12/6/2006 12:55:27 PM
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12/6/2006 2:18:28 PM
12/6/2006 2:21:50 PM
12/6/2006 2:45:42 PM
sarijoul is right, i read the same essay. i'll dig it up if need be.
12/6/2006 2:48:36 PM
Sigh yes, dig it up please. I've read almost all of Nietzsche's works. I'll concede if a reasonable interpretation of the text lends itself to that fact, but I'll be interpreting it in the context of his period and his other writings, and not some preconceived prejudice I have against philosophers.Do you remember what work it was published in? As far as regarding the philosopher itself (in his image) he says (in Twilight of the Idols) something to the tune of:Aristotle claims that to live alone one must be a beast or a god. He leaves out the third case: one must be both, a philosopher. (paraphrased, I left my copy of Twilight in the car and I'm not kidding)I mean, Schopenhauer also claims that philosophers are windbags (himself excluded, of course, along with Kant and Plato). This doesn't stop him from engaging in philosophy, and I think a reasonable interpretation of his claim is that he rejects other forms of philosophy than what he engages in. Lots of thinkers viewed themselves as being radically different/better/fundamentally different than the people before them.[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 2:55 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2006 2:53:54 PM
his essay implied that his even writing the essay that i was reading was pointless.it has been nearly ten years since i've read this and i don't have a copy. ben^^ could help you more.but it's fairly irrelevant to this point.my point is: when do scientists make metaphysical claims as a primary claim in their work? and when/if it did happen, wouldn't it be fairly obvious to most that it's not "science." and even if it weren't obvious, what idiots take science to be "truth" anyway? i mean don't they go through life seeing scientific change after change. surely they must realize that change will occur in the future that is likely to shift any scientific thought held currently.
12/6/2006 2:59:11 PM
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12/6/2006 4:03:32 PM
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12/6/2006 4:10:48 PM
He could claim there're no problems at all with the notion of causality and endorse it, sure. But this would either be ignorant or intellectually dishonest.
12/6/2006 4:22:40 PM
[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 4:25 PM. Reason : nm]
12/6/2006 4:24:49 PM
I'll let you ponder if your chair and computer exist. I'll just use mine. Let me know when I can do something better.
12/6/2006 4:25:51 PM
They clearly exist, I'm using them. You don't think I'm arguing that they don't, do you?
12/6/2006 4:26:50 PM
what ARE you arguing?(and i'd contend that you don't know that they exist. but it doesn't really matter in the end whether they exist or not.)
12/6/2006 4:28:48 PM
I don't know dammit. What are you saying, they exist but science can't prove anything about them?
12/6/2006 4:29:42 PM
12/6/2006 4:30:50 PM
Stuff apparently exists for me too. I'm just going to leave it at that and not worry about whether they're subjects or phenomena or whatever.
12/6/2006 4:42:00 PM
Well by definition they're phenomena. The question is whether there's a thing in itself there. It's a question some people try to answer "scientifically" but there's no real way to do so.
12/6/2006 4:53:23 PM
This is really beginning to seem like some trolling.
12/6/2006 4:55:14 PM
^^examples please.[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 4:55 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2006 4:55:27 PM
12/6/2006 5:00:04 PM
12/6/2006 5:02:21 PM
"Is there a thing-in-itself?"
12/6/2006 5:04:37 PM
is that supposed to be an example?
12/6/2006 5:08:06 PM
It is an example of a question that's purportedly answered by matter.
12/6/2006 5:09:13 PM
let me clarify: i'd like an example of someone trying to answer the question scientifically.
12/6/2006 5:10:52 PM
I mean anytime a scientist asserts there's matter, using the fact that he's a scientist as some sort of built-in justification.
12/6/2006 5:12:21 PM
example please
12/6/2006 5:14:08 PM
Actually hold up, I see where you're backing me.I'm not asserting that real, constructive science consists of these claims. I'm asserting that people who use science to further their goals take science and make metaphysical projections from them.Take a look at any "scientific" atheist and there's your example. [Edited on December 6, 2006 at 5:16 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2006 5:15:07 PM
no. you've been arguing against a hypothetical scientist this whole time. one which i've rarely (if ever) seen.
12/6/2006 5:15:52 PM
Rarely if ever seen? I don't think so, just look at the modern debate. Maybe you don't though, that's fine.
12/6/2006 5:17:08 PM
12/6/2006 5:17:49 PM
People furthering the "atheist" agenda, the "Brights," etc. You haven't notice this getting bigger, or at least more well-covered?
12/6/2006 5:18:31 PM
nope. i disregard kooks in general. the only time i can think of people using this sort of justification is a really bad cable access show. "atheist hour" or something. but i would HARDLY call these people respected and in no way were they scientists.[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 5:20 PM. Reason : if it were so prevalent, you'd think that you would have put some examples by now]
12/6/2006 5:19:58 PM
So where did I say actual scientists did this again? Stop strawmanning me. My objection has always been with people using science as a weapon for their metaphysical judgments. What about this is hard for you to understand so we can work on your comprehension? This sort of thing is getting fairly mainstream.
12/6/2006 5:22:37 PM
12/6/2006 5:23:33 PM
You think materialism isn't a common assumption against scientists? You're not going to see a treatise or matter from most scientists nowadays, seeing as how this was addressed mostly in the 17th century and by philosopher/scientist hybrids.
12/6/2006 5:24:36 PM
so you're saying you don't have any examples?^i'm saying maybe it's assumed, but not claimed as a hypothesis that can be tested[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 5:25 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2006 5:25:20 PM
What I'm saying is that you're asking me for examples of stuff that doesn't represent my view or what I'd like to show. In essence you're trying to lead me off track and defeat whatever new thing you try to get me to say because the original claim is too much for you to handle.Materialism is a working assumption of science. Ask just about any scientist if they believe in matter. The problem comes when this logical-metaphysical postulate gets used in other arenas. Shit, even science could do without it.
12/6/2006 5:27:56 PM
well your whole arguments hinges on arguing against this practice. and you've yet to provide any examples of it.
12/6/2006 5:29:23 PM
My entire argument hinges on people using science to back up their metaphysics. What's hard about this to see? Science and atheism are being tied together in the public debate. Do you just not pay attention to it, or what?I am trying to find an example for you that's not from a horribly biased source (some atheist journal, some christian journal, etc). You might have to wait a bit though because I have to get some food.
12/6/2006 5:32:55 PM
This argument is stupid as hell.You can see matter, I guess we don't fully know it's true "composition" but I mean to argue it isn't real is useless. Regardless it has measureable effects.
12/6/2006 5:35:42 PM
sarijoul -- while foraging I thought about exactly what you're asking for. Why do you want me to find an article where a scientist claims there's matter? This is stupid. It's a working assumption of science. I can point out to you in the world literature however peoples' concerns when idealism was brought forward as an ontological theory (they were afraid it would throw out physics).
12/6/2006 5:59:29 PM