From
Post 21:
This seems our principle bone of contention, so let's mark it by itself...
JoeyKnothead wrote:
...Positing a volitional agent without physical form is, I contend, not a rational argument...
EduChris wrote:
The "evidence" that we have is our entire physical universe. What we seek is a rational explanation for this universe--particuarly, the "specificity" of the universe (to use ThatGirlAgain's terminology).
I'm not so sure if I accept a charge of specificity. Such language seems too subjective (while admitting here we are subjectivin' to beat the band).
I note also that where I propose a volitional agent would require physicality, you present the
physical universe as evidence it doesn't.
EduChris wrote:
Our universe is not some amorphous, uninteresting...
Uninteresting is a purely subjective value.
EduChris wrote:
inert blob...
A "blob" is what we make of it. Where some see a "blob", others may see an amoeba.
EduChris wrote:
but rather a highly organized...
By who's determination must we consider the universe "organized"?
EduChris wrote:
information-laden...
I contend that where there's something, there's information to be had. Upon considering such, a charge of "information laden" is only dependent on one's ability to investigate.
EduChris wrote:
consciousness-inhabited spectacle...
This is where I contend all evidence indicates that consciousness-inhabited would be a product of the brain, a physical form, as expressed through the mind.
"Spectacle" of course being a rather incredulous position, but danged if I don't agree.
EduChris wrote:
which, so far as we can tell, didn't have to exist.
I can agree with that, with a qualifier to follow...
EduChris wrote:
No one claims to know all of the precise steps which came together to produce this universe, with all of its very specific physical "laws." However, we have the following general options:
1) Chance...
Snipped for brevity and for I'm kinda with ya here.
I would add that as above, where you declare "didn't have to exist", you are positing a position based on chance, but saying such a position is not warranted.
EduChris wrote:
2) Necessity. This is the "Omniverse" option--all possibilities are necessarily instantiated...
This is where I propose that necessity is the ultimate rule that things act according to their properties. In this fashion then, the universe could be considered "necessary" because of its own (pre-) composition.
We'll cover this next'n completely because it seems the fundamental deal here...
EduChris wrote:
3) Volition. This is the theistic option. In order to rule out this option, we have two options: 1) we could present a very strong argument that our human volition is an illusion, a chimera, an impotent mirage which does not actually cause anything to happen in our universe, wherein absolutely everything derives from chance and/or necessity; or 2) we could present a very strong argument that volition cannot exist in the absence of some highly specific physical substructure (such as our brain).
Of course we have more data to sift through, but I'm gonna point out the notion that EduChris seemingly accepts that volition can't exist without some physical structure (with apologies if that ain't what he's getting at here).
EduChris wrote:
The first problem with the "volition-as-illusion" option is that we have excellent prima facie evidence that our personal volition does cause (or select) certain things to happen, for the purpose of realizing some subjective value. This prima facie evidence is as direct and unmediated as anything could ever be, and so the burden of proof needed to deny the efficacy of our volition seems insurmountable.
I don't argue that our volition need be efficient, but that there it is, as expressed in the physical brain.
EduChris wrote:
The second problem with the "volition-as-illusion" option is that we have a diffiicult time explaining how evolution could have produced conscious thoughts which have no bearing whatsoever on behavior.
Where I perceive light, it has little impact on my hearing. Thus, the perception of light need not impact on my behavior, except for when it does.
EduChris wrote:
Conscious thoughts which do not affect behavior in any way cannot have been built and honed according to adaptive advantage, for the very reason that these conscious thoughts produced no behaviors at all.
As above, where I perceive light, that notion need not impact on my ability to know a fire, which produces light, may be a good way to cook a biscuit. Thus, my sense of taste is impacted, somewhat tangentially, by my sense of sight.
I contend that our perceptions of our various senses have presented in us an ability to extrapolate, and that such is not in conflict with the ToE (not that you directly argue against it).
EduChris wrote:
Thus the "evolutionary accident" explanation for SME seems too ad hoc to be taken seriously, especially since we apparently do use our inner conscious subjective thought life to weigh and evaluate arguments, resulting in specific behaviors every single day.
When something "seems", we are displaying our ability to cognitize, to think, to discern, and such are or is the very product, best we can tell, of a physical brain.
EduChris wrote:
The problem with the "volition-requires-physicality" option is that we don't know this. We can't know this.
...
I contend this is an
argumentum ad ignorantiam, where you propose we can't know it ain't, so therefore it is.
EduCyhris wrote:
When it comes right down to it, we don't even know what "physicality" is. We sometimes assume that we know, but yet appearances can be deceiving. We are not solid masses, but rather mostly empty space.
With all respect, this reeks of a "god of the gaps" argument - noting you're willing to clarify.
EduChris wrote:
Physicists seem to be finding newer and smaller particles every year, and now we have begun to speak of "virtual particles" as opposed to "real particles." No one has ever seen a virtual particle, or even a real particle; these are just hypothetical postulates that help us explain and predict results of very complicated experiments and procedures, all of which are multiply mediated through any number of mechanical apparati and any number of human observers, each of whom might interpret the results in various ways. At the end of the day, we don't know what our subjective mental experience really is: we can't measure it or weigh it. We can tamper with it in various ways, by poking around in the brain, but this hardly proves that an actual brain is required for SME, any more than a leaky straw proves that there is no water in the glass.
This condition does nothing to show that a volitional agent wouldn't require physicality. What it does is show that where we don't know something, some'll insert a god into that gap. I say that with the full appreciation that I may misunderstand what you're getting at.
EduChris wrote:
So any way we look at it, we apparently have some sort of "possibility reservoir" from which our very specific universe became actualized.
I fear the use of "specific" in this sense may be borne of an entity observing such from within. It is a subjective term, even if one may produce objective criteria for determining just how "specific" this universe may be.
EduChris wrote:
The "chance" option doesn't give us an actual explanation, and it seems entirely ad hoc.
Agreed, if we discount the purely mathematical notion of "danged if there it ain't, and what are the odds on that".
EduChris wrote:
The "necessity" option requires an infinite number of other universes...
I'm not so sure it does, where necessity would be understood as stuff acting according to its properties.
EduChris wrote:
the majority of which will be amorphous blobs, in order to avoid the ad hoc problem.
Okay, so the majority of all other universes are amorphous blobs. Here we sit in one that aint. How might such a condition show us the rational take is that a god created humans?
EduChris wrote:
But we have no empirical evidence for these other universes, nor can we have ever have any empirical evidence for them, even in principle, since we don't have the luxury of getting outside our own universe to observe these putative universes.
So then, we discount as irrational a belief in other universes, and sit here wondering my we should consider a god as creating this'n, so by extension, humans.
EduChris wrote:
This leaves us with the third option. If this option can be shown to be logically impossible, then we should pick one of the other options--either one, actually, since it wouldn't make any difference if volition is an illusion.
But we don't have any good basis for excluding volition, and every reason for retaining it.
By what rationale should we include volition if we don't contend that such is borne of a physical brain (or analogous component)?
EduChris wrote:
The "volition" option is the least ad hoc, the most privative, and in best accord with our natural sense of who we are as persons.
While I contend it's a very ad hoc position, given that it refuses to accept that volition, through thought, is seen as a component of a physical brain.
EduChris wrote:
This option alone provides the possibility that some answers to some questions are actually better than other answers.
Providing for a
possibility is not providing for a
most rational basis. It's possible I'm smart, but impossible to find an entire planet that'll agree with me about it.
EduChris wrote:
This option alone provides the necessary metaphysical framework for the sort of wordview most of us employ in our daily lives. For all of these reasons and more, most people have been, are, and will continue to be, theists.
Argumentum ad populum.
I might be Teddy Roosevelt, but I ain't.
-Punkinhead Martin