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Post 60

Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 5:12pmSanction this postReply
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Brendan,

Ed: “Actually, it [the existence axiom] does say something about the nature of existence...”

And what would that be?

Brendan
That it's always been and always will be (i.e., that thinking otherwise is contradictory).

;-)

Ed


Post 61

Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 5:22pmSanction this postReply
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Brendan,

If the primary axioms originate with sensory perception, how are they generated? Since sense perception is always of particular things, it’s not clear how these very general concepts can be generated in this way. Perhaps you could demonstrate the process.

B-r-e-n-d-a-n! We've been through all this before (I could even, with some work, generate the links).

If axioms "originated" in sense perception, then animals would understand axioms, too -- but this isn't true. An 18-month old human stares for a long time at magic tricks (where some part of "existence" vanishes), dogs don't though. If you put 2 balls behind a screen for instance, and then pull back only one (the 2nd "appeared" to vanish), dogs don't bat an eye -- they just want you to throw them the one ball you have left.

When Jon said that "axioms are just implicit in that knowledge" -- he meant human knowledge. Don't believe me? Well, then just ask him! Axioms don't "originate" in a sense perception (for any kind of being that can sense-perceive), they "originate" in the myriad sense perceptions and logical analyses of a conceptual being.

Got it?

Ed


Post 62

Sunday, April 1, 2007 - 2:03pmSanction this postReply
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Just as an aside, there's a great article in the current April Scientific American on reasoning among ravens.  I've followed research on bird intelligence off and on for many years, and done my own experiments with the local crows, who are to ravens as chimps are to humans.  They display an astonishing level of intelligence themselves, including the ability to recognize individual humans even from a great distance, to remember salient facts about each individual human with whom they have ever interacted and to model their own behavior on that of other crows or even non-crows.

Ravens, however, are pretty close to human level in intelligence.  They clearly think through and visualize consequences before they act, explicitly taking into account their understanding of the knowledge or ignorance of other parties.


Post 63

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 2:58amSanction this postReply
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Ed: “That it's always been and always will be…”

Sounding a tad new-age there, Ed. Are you sure you don’t have some lingering religious longings?

“Axioms don't "originate" in a sense perception…they "originate" in the myriad sense perceptions and logical analyses of a conceptual being.”

If you read the relevant passages again, Jon said that axioms originate “with” sense perception and that was the sense in which I took his claim. And Rand agrees. I don’t have a quote handy, but I remember her saying that the axioms are “present” in the very first perception.

In support of that, one must remember that Rand needs these basic concepts to generate concepts that are crucial to her epistemology, such as causation and unit. Still, if you believe that they are the outcome of the logical analysis of perception, you may wish to demonstrate the process.

Rand supplied us with a ready-made theory of concept formation, so you should have no problem applying it to the formation of axiomatic concepts. Good luck.

Brendan

Post 64

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 5:34amSanction this postReply
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Phil,

Ravens, however, are pretty close to human level in intelligence.
You're wrong and I can prove it but, because it will take some time, I will do this later (probably next weekend) ...
=====================

Brendan,

If you read the relevant passages again, Jon said that axioms originate “with” sense perception and that was the sense in which I took his claim. And Rand agrees. I don’t have a quote handy, but I remember her saying that the axioms are “present” in the very first perception.
You're wrong and I can prove it but, because it will take some time, I will do this later (probably next weekend) ...
=====================

Ed




Post 65

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 6:56amSanction this postReply
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the axioms are “present” in the very first perception.

ONLY in the sense that they are implied.


Post 66

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 9:36amSanction this postReply
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Ed,

Is that you're new picture? You look like Shelby Steele in that one. Quite a bit different from your previous pic. I'm beginning to think that you can't tell what people look like from their pictures. I don't look at all like mine. I'm much better looking! ;-)

- Bill

Post 67

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 11:10amSanction this postReply
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You would think that if ravens were so smart, they would recognize guns when they saw them, then.  But then again, I am a pretty good shot, so they might not have the time.

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Post 68

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 12:19pmSanction this postReply
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Ed wrote, “If you put 2 balls behind a screen for instance, and then pull back only one (the 2nd "appeared" to vanish), dogs don't bat an eye -- they just want you to throw them the one ball you have left.”

I just tried it. She ignored the one remaining thrown ball, opting instead to walk around the obstruction and pick up the missing one, which she walked off with.


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Post 69

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 2:20pmSanction this postReply
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Jon Letendre wrote: 
It follows that a “higher-order good” would eventuate from the existence of a God with freedom, a God for whom it would NOT be impossible to commit anything evil in his actions. A free, morally responsible God is clearly greater than the one traditionally known. To avoid confusion, let’s call Him Dog. Obviously, Dog created God.
There is an ontological distinction between created beings and God.  There is absolute perfection in God, and subsequently limitation or privation in anything God creates-- by necessity.  In this connection, Leibniz says somewhere or other that although the Devil may be the author of evil, the origin of evil is the inclination to evil from the original imperfection of creatures.        

Here is a relevant passage from Leibniz's Theodicy, in which he presents and refutes the notion that God would be the ex post facto cause of sin through creation.   

OBJECTION V:
Whoever produces all that is real in a thing is its cause.
God produces all that is real in sin.
Therefore God is the cause of sin.

ANSWER
I might content myself with denying the major or the minor, because the term 'real' admits of interpretations capable of rendering these propositions false. But in order to give a better explanation I will make a distinction. 'Real' either signifies that which is positive only, or else it includes also privative beings: in the first case, I deny the major and I admit the minor; in the second case, I do the opposite. I might have confined myself to that; but I was willing to go further, in order to account for this distinction. I have therefore been well pleased to point out that every purely positive or absolute reality is a perfection, and that every imperfection comes from limitation, that is, from the privative: for to limit is to withhold extension, or the more beyond. Now God is the cause of all perfections, and consequently of all realities, when they are regarded as purely positive. But limitations or privations result from the original imperfection of creatures which restricts their receptivity. It is as with a laden boat, which the river carries along more slowly or less slowly in proportion to the weight that it bears: thus the speed comes from the river, but the retardation which restricts this speed comes from the load. Also I have shown in the present work how the creature, in causing sin, is a deficient cause; how errors and evil inclinations spring from privation; and how privation is efficacious accidentally. And I have justified the opinion of St. Augustine (lib. I, Ad. Simpl., qu. 2) who explains (for example) how God hardens the soul, not in giving it something evil, but because the effect of the good he imprints is restricted by the resistance of the soul, and by the circumstances contributing to this resistance, so that he does not give it all the good that would overcome its evil. 'Nec (inquit) ab illo erogatur aliquid quo homo fit deterior, sed tantum quo fit melior non erogatur.'

We say, then, that God permits evil by creating creatures who possess imperfections, but nevertheless participate in the goodness of God insofar as they share in his perfections.  That these creatures are ordered to God as an end, despite their imperfections, is owing to their nature; for, insofar as they are, they are good.  Their imperfections come from privation--a privation whose presence is necessarily a part of any created essence, and which involves the capacity for (not the necessity of) evil. 


Post 70

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 7:41pmSanction this postReply
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Leibniz,

There is an ontological distinction between the created being (God) and Dog. There is absolute perfection in Dog, and subsequently limitation or privation in anything Dog creates-- by necessity.

Dog does only good, never evil, from capacities that include good AND evil—while God is limited by his very capacities to doing only good. Therefore, Dog is ontologically distinct from God and the good that Dog does is morally superior to the good done by that one trick pony that is God.


Post 71

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 9:02pmSanction this postReply
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I just tried it. She ignored the one remaining thrown ball, opting instead to walk around the obstruction and pick up the missing one, which she walked off with.
Jon L., if you're willing, then please start a new thread where I can ask you some things (without hijacking this one) about how you conducted your "case study."

Ed


Post 72

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 9:15pmSanction this postReply
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**Leibniz puts on his Bishop Berkeley mask, and begins**

If we don't perceive material objects, then how did we discover what a brain is (which, last I checked, is a material object), or that 'reality' can "really" be simulated through direct brain stimulus. Where did we get the knowledge of brains and of the effects of brain stimulus on conscious experience if not from direct perception?

It's called perceptual correlation.  We know that when a certain electrode is applied to a bare brain, a correlative mental reaction occurs, which we notice in a correlative physical reaction from the patient undergoing this procedure.  Though we might say that x causes y, which causes z, all we really know is that a certain correlation exists with respect to the sequential appearance of the phenomena. 
Moreover, it won't do to say that what we perceive directly is sensory phenomena or sensations rather than material objects. A sensory phenomenon or sensation is not an object of awareness; it is a process or form of awareness; it is how we perceive, not what we perceive.
You can say this all you want.  But we all know that the only things which are directly presented to people are sensory phenomena.  We then infer that there are material objects which make or cause us to be aware of sensory phenomena.  But all we really have before us is the phenomena. 
Well, if experience can tell us what is actual, then it can tell us that there are actual, material objects, which have a certain identity, part of which is their capacity to act a certain way under certain conditions. A red object, because it is red, will necessarily reflect light along a certain wavelength. An ice cube from my refrigerator will necessarily float when placed in a glass of water. Why? Because of what it is, because it is less dense than water.

How do you know that a red object will necessarily reflect light along a certain wavelength?  You've just never perceived a situation to the contrary.  How do you know that an ice cube will always float in water?  How do you know that it is in the nature of an ice cube to float?  You don't know this; you infer it based on seeing it often, and based on an analysis of the molecular configurations of ice and water.  But how do you know that these molecular configurations cause ice to float?  You don't.  You just know that certain molecular configurations with respect to H20 are correlated to the phenomenon of floating ice. 

I wrote:  "Bill, are you an infallibilist with respect to knowledge? In other words, do you think knowledge is synonymous with certainty of truth? If so, then you might want to ease up on the rhetoric. You and I both know that you can't prove cosmological naturalism."
Well, if by "prove" you mean justify as true, then I can prove it, because all the evidence supports such a view and none contradicts it. There is no more legitimate evidence for supernaturalism -- for gods, devils, angels and other supernatural creatures -- than there is for fairies and ghosts.

So you're an evidentialist.  In any case, you don't 'justify truth' by providing evidence.  You justify truth by providing a proof.  If you mean 'justify belief', that is perfectly permissible.  You are entitled to say that your belief in cosmological naturalism is justified if you can find evidence in support of it, and no evidence to the contrary.  But I would disagree that there is no evidence to the contrary. 
Correction: I don't just think of human consciousness; there are other forms of consciousness besides human. But, as I've said before, consciousness requires a means of awareness, because it must perceive in a particular form, e.g., visually, auditorially, tactilly, etc. It doesn't have to be a human form, but it does have to be some form of awareness.
I'm now 'perceiving' an isosceles triangle in my mind.  While doing this, I'm quite aware that my means of awareness of the triangle is not sensory.  This is a counterexample to your claim.        

I wrote:  "It makes more sense to say God is something akin to a conscious entity, since God has knowledge and will and other (what we understand to be) mental properties, though he does not have them in the same way that we do."
 First of all, how do you know any of this? You're questioning my right to claim knowledge of material objects. Yet, you feel entitled to claim knowledge of a supernatural being that has no properties that we have any evidence of, let alone understand -- a being who thinks without a mind or a brain and who has knowledge and will without any of the preconditions for such faculties. If this isn't "wanting" to believe something without any justification for it, I don't know what is.
Whoa.  I claim knowledge of God, but I realize that this knowledge may only amount to justified belief.  This is fine, considering that I am a fallibilist with respect to knowledge.   

I have evidence of God's existence insofar as I have reason to believe that God exists.  And I do have such reason.  I also have reason to believe that God has certain properties, though I admit that my knowledge of God is limited by my natural mental limitations, etc. 

As far as your statement that God must have the 'preconditions' for mental faculties, I say:  Why?  Who says such preconditions are absolutely necessary for mental entities? 
What you are claiming to exist is an entity that possesses knowledge without any basis for possessing it.
The basis is God's nature.  God has immediate knowledge of necessary truths and possibilia, since this knowledge is natural to him.  
As I've pointed out repeatedly in my exchanges with you, It is simply impossible for a entity to be conscious and to possess knowledge and will without any means of doing so -- without any mode of consciousness or form of awareness.
Things aren't impossible just because you say that they are impossible. 

God's mode of consciousness or form of awareness is apperception.  This is similar to my apperceiving a triangle earlier on. 
You can't even rationally conceive of an entity that possesses knowledge and awareness while lacking the physical preconditions for it.
Tell me why there have to be physical preconditions for possession of knowledge and awareness.  Your argument always takes the form: 
1.  I've never seen a conscious non-physical entity
2.  And I deny the possibility of something I've never seen, ergo...

But these are not solid premises. 
Please explain to me what you mean by "positive property." Are you now telling me that God does possess physical properties -- that he does have a material body, brain and nervous system? You say he possesses all positive properties. What could that possibly mean?  
Godel says two things about positive properties: 
1.  If any property is positive, it's negation is not positive.  (Which means that green is not a positive property, insofar as it can be negated by another positive property, e.g. red.  Omnipotence, however, is a positive property.)    

2.  Properties (in the argument) are positive in the 'moral-aesthetic sense'. 

I wrote:  Please tell me what direct perception is. 
You can know it ostensively by direct experience. A scientific definition would be "a group of sensations automatically retained and integrated by the brain of a living organism."
 Your making a distinction between direct experience and direct perception implies that there is a difference.  What is the difference?  Must direct perceptions be conscious (not subconcious) on your view, while not so for direct experiences?     
First of all, direct perception is not sub-cognitive; it is part of the cognitive process; propositional knowledge is not the only kind of cognition. My cat engages in a process of cognition, but she does not have abstract or propositional knowledge; her cognition is confined to the perceptual level. Direct perception is the basis for concept formation. I've discussed in previous posts how concepts are formed from direct perception. I won't revisit that here. Suffice it to say that once a child is able to form concepts, he can organize these concepts into propositions, a process which enables him to express a complete thought.
So you admit it is sub-propositional (which is what I was driving at by saying 'sub-cognitive').  This poses a problem?  How does knowledge (which is propositional) derive from the direct perception?   Put more pointedly, how does propositional knowledge, which relies on conceptual relation, derive from direct perception?  Invoking 'abstraction' won't do.  To abstract implies that you recognize a concept in the first place from which to abstract; to abstract from something non-conceptual is to create a concept ex nihilo. 
Of course, they only take on conceptual meaning after passing through an active intellect, but that does not mean that perception does not constitute an awareness of objects in the external world. My cat is certainly aware of me, when she sees me walk through the door.

The whole problem is that I could make your cat equally aware of you by stimulating its brain in a certain way, and you (on your view) wouldn't be there. 
Again, perceptions and sensations are not the objects of direct awareness, they are the form of direct awareness or the process by which we are directly aware of material objects.
You know nothing of a rock other than what you perceive of a rock, and what you infer from this perception.  So how are you aware of the rock itself?  Telling a 'just-so' story, e.g. about how material objects cause the perception, is just an inference to the best explanation.  It is not something of which you can be certain.  
A direct perception cannot be mistaken; our senses can only perceive what is out there, and they do so in a particular form that is determined by the nature of our sensory apparatus.
False.  The brain can be stimulated so as to make it see red (or experience a 'red sensation'), even though nothing (on your view) is red to be seen before its eyes.   


Post 73

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 9:24pmSanction this postReply
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There is an ontological distinction between the created being (God) and Dog. There is absolute perfection in Dog, and subsequently limitation or privation in anything Dog creates-- by necessity.  Dog does only good, never evil, from capacities that include good AND evil. 
'Dog' would not have capacities for good and evil, but only a capacity for good--since 'Dog' possesses absolute perfection, which includes omnibenevolence.  Hence, the analogy fails. 


Post 74

Monday, April 2, 2007 - 10:04pmSanction this postReply
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Leibniz,

You wrote that, “Free will is a higher-order good that allows the human being to embrace the good in his freedom, even though it opens up the possibility of evil.

“A world with free, morally responsible agents is a greater good than a world with soulless automatons.”


I think the analogy holds up very well, as God is precisely the automaton you refer to above. He does only good, but what big-whoop is that, given that he can’t do otherwise?

A “greater good,” a “higher-order good” obtains from a God (Dog) who “embrace[s] the good,” not automatically and necessarily due to ontological limitation, but rather “in his freedom.”

Dog is much more absolutely perfect because he chooses the good consistently and with a handicap. God doesn’t impress me at all.


Post 75

Tuesday, April 3, 2007 - 2:33amSanction this postReply
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You wrote that, “Free will is a higher-order good that allows the human being to embrace the good in his freedom, even though it opens up the possibility of evil.

“A world with free, morally responsible agents is a greater good than a world with soulless automatons.”


I think the analogy holds up very well, as God is precisely the automaton you refer to above. He does only good, but what big-whoop is that, given that he can’t do otherwise?

God is not the automaton to which I refer above.  I understand an automaton to be any entity without will.  This is why I spoke of such automatons as 'soulless', i.e. without will. 

But God has proven himself to be most free in acting according to his will, which is good.  As Leibniz says in his Theodicy,
OBJECTION VIII

Whoever cannot fail to choose the best, is not free.
God cannot fail to choose the best.
Hence, God is not free.

ANSWER

I deny the major of this argument. Rather is it true freedom, and the most perfect, to be able to make the best use of one's free will, and always to exercise this power, without being turned aside either by outward force or by inward passions, whereof the one enslaves our bodies and the other our souls. There is nothing less servile and more befitting the highest degree of freedom than to be always led towards the good, and always by one's own inclination, without any constraint and without any displeasure. And to object that God therefore had need of external things is only a sophism. He creates them freely: but when he had set before him an end, that of exercising his goodness, his wisdom determined him to choose the means most appropriate for obtaining this end. To call that a need is to take the term in a sense not usual, which clears it of all imperfection, somewhat as one does when speaking of the wrath of God.
Jon wrote: 
Dog is much more absolutely perfect because he chooses the good consistently and with a handicap. God doesn’t impress me at all.

When Dog chooses the good, he acts in the same way that God does, i.e. according to his nature.  It's just that Dog's nature is limited by the privation associated with created beings.   


Post 76

Tuesday, April 3, 2007 - 6:36amSanction this postReply
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Let's say that God created a world where sin and evil are not possible... Oh, wait, He did! We call it Mercury.


Post 77

Tuesday, April 3, 2007 - 8:17amSanction this postReply
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So, if God had created man with an all-good will, then man would be an automaton. He therefore created man with a not-so-all-good will, which is a greater good. And yet, God, with his all-good will, is not an automaton.

It’s almost as though you want to have it both ways, Leibniz.

And I think you still misunderstand the nature of Dog. He is the uncreated creator of God, and not a “created being” as you wrote. And it is false that “When Dog chooses the good, he acts in the same way that God does, i.e. according to his nature.” Dog chooses the good and only the good, while possessive of the capacity to choose evil. So Dog does not choose the good “in the same way that God does.” God chooses the good because he’s a one-trick-pony, Dog chooses the good in freedom, which is, as you have asserted, a “greater good.”


Post 78

Tuesday, April 3, 2007 - 10:51amSanction this postReply
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So, if God had created man with an all-good will, then man would be an automaton. He therefore created man with a not-so-all-good will, which is a greater good. And yet, God, with his all-good will, is not an automaton.

No, if God created man with will, then man would not be an automaton, because man would have will.  To be an automaton is to lack will. 
And I think you still misunderstand the nature of Dog. He is the uncreated creator of God, and not a “created being” as you wrote. And it is false that “When Dog chooses the good, he acts in the same way that God does, i.e. according to his nature.” Dog chooses the good and only the good, while possessive of the capacity to choose evil.

Right, I misapplied the terms.  Reverse them, and your objection dissolves. 

Dog, as a perfect being, possesses a perfect will, and therefore cannot possibly do evil.  God, on the other hand, as a created entity, possesses the imperfection associated with created beings.  As such, his will is not perfect, because his nature is not perfect.  When God commits a good action, this is owing to his nature insofar as it participates in the perfections of Dog; when he commits a bad action this is owing to the admixture of his privation.  When I wrote, "Free will is a higher-order good that allows the human being to embrace the good in his freedom, even though it opens up the possibility of evil", what I meant was that the will itself opens up the human being to embrace the good, since to embrace the good in volition is the only way to embrace the good.  When I wrote that a human being's will opens up the possibility of evil, what I meant was that this possibility comes from endowing an imperfect being with will. 

(Edited by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on 4/03, 12:41pm)


Post 79

Tuesday, April 3, 2007 - 1:04pmSanction this postReply
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“When God commits a good action, this is owing to his nature insofar as it participates in the perfections of Dog”

Hallelujah!


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