RE: Oh no not another free will thread.
April 26, 2018 at 11:07 am
(This post was last modified: April 26, 2018 at 11:46 am by Edwardo Piet.)
(April 26, 2018 at 10:46 am)henryp Wrote: So the shortcoming of your non-science position, is that your 'intuition' is science. It's shitty science, but science none the less.
Sigh. How much longer should I waste my time on telling you on what I'm NOT saying before I just give up because it's like you're not even trying to understand me?
What about my intuition do you think is a scientific claim? I'm literally talking about whatever is outside of science! How can that be a scientific claim?
Quote:It's the observation of one's own mind. And our minds are very solidly in our reality. Your intuition and ideas have no ties to 'the objective world beyond the reality we experience.' It's just your physical brain looking at your observed reality, and coming up with some guesses based on those things.
You say our minds are very solidly in "our reality". Well yes, they are in the sense that we filter whatever real objective reality is through our senses... but my point is that we can't perceive things as they actually are, and science is filtered through all of that. "Our reality" is subjective, and science's objective understanding of reality is only epistemically objective, it's not ontologically objective. We are able to objectively assess the world
as we experience it as subjects. Science is a epistemically objective study of ontological subjectivity. Ontological objectivity
outside of subjectivity is ultimately unnkowable by defintion. Because knowledge requires minds and we can only know what our minds are able to perceive. As soon as we're testing something outside of the mind, it is filtered through our mind... so we're only seeing the universe from the point of view of ourselves, not from the universe's own point of view, obviously. We don't see things how they actually are. We see things as we see them, science just helps us get a more accurate picture of the world as we see it. Even when we learn about how bats experience the world through eccolation, even that understanding is an understanding of bats filtered through our own senses.
We can never know if objective reality is different outside of our minds or not.
My intuition doesn't touch science at all. I'm specifically talking about an intuition about what is outside of science. My intuition is that there is an objective world outside of ourselves.... do you think there isn't? Do you think that if you're alone in a room and you became 100% unconscious the room would disappear because they're nothing outside of experience? And then as soon as someone enters the room it appears? That would be unfalsifiable, we can't prove reality isn't like that.... but my intuition certainly doesn't believe that's how reality is. I believe that there is a room there whether any conscious beings are there or not. Do you disagree with that supposedly "unscientific" intuition?
We don't see things as they actually are. I'm merely saying that science represents our best attempts to understand the world around us as they actually are but all those attempts are entirely based on our experience. It is a highly accurate and solidly successful viewpoint about the world as we experience. To say that science tests the world outside our experience is absurd because literally the entirety of science is empirical and in case you didn't know (by this point you're starting to sound very, very dense so I wouldn't be surprised): "empirical" means:
Google's Wrote:based on, concerned with, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic
I rest my case. A case you aren't even addressing because you don't understand what I'm actually saying. I'm not talking about science, you're talking about science... and I'm only bringing it up to explain to you why what I'm talking about doesn't contradict science. See my signature, some people understand me.
Science deals with phenomena.
And the more you talk about science the more it seems to me that I understand how science works as a whole far better than you do, even if you know more sciencey details because you find it less mindnumbingly boring than I do.
The most interesting aspect of science to me is how it works in general. The scientific method, the philosophy of science, falsifaiblity. I love how science works and I love empiricism. I love knowing what science is about and what it isn't about.
Random facts about quantum mechanics bore me to death. But that doesn't mean I can't see very clearly that you are completely misunderstanding what I'm saying. "Because science" isn't a response to something that isn't even talking about science.
I'm talking philosophy and
logic. Not theism. You sound very ridiculous to me.
Lawrence Krauss is an example of a person who is an amazing scientist but absolutely terrible philosopher. Which is fine, because he's not a philosopher. But his lack of understanding of philosophy is extremely embarassing when he starts making philosophical claims. This is why both philosophers
and more philosophically minded physicists criticized him highly, and rightly, for his insistence that a universe came from "nothing".
So perhaps you will understand that you can be wrong about this when fucking Lawrence Krauss can be wrong about philosophical stuff and yet when it comes to the scientific claims he makes he's very right and I don't disagree with him on that. What he calls nothing is indeed what the universe came from. But just because he wants to call that "nothing" doesn't make it nothing.
Scientists are able to make completely correct scientific discoveries but still draw completely baseless philosophical conclusions from it. I can accept all the science without blindly thinking that when scientists start drawing false conclusions that are nothing to do with science that they're right just because they're good at science.
This is why you're more like a theist than I am. You just blindly trust scientists
even when they make claims that are outside their field and have nothing to do with science. Ironically, that's what a theist does. Blindly trusts people rather than thinking for themselves. I trust expert scientists insofar as they are talking about science. Once they start talking about other things I'm not going to blindly trust them.