Dan Rowden wrote:Dave Toast wrote:Dan Rowden wrote:Exactly, Dave. "Acausality" in a temporal, empirical sense has always and must always have application - it's inevitable because there's always a limit to what is observable and explicable; that limit may be contingent, it may be final, we'll never be truly sure about that. But this application of the concept of "acausality" is, of course, restricted to empirical considerations because the definition of "cause" being employed is limited to empirical relevance and context.
The inconsequentiality of definitions eh Dan.
In this case it is a final limit btw, that much we do know. But I guess you were refering to the contextual limits of any given current theory.
On what basis do you say we know it's final? I'm not sure I'm convinced of that.

Unidian wrote:"LOL" is your answer?
Okay, fair enough. There's nothing wrong with "lol." It doesn't bother me, just in case you hoped it would.

Of course, philosophically, my answer might differ.

Ataraxia wrote:Davetoast:"QM shows non-determinsim but this just points to there being no absolute truths"
I'm sure I've misrepresented all of your positions to some extent and for that I apologise.But thats how it comes accross to me.

Dan Rowden wrote:I'm not sure why David's "Wisdom of the Infinite" isn't a sufficient explanation of causality - both in a linear empirical sense and in a purely logical one. What part of that troubles you (assuming you've read it)?
Yeah,sorry about that Dave,I did get you wrong on that.Dave Toast wrote:Ataraxia wrote:Davetoast:"QM shows non-determinsim but this just points to there being no absolute truths"
I'm sure I've misrepresented all of your positions to some extent and for that I apologise.But thats how it comes accross to me.
Yep, you got me almost as wrong as possible. It doesn't prove non-deterministim.
Ataraxia wrote:DQ/KS :"Causality is like a 'theory of everything' because space goat dependent arising is absolutlely true and thus must be defended at all costs.When pressed on this-'well it's only a stepping stone' "
Larkin : "Nargajuna says you're wrong David/Kevin"

Dave Toast wrote:Ataraxia wrote:DQ/KS :"Causality is like a 'theory of everything' because space goat dependent arising is absolutlely true and thus must be defended at all costs.When pressed on this-'well it's only a stepping stone' "
Larkin : "Nargajuna says you're wrong David/Kevin"
I'm not so sure about that. Nagarjuna placed billiard ball causation in the realm of the empirical. He did not do the same with conditionality, or co-dependent origination - logical causality. As such, empirical evidence can never constitute an absolute and so scientific causality or acausality cannot be absolute.
But that isn't the case for conditionality. And conditionality is none other than the causality David and Kevin espouse.
Absolute truths are logical entities. ...
Ok.Dave Toast wrote: As such, empirical evidence can never constitute an absolute and so scientific causality or acausality cannot be absolute.
But isn't this the heart of the matter? QSR conflate conditionality and billiard ball causality as if they where same.And then argue accordingly."acausality can never be absolutely true because of..... conditionality"But that isn't the case for conditionality. And conditionality is none other than the causality David and Kevin espouse.
Fine,but enquiring minds want to know.Isn't that what philosophy is? Trying to put all the pieces together.None of this matters anyway. Causality is one of the most important tools in the box when it comes to deconstructing yourself. The necessity of absolutes follow in its wake. That's all that matters.
Nat: What, if anything, is the philosophical value of proclaiming causality as an absolute truth?
Dave: Thinking about it can provide the thinker the means to eventually realise the emptiness of absolutes. Kind of like the koans and banging your head against the wall you spoke about the other day.
Nat: Oh, in that case, we have no disagreement. Kewl potatoes.
I may just as well say neutral monism is true and take it on faith it so.Tuck a copy of the Tao te Ching under my wing and move to my nearest cave.
I'm not trying to be a smart arse here,I'm all at sea over this problem and the 'problem of consciousness'.So much so I've decided to do an undergraduate in philosphy,starting next week.
It wouldn't,I'm being flippant.Unidian wrote:Why would that be the result of saying neutral monism is true?
Yes,quite a few people with philosophy degrees have said that to me also-it's a waste of time.
College classes are going to help? How do you figure that? Based on what little I've seen of your writing, it's a good statistical bet that your intellect is sharper than that of the professor, most or all of the class, and most of the people who write the textbooks. How is that going to help?
Dave Toast wrote:Absolute truths are logical entities. Scientific truths are empirical entities.
None of this matters anyway. Causality is one of the most important tools in the box when it comes to deconstructing yourself. The necessity of absolutes follow in its wake. That's all that matters.
RobertGreenSky wrote:Dave Toast wrote:Ataraxia wrote:DQ/KS :"Causality is like a 'theory of everything' because space goat dependent arising is absolutlely true and thus must be defended at all costs.When pressed on this-'well it's only a stepping stone' "
Larkin : "Nargajuna says you're wrong David/Kevin"
I'm not so sure about that. Nagarjuna placed billiard ball causation in the realm of the empirical. He did not do the same with conditionality, or co-dependent origination - logical causality. As such, empirical evidence can never constitute an absolute and so scientific causality or acausality cannot be absolute.
But that isn't the case for conditionality. And conditionality is none other than the causality David and Kevin espouse.
Absolute truths are logical entities. ...
Mr. Toast,
You neglected your cites. Where did Nagarjuna allow that this 'conditionality' was absolute truth, and did Nagarjuna assert that 'absolute truths are logical entities'? Of the former, I've been looking through XX Examination of Combination and I don't see any problem. Of the latter, you won't find such a thing in Nagarjuna but knock yourself out.
If that's Toast, in Nagarjuna's view it would be toast I think. If the point is to deny thought anything to which it can cling, isn't it a contradiction to suggest there are still some truths to which thought can cling? What liberation is there in clinging?

Ataraxia wrote:Ok.Dave Toast wrote: As such, empirical evidence can never constitute an absolute and so scientific causality or acausality cannot be absolute.
It's also fair to say the mathematics support the acausality hypothesise.But again that could just be be human,all too human.
But isn't this the heart of the matter? QSR conflate conditionality and billiard ball causality as if they where same.And then argue accordingly."acausality can never be absolutely true because of..... conditionality"But that isn't the case for conditionality. And conditionality is none other than the causality David and Kevin espouse.
So "shut up and calculate" ,you'll see I'm right eventually.
It's all so simple.Why haven't these theoretical physicists grasped this?Why if i pick up any book off the shelf on the subject of QM will there will be some sort of claim that "particles just pop into existence"?Fine,but enquiring minds want to know.Isn't that what philosophy is? Trying to put all the pieces together.None of this matters anyway. Causality is one of the most important tools in the box when it comes to deconstructing yourself. The necessity of absolutes follow in its wake. That's all that matters.
I may just as well say neutral monism is true and take it on faith it so.Tuck a copy of the Tao te Ching under my wing and move to my nearest cave.
I'm not trying to be a smart arse here,I'm all at sea over this problem and the 'problem of consciousness'.

divine focus wrote:Dave Toast wrote:Absolute truths are logical entities. Scientific truths are empirical entities.
None of this matters anyway. Causality is one of the most important tools in the box when it comes to deconstructing yourself. The necessity of absolutes follow in its wake. That's all that matters.
The point is not to deconstruct, but redefine.

divine focus wrote:One does not need to complicate in order to simplify. It is not a deconstruction that is necessary, but a new
"story," as Alex put it--a new understanding of yourself compatible with your held beliefs that allows you to put the methods of growth into practice within your experience. Breaking yourself down serves very little purpose except that of the experience itself. The mind does not need accuracy within concepts, but accuracy from experience. It is an accuracy of self, not an accuracy of the outside world. The outside world only exists within concepts, and its reality independent of you must be believed by the mind to be "real' or absolute. Deconstruction cannot happen without this perception, but the perception is not true.

If I'm reading you aright, you are saying acausality only appears to be true, empirically and mathematically.It's not REALLY true,it's not part of the quantum system even though mathematics and empricism, predict ,and have observed it as such.Dave Toast wrote:Ataraxia wrote:Ok.Dave Toast wrote: As such, empirical evidence can never constitute an absolute and so scientific causality or acausality cannot be absolute.
It's also fair to say the mathematics support the acausality hypothesise.But again that could just be be human,all too human.
That's exactly what it is. The seeming acausality is not part of the quantum system, it is a result of the maths that has to deal with our inability to delineate and discern precise causes.
Hmmm, a subset.To be honest,it sounds slippery to me.DaveT:It's not really a conflation because billiard ball causality is, in effect, a subset of conditionality. Conditionality is infinite in nature whereas billiard ball causality is just a scientific and far more precise delineation of it, an attempt to isolate and discern specific, empirical aspects of it.
Of course, billiard ball causality is always going to be contingent thereby.
For the sake of this argument lets assume we are both physicalists for a moment.Can a particle just pop into existence?I'm not with you on much of this. Could you put it another way?
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