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Post 60

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 10:55amSanction this postReply
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Regi:

 

Me:  >>I’m not trying to convince Objectivists to become Catholics – or even that we’re something more than the scum of the earth.<<
 
You:  >>Do not suppose everyone who disagrees with you thinks you are the scum of the earth.<<

 

I try not to be that uncharitable.  I simply wanted to make clear that I have no interest in changing anyone’s mind regarding Catholics or Catholicism.

 

You:  >>Human beings are provided only one means of gaining knowledge, the ability to reason. Anything that is not learned by reason from the evidence is superstition. To the extent your choices and behavior are determined by irrational beliefs, you will be acting contrary to reality, which at best is pointless, but more likely self-destructive.<<

 

You and I have no argument here.

 

I suspect where the division lies is that my reason has lead me to axiomatic conclusions that are different from yours.  So long as what I reason from those axioms is in accord with my experience of reality (assuming that I am not mentally ill and so am experiencing reality as it objectively is), how is the charge of irrationality justified?  Maybe I am in error regarding an axiom, but who can say so with authority as long as they are not falsified, and what I deduce from them is consistent with reality?  Only someone who has a complete knowledge of reality, which no human being has or will ever have.

 

Where am I wrong?

 

Regards,
Bill a.k.a. Citizen Rat


Post 61

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 10:57amSanction this postReply
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Regi:

 

You wrote: >>Now I have no idea why you hate matter so much.<<

 

I love the stuff.  I make a lot of money from it.  On a soft summer morning with the plant doors open, there’s nothing quite like the tang of carbide slicing through steel.  It makes me think how elemental the creation of wealth is.  I was made for this material world.

 

You noted:  >>C.S. Lewis once remarked, "God loves matter, else He would not have made so much of it." [quote may not be exact, since it is from memory.]<<

 

You are correct, Regi.  The remark comes from Lewis’s book “Mere Christianity”, which I just happen to be reading this week.

You stated:  >>There is no reason for a theist to reject materialism or to suppose there is any contradiction between a determined physical world and consciousness and volition.<<

 

Not quite.  There is no reason for a theist to reject the existence of matter.  He would be insane to do so; in utter defiance of his senses.  Materialism is another issue, which is the belief that nothing exists but matter.  I agree that for a theist there is no contradiction between “a determined physical world and consciousness and volition”.

Then you gave me a large chunk to chew on:  >>In fact, I think that is your mistake. You are equating the physical aspects of existence (that which is studied by the physical sciences) with material existence. They are not the same thing. … But consciousness and volition are certainly part of the objective material existence, or the natural world, else there would be no living, conscious, or rational beings in the world—but we know there are.<<

 

If we substitute “physical” everywhere I have been saying “material”, “matter”, or “mechanical”, then I am not finding any profound disagreement between us.  If there is, it must lie in what you term “material existence” and its implications.

 

Regards,
Bill a.k.a. Citizen Rat


Post 62

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 10:59amSanction this postReply
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Regi:

 

Me: >>Ah yes, the old cannibal canard.<<

 

You: >>That is extremely disingenuous. I specifically referred to the doctrine of transubstantiation. I never mentioned (or even thought of) the straw man you threw up about cannibalism, although I can certainly understand how that charge might be laid. I was referring to the superstition that the wine and host are literally changed into actual blood and flesh.<<

 

Now, Regi, my friend, who’s being disingenuous?  That “superstition” is the rationale for the Eucharist, which I do believe you have previously equated to cannibalism elsewhere.  Am I mistaken?  Did you have something else in mind when you questioned the “decency” of the doctrine of transubstantiation?  If so, I apologize.

 

Regards,

Bill a.k.a. Citizen Rat

 

For the kids out there:  The Eucharist (or communion, as it is sometimes known) is a re-creation of the Last Supper, which Catholics celebrate at every mass.  Some people who find Catholicism to be extremely disagreeable state that this communion is cannibalism.  The basis for their charge is that the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation states that the bread and wine a Catholic receives at communion has been transformed into the actual body and blood of Christ – and eating human flesh is cannibalism, right?  Well, not exactly.

 

Eating human flesh is certainly cannibalism if it is in the form of flesh.  At the Eucharist the body and blood of Christ are not in the form of flesh; they are in the form of bread and wine.  Now perhaps you’re thinking, well so what, the symbolism of cannibalism is still there?  No, it’s not.  The issue of form is paramount.  If it weren’t, we would all qualify as cannibals if we do not account for form.

 
Let me give you an example:  You’re a tree hugger who likes to commune with nature.  So you go up to the wilds of Alaska and try to hug a few bears.  One takes exception to your trans-species demonstration of affection and eats you.  As the bear digests you, you are transformed into the bear.  I then come along, shoot the bear, and later that night grill up a nice juicy bear steak.  As I dine on that, I am eating some part of you that has become the bear, but you are not in the form of your own person, but that of a bear steak.  Because of the FORM of my meal, no sensible person would accuse me of being a cannibal.


Post 63

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 1:00pmSanction this postReply
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Citizen Rat,

"At the Eucharist the body and blood of Christ are not in the form of flesh; they are in the form of bread and wine."
 
In what way does the wine and bread used at Eucharist become imprinted with the "Christ" quality?  That is, if the bread and cup of wine already so blessed were placed with many other pieces of bread and wine that have not been so blessed, is there really a way to tell the difference?  Could one, in theory, bless other objects in the same way so that they also become the flesh of Christ in some other form (a rock, a tree, or even another human)?
 
Also, the example you give seems to drop the context of what it means for flesh to be human in the first place.  When human flesh is digested by a bear, it is broken down into its constitutent proteins, the DNA unraveled, etc., and finally reconstituted into bear flesh, bear cells with bear DNA, etc.  Just because the molecules in question are the same does not imply that those molecules are forever imprinted with the "human" quality.  This is why one would not consider you to be a cannibal for eating a bear which ate a human.
 
For the record, I don't find Catholicism "extremely disagreeable," but I do find this aspect of it to be somewhat, well, unbelievable.
 
Sincerely,
Nate T.


Post 64

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 1:37pmSanction this postReply
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I would like to see less Catholic doctrine and more philosophy on this thread. Thank you. (I'm not blaming anyone.)

Post 65

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 1:55pmSanction this postReply
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Sorry Rodney; couldn't resist.

Post 66

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 2:11pmSanction this postReply
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I know that. No one is to blame really. But the trend might give visitors a low opinion of the intellectual level here at SOLO.

Post 67

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 4:57pmSanction this postReply
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 Rodney,

... the trend might give visitors a low opinion of the intellectual level here at SOLO.

How could anyone get that impression.  ;>)


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Post 68

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 5:26pmSanction this postReply
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I see your point. Yes, there is more than one possible source of that impression.

I admire Mr. Stolyarov's civility, dignity, passion, industry, and intellect, but Atlas icons are just an unimportant experiment in my mind.

PS: It just occurred to me that maybe you meant the silly jokes we are now making in that Atlas thread. Guilty! But I can plead that it is obvious we are not serious there. (And I want to say that, of course, I was not indulging in any humor at Mr. S' expense.)

(Edited by Rodney Rawlings on 4/23, 5:45pm)


Post 69

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 7:20pmSanction this postReply
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Thanks for the comments, Bill. I take your point regarding the term trans-material, which as you say avoids a material/non-material duality and also ties the non-material to material reality.

Unfortunately, the posters on this forum have varying degrees of philosophical literacy, and comments that might “pass” for the literate will raise a flag for the less knowledgeable. One example is a poster above, who equates your condemnation of materialism with a hatred of matter.

Countering this type of misunderstanding is time-consuming and tedious, and I can understand why one might give up in frustration. But there you go. Who said the intellectual life was easy!

Brendan


Post 70

Friday, April 23, 2004 - 7:39pmSanction this postReply
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Jeremy asks why he would want to examine [his] own primary postulate and prove that “Existence exists”. My suggestion is based on your 21 April post, where you suggest Bill stops using God as the basis for confronting Objectivism, when he cannot prove the existence of such a being. On that argument, the lack of proof for “Existence Exists” should also disqualify it as a fundamental assumption.

Nicholas: “Any attempt to prove something assumes …2) that an external reality exists and is knowable.”

Yes, one would have to assume what one is trying to prove. And that’s my point. If the term “existence” is understood to mean or refer to “an external reality that exists and is knowable”, you’ve already taken on board several assumptions about the nature of existence. In that case, the term cannot be a fundamental primary, because it depends on some preceding metaphysical and epistemological assumptions.

And if existence is not the bedrock fact that Rand claims it is, maybe there does exist an uncaused cause, like God. Or maybe not. But a clear view of the subject requires one to lay all possible assumptions on the table.

Brendan


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Post 71

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 3:39amSanction this postReply
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Let's get this straight, Brendan.  You think it would be good for me to prove and/or examine the axiom "existence exists"?  Again, what's the point? 

Lord forfend that I to attempt to do such a thing with a mind (maybe) that receives (faulty or distorted) information  through my senses (the ultimate, unknown distorters, which might be the cause of the faulty information that I think, but don't know for sure, I am trying to analyze). 

How should I begin?  Should I begin with accepting fully and without doubt that my perceptions and senses are 100% accurate, and I therefore will perceive what is real and what is not, and can as a result proceed with my analyzation of "existence exists"?  How do I do this without first accepting that reality (which my brain and perceptions are a part of) is real?  Am I supposed to believe my mind exists outside of reality, and is exempt from the analyzation?  Is this the basis for Bill's accepting God?  I'd like to see the evidence for that one, seeing as how I just thought it up.  Sounds silly, huh?

I can "prove" "existence exists" to myself and accept it, as that's the simplest (most logical) answer to the air I breath, the food I eat, the books I read and the TV I watch.  That stuff exists somewhere, so it may as well be within existence, right?  (this is longhand for "A is A" or "punch yourself in the face and see if it feels REAL".)

The axiom could be seen as vulnerable in one area.  It's susceptible to the ravings of folks who are looking for a witty, murky, contorted and distorted way to turn philosophy and specifically metaphysics into a parlor trick and mind-game unfathomable to normal people like you and me.  (read: Power-Trip.  Ever noticed how most--probably all--authoritarians and despots have been "mystics of the mind"?)

The axiom's not really vulnerable, though.  People's minds are--to the meandering crap-speak of "philosophical" windbags...ya know, the guy who sits at his desk all day with a vein popping out of his brow, trying to "prove" no one can know anything about anything, ever. 

But all he has to do is say "existence doesn't exist".  It's that easy.  How do I compete with that?  (this is a rhetorical question.)

[edited for pornographic content : P]

(Edited by Jeremy Johnson on 4/24, 6:12am)

(Edited by Jeremy Johnson on 4/24, 6:13am)


Post 72

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 4:43amSanction this postReply
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Yes, Rodney, I "meant the silly jokes;" but, was joking, myself, of course.

Regi


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Post 73

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 5:36amSanction this postReply
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Brendan, Bill,

One example is a poster above, who equates your condemnation of materialism with a hatred of matter.
 
Who condemns that which they love? Personally, I have no objection if you want to make self-contradictory statements, but when directed at someone else, out of courtesy, you might include the context, which was this (Post #41):

But you acknowledge that my post #84 "your explanations of consciousness and volition are intellectually coherent if you are materialist," in your post #86 on the "Atheist Internet Outreach Response," thread.

Now I have no idea why you hate matter so much.

 
My comment was directed at Bill's acknowledgement that my explanation of the fact, consciousness and volition are perfectly consistent within a material context, is "intellectually coherent" but then repudiated it with, "if you are materialist," as though being a materialist invalidated correct reason.

Since you are unlikely to go back and read the original post Bill repudiated with his, "if you are a materialist," remark, here it is:

... volition is not "experienced," as, "free will," or anything else. Volition is only that aspect of human nature that makes it necessary for humans to act by conscious choice, or not act at all. There is no mystery about it. It has nothing to do with the fact the material (physical) existence is determined by the laws of physics. Volition is an aspect of life, that self-sustained process that uses the the physical organism to sustain itself and the organism as a living entity. It is the life process that is volitional, not the physical organism.
 
The proper analogy is the computer. The hardware of a computer has a fixed and determined nature, but a program running on that computer is not determined by the nature of the physical components of the hardware. The program can do anything possible to programs, and is not determined or limited by the hardware at all.


Regi


Post 74

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 5:51amSanction this postReply
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I have a hunch that I'd better get around to it before post #666.

 

Rodney: You suggested: >>You should hang around at least until I've answered.<< I will, and I look forward to it.

 


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Post 75

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 5:56amSanction this postReply
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Brendan, Jeremy,

Brendan, why do you love contradicting yourself?

You said: And if existence is not the bedrock fact that Rand claims it is, maybe there does exist an uncaused cause, like God.
 
If existence does not exist (is not the bedrock), nothing exists. You either have to start with existence ("existence exists" does not say what exists, only that existence does exist), or you start with nothing. Unless you believe God is nothing, if existence is not the bedrock, God does not exist either.
 
This is exactly why an axiomatic concept, (which is the way it is actually expressed in Objectivism) is axiomatic. It cannot be denied without producing a self-contradiction.
 
For you enjoyment:
 
"Axioms are usually considered to be propositions identifying a fundamental, self-evident truth. But explicit propositions as such are not primaries: they are made of concepts. The base of man's knowledge—of all other concepts, all axioms, propositions and thought—consist of axiomatic concepts.
"An axiomatic concept is the identification of a primary fact of reality, which cannot be analyzed, i.e., reduced to other facts or broken into component parts. It is implicit in all facts and in all knowledge. It is the fundamentally given and directly perceived or experienced, which requires no proof or explanation, but on which all proofs and explanations rest.
"The first and primary axiomatic concepts are 'existence,' 'identity' (which is a corollary of 'existence') and 'consciousness.' One can study what exists and how consciousness functions; but one cannot analyze (or 'prove') existence as such, or consciousness as such. ..." [Ayn Rand, Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, p. 55]

 
Regi

(Edited by Reginald Firehammer on 4/24, 4:23pm)


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Post 76

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 7:39amSanction this postReply
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Regi, I rub my remaining two brain cells together and write all that stuff up there, exhausting myself emotionally and physically to the point of choking down 73 Prozacs just to make it through the day without leaping from the mast of an British Navy (circa 1800s) cutter, and you go ahead and start quoting official scripture!  Ack!  My little light was shining.  You really are a bastard-and-a-half.  8^P

Post 77

Saturday, April 24, 2004 - 4:25pmSanction this postReply
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Jeremy,

You kindly reminded me, You really are a bastard-and-a-half.
 
I saw immediately that you were right. I am totally chagrined. There is nothing for it but to beg your forgiveness, have my Guinness and a Wild Turkey or two, and try to forget what a reprehensible individual I am--and, of course, try to stop laughing. It's shameful.

Regi


Post 78

Sunday, April 25, 2004 - 3:36pmSanction this postReply
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Jeremy: “I can "prove" "existence exists" to myself and accept it, as that's the simplest (most logical) answer to the air I breath, the food I eat, the books I read and the TV I watch.”

Sure you can point to the existence of an external world by reference to your experience of objects that exist apart from your own self. That’s what I would do. But such a procedure will not produce an axiomatic concept. First, in appealing to your experience, you’re deriving the concept existence from other facts. The concept existence thus becomes a derivative, rather than a primary. Refer Rand’s claim: “An axiomatic concept is the identification of a primary fact of reality, which cannot be analyzed, i.e., reduced to other facts or broken into component parts.”

Second, in appealing to your experience as the basis for the concept of existence, you’re appealing to the primacy of consciousness.

Brendan


Post 79

Sunday, April 25, 2004 - 3:41pmSanction this postReply
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Brendan: “One example is a poster above, who equates your condemnation of materialism with a hatred of matter.” Regi: “Who condemns that which they love?”

Regi, a rejection of philosophical materialism is not in itself a rejection of matter.

Regi: “If existence does not exist (is not the bedrock), nothing exists.”

My wording was: “And if existence is not the bedrock fact that Rand claims it is, maybe there does exist an uncaused cause, like God.” I said nothing about existing not existing, rather I was speculating that there might be a first cause prior to existence.

Regi: “This is exactly why an axiomatic concept, …is axiomatic. It cannot be denied without producing a self-contradiction.”

It might pay to distinguish between concepts and their referents. As I understand it, Rand claims that axiomatic concepts are undeniable, in that they must be used in the very act of denying them. And that is true, if we all agree on the meaning of the term, and are talking solely about the concept rather than its referents. But that’s also true of any concept. Try denying the term God without using it. So if the concept existence is axiomatic, then so is any concept.

The same does not apply to the referents of concepts. Assuming that the Objectivist concept of existence is equivalent to “all that which exists”, I can deny that anything exists without fear of contradiction. I just happen to be uttering a falsehood.

Brendan


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