Atla wrote: ↑Fri Mar 13, 2020 12:49 am
TheVisionofEr wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2020 8:56 pmThere can’t be a science without an object. Science can take existing things for its object and then make laws about them. It can’t take being for an object of knowledge or action.
Not sure what you are saying. Of course existence itself isn't a "thing", and science doesn't need separate things either.
The point is we have a starting point. We are born into common sense (or, that could be called by another name). It's unreasonable to deny that. We later learn things, or imagine ourselves to learn things, as in classrooms.
The progress implies getting closer to the truth, or an improvement over the starting place. The everyday is the starting place. We can’t seemingly dispense with it. We live in it. Many problems arise from that. It’s not cogent to say a supposed “knowledge” that is destructive to our real lives is really knowledge. It’s questionable that knowledge that isn’t good for human beings is really knowledge at all. Knowledge seems to imply something that helps human beings.
How did you write something that odd about knowledge? Basic "truth" has nothing to do with helping humans. Working out a good everyday philosophy that helps humans is a different matter.
In some issues, common sense gets eventually thrown out the window, doesn't really matter how things 'seem' to our human mind, which evolved for survival not understanding.
That’s why they speak of consciousness. Consciousness isn’t an ego. In Dennett we find everything as his object, or the object of his theory, including consciousness. That is western metaphysics or object theory in a pure or extreme form.
Dennett is arguably insane, he is denying qualia and possibly the constant 'subjective' first-person perspective.
There are no separate objects, and there is no objectivity without subjectivity, if we are to make that distinction.
I don’t see any sense to this. This is sophistry, or, put another way, it is unreasonable talk. We do observe. Observation is an action. An action must have something acted upon.
What sophists try to do is show that reason, or the reasonable account, is in error by the standard of some form of abstract intelligibility such as “logic.”
You are just insisting that an arbitrary circular reasoning has anything to do with "truth". Again, are you confusing "truth" with what's a useful convention for helping humans, isn't that more like what sophistry is?
Technically there is no special 'I', that could take that special action of observation, and there is no special 'something' that this would act upon. That's just circular nonsense.
“How did you write something that odd about knowledge? Basic "truth" has nothing to do with helping humans.”
Then it isn’t truth. It’s a cloudburst of meaninglessness in the form of a ginormous flush of information.
I mean, why is philosophy/science popular? It is because of the impression that it produces inventions that are conquering the environment, and, the human body. And that it is going to therefore hand the ability or techniques that improve human life and bring about happiness to humans. Otherwise it would be a childish intelectual game of collecting a kind of garbage heap of worthless information.
“Working out a good everyday philosophy that helps humans is a different matter.”
The two can’t be separated for thoughtful people. The biggest difficulty in our own time is the forgetfulness of where we stand in the evolution of our own concepts. Concepts in their tangible form are possibilities. When philosophy becomes technology it becomes the possibility of what I wrote above. As a suppressed instinctive belief about progress towards happiness for human beings.
“In some issues, common sense gets eventually thrown out the window, doesn't really matter how things 'seem' to our human mind, which evolved for survival not understanding.”
Is there supposed to be some other mind that understands the information linked to the technology creation?
Think of a mathematician who makes the generic claim that math is “the language of the universe,” never mind that he doesn’t likely know the origin of this statement in Galileo’s understanding of mechanics. When was there someone whose first language was math? Entirely impossible. Math exists only for someone with a common sense, which has been received in the first year of life, and is part of the reception of an evolution of thinking.
The mathamatical thinking can never replace reality in the way it is interpreted by ordinary understanding. It stands inside it as a sort of problem-solving tool in the service of ordinary understanding.
“You are just insisting that an arbitrary circular reasoning has anything to do with "truth".”
It’s not arbitrary so far as arbitrary means without reason. It is reasonable to start with the common sense meaning of truth. Truth is what if we know it we are better off. Any other definition is arbitrary or in the service of a specific limited project which itself is ultimitly meant to serve the first understanding.
We start from common sense meanings, but common sense sometimes has several meanings of the same terms. Then we may try to discern which is the main or core meaning. As in Aristotle in book 5 of the metaphysics with the term
phusis or “nature.” The question we have to ask is if we are genuinely improving common sense through philosophy/science. Everything depends on that, and on discovering a standard there.
All reasoning is circular, by the way. The only issue that can be seriously raised is when someone does not find it elucidates some matter. If I don’t know what someone means by the phrase “term of art,” and I say, it means the same as “technical term” this might be all they need, provided they already know what technical term means.