciousness. Isn't it the case that both the mental and the physical are basic and not able to be reduced to something else? If it is the case that the mental does not reduce to the physical, then physicalism is false.
How does one go about exploring, let alone quantifying, the non-physical?
Aren't we already doing that when we talk about mental states like beliefs, desires, intentions, emotions and knowledge?

To answer your question: By considering that possibility that physicalism can't explain everything, by considering the possibility that whatever it is that will give us a complete understanding of our world, it will also have to explain mental states- to be more precise, it will have to explain why it is that we have minds.
By Alias
#312687
anonymous66 wrote: June 5th, 2018, 11:11 am [How does one go about exploring, let alone quantifying, the non-physical? ]
Aren't we already doing that when we talk about mental states like beliefs, desires, intentions, emotions and knowledge?
We talk about all kinds of things, whether they actually exist or not. What I'm asking is: how do you learn about them scientifically?
You can explore the knowledge and intentions of a live and conscious brain.
You can explore the functioning of a live brain, with its mental states intact.
You can examine a brain when consciousness and emotions have vacated it.
Try removing the brain, and then studying any of the other things in its absence.
To answer your question: By considering that possibility that physicalism can't explain everything.
Possibility, sure. Experimental evidence - problematic. Proof? Show me.
By considering the possibility that whatever it is that will give us a complete understanding of our world, it will also have to explain mental states-
How about considering the possibility that we are incapable of understanding the complete world? Or that we could maybe understand it, if we were able to recognize and collect all the relevant data, and that may be beyond our reach in space-time.
to be more precise, it will have to explain why it is that we have minds.
Force the mind to explain its own reason for being? I doubt that it - or anything! - can do that without making **** up.

But --
this is important! --
What makes you think there is any more reason than that it gave its owners a survival advantage?
Favorite Philosopher: Terry Pratchett
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 9

Current Philosophy Book of the Month

The Riddle of Alchemy

The Riddle of Alchemy
by Paul Kiritsis
January 2025

2025 Philosophy Books of the Month

On Spirits: The World Hidden Volume II

On Spirits: The World Hidden Volume II
by Dr. Joseph M. Feagan
April 2025

Escape to Paradise and Beyond (Tentative)

Escape to Paradise and Beyond (Tentative)
by Maitreya Dasa
March 2025

They Love You Until You Start Thinking for Yourself

They Love You Until You Start Thinking for Yourself
by Monica Omorodion Swaida
February 2025

The Riddle of Alchemy

The Riddle of Alchemy
by Paul Kiritsis
January 2025

2024 Philosophy Books of the Month

Connecting the Dots: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Science

Connecting the Dots: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Science
by Lia Russ
December 2024

The Advent of Time: A Solution to the Problem of Evil...

The Advent of Time: A Solution to the Problem of Evil...
by Indignus Servus
November 2024

Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age

Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age
by Elliott B. Martin, Jr.
October 2024

Zen and the Art of Writing

Zen and the Art of Writing
by Ray Hodgson
September 2024

How is God Involved in Evolution?

How is God Involved in Evolution?
by Joe P. Provenzano, Ron D. Morgan, and Dan R. Provenzano
August 2024

Launchpad Republic: America's Entrepreneurial Edge and Why It Matters

Launchpad Republic: America's Entrepreneurial Edge and Why It Matters
by Howard Wolk
July 2024

Quest: Finding Freddie: Reflections from the Other Side

Quest: Finding Freddie: Reflections from the Other Side
by Thomas Richard Spradlin
June 2024

Neither Safe Nor Effective

Neither Safe Nor Effective
by Dr. Colleen Huber
May 2024

Now or Never

Now or Never
by Mary Wasche
April 2024

Meditations

Meditations
by Marcus Aurelius
March 2024

Beyond the Golden Door: Seeing the American Dream Through an Immigrant's Eyes

Beyond the Golden Door: Seeing the American Dream Through an Immigrant's Eyes
by Ali Master
February 2024

The In-Between: Life in the Micro

The In-Between: Life in the Micro
by Christian Espinosa
January 2024

2023 Philosophy Books of the Month

Entanglement - Quantum and Otherwise

Entanglement - Quantum and Otherwise
by John K Danenbarger
January 2023

Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul

Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul
by Mitzi Perdue
February 2023

Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness

Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness
by Chet Shupe
March 2023

The Unfakeable Code®

The Unfakeable Code®
by Tony Jeton Selimi
April 2023

The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are

The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are
by Alan Watts
May 2023

Killing Abel

Killing Abel
by Michael Tieman
June 2023

Reconfigurement: Reconfiguring Your Life at Any Stage and Planning Ahead

Reconfigurement: Reconfiguring Your Life at Any Stage and Planning Ahead
by E. Alan Fleischauer
July 2023

First Survivor: The Impossible Childhood Cancer Breakthrough

First Survivor: The Impossible Childhood Cancer Breakthrough
by Mark Unger
August 2023

Predictably Irrational

Predictably Irrational
by Dan Ariely
September 2023

Artwords

Artwords
by Beatriz M. Robles
November 2023

Fireproof Happiness: Extinguishing Anxiety & Igniting Hope

Fireproof Happiness: Extinguishing Anxiety & Igniting Hope
by Dr. Randy Ross
December 2023

2022 Philosophy Books of the Month

Emotional Intelligence At Work

Emotional Intelligence At Work
by Richard M Contino & Penelope J Holt
January 2022

Free Will, Do You Have It?

Free Will, Do You Have It?
by Albertus Kral
February 2022

My Enemy in Vietnam

My Enemy in Vietnam
by Billy Springer
March 2022

2X2 on the Ark

2X2 on the Ark
by Mary J Giuffra, PhD
April 2022

The Maestro Monologue

The Maestro Monologue
by Rob White
May 2022

What Makes America Great

What Makes America Great
by Bob Dowell
June 2022

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!
by Jerry Durr
July 2022

Living in Color

Living in Color
by Mike Murphy
August 2022 (tentative)

The Not So Great American Novel

The Not So Great American Novel
by James E Doucette
September 2022

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches
by John N. (Jake) Ferris
October 2022

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All
by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
November 2022

The Smartest Person in the Room: The Root Cause and New Solution for Cybersecurity

The Smartest Person in the Room
by Christian Espinosa
December 2022

2021 Philosophy Books of the Month

The Biblical Clock: The Untold Secrets Linking the Universe and Humanity with God's Plan

The Biblical Clock
by Daniel Friedmann
March 2021

Wilderness Cry: A Scientific and Philosophical Approach to Understanding God and the Universe

Wilderness Cry
by Dr. Hilary L Hunt M.D.
April 2021

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute: Tools To Spark Your Dream And Ignite Your Follow-Through

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute
by Jeff Meyer
May 2021

Surviving the Business of Healthcare: Knowledge is Power

Surviving the Business of Healthcare
by Barbara Galutia Regis M.S. PA-C
June 2021

Winning the War on Cancer: The Epic Journey Towards a Natural Cure

Winning the War on Cancer
by Sylvie Beljanski
July 2021

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream
by Dr Frank L Douglas
August 2021

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts
by Mark L. Wdowiak
September 2021

The Preppers Medical Handbook

The Preppers Medical Handbook
by Dr. William W Forgey M.D.
October 2021

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress: A Practical Guide

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress
by Dr. Gustavo Kinrys, MD
November 2021

Dream For Peace: An Ambassador Memoir

Dream For Peace
by Dr. Ghoulem Berrah
December 2021


SCIENCE and SCIENTISM

I think you're using term 'universal' a littl[…]

Emergence can't do that!!

Are we now describing our map, not the territory[…]

“The charm quark is an elementary particle found i[…]

True: Nothing is hard. Things can be scary, painfu[…]