Nils wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:04 pm
Byblos wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 7:14 am
Nils wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 1:11 pm
PaulSacramento wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 11:03 am
You realize that, simply, the PSR means that humans have the rational ability to reasonably draw conclusions about the world they live in, even in an abstract sense.
To deny that is to deny basic science and the possibility of quantum physics.
Yes, but PSRx (see #12) suffices also. The advantage with PSRx is that it doesn’t require sufficient reasons for events outside our universe. So it doesn’t require a mysterious necessary self explaining cause.
Nils
If sufficient reasons are not required outside of our universe then perhaps they ought not be required within our universe in far away places we are not likely to discover or observe. Perhaps we should confine PSRx to the observable and testable parts of our universe only, how about only to our Milky Way or our solar system? Maybe just our planet? North American universities and laboratories? Where do you draw the line? And more importantly, who does the drawing?
You deny the complete and total applicability of the PSR and you end up denying everything.
Not at all. What’s in our universe, that’s what we are able to study and do science about. What’s outside our universe we have to use philosophy or theology to study. That is a very important distinction.
There are many theoretical physicists and mathematicians who would take issue with the categorization that what we are able to study and do science about is limited to our universe. And once again, if you're going to confine the sciences to what is observable and testable, you'd have to confine that to a much narrower range than our universe.
Nils wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:04 pm If you look at Fesers arguments for PSR, #2 to #7 (se post #9), they all are about us within our universe and not at all about extra universal theories. Within our university we should adhere to PSR and that is what PSRx says.
Not at all (my turn). In points 2 to 7 Feser is basically indicating how we come to know the PSR, i.e. not only through observation, that's trivial. But more importantly through our reliable cognitive faculties, which lead us to the observable conclusions (and once again, that's trivial) as well as to general extrapolations about reality itself. And the reality is that it is intelligible, that much we know from science and observation, and that reality must also be uniformly intelligible lest we end up with brute facts that explain nothing. So, no, Feser was not confining his PSR proof to our universe, only offering our cognitive faculties as reliable and through which we deduce that reality is wholly intelligible.
In fact, if you've read the whole chapter on the PSR proof in feser's book, I'm certain you would have come across his detailed argument on why contingent things require an extrinsic explanation even if those contingent things are in our universe, in a multi-verse, in an infinite set of universes extending back in time to infinity. His argument is such that, if that were true, that the infinite list of contingent things exists at all requires an extrinsic explanation and must terminate (or initiate) in a self-explaining absolute necessity.
Nils wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:04 pm
Byblos wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 7:14 am
And like I said, there is really nothing mysterious about the PSR as it is the result of rational inquiry. Either reality is intelligible or it isn't. If it is intelligible, and that's an a priori assumption made by science and philosophy, then there can be no exceptions for its intelligibility. For if there were exceptions and brute facts are assumed in one respect, intelligibility no longer applies and neither does rationality.
PSR assumes intelligibility in all respects and entails two types of explanations, either extrinsic for contingent things, or intrinsic for necessary things. There is NO third option. That's pure rationality, no mystery whatsoever. Calling it "mysterious" doesn't really bring anything to the table other than attempting to avoid the obvious.
What is mysterious is the intrinsic, self-explaining entity. I have no experience of self-explaining things. Do you have any?
Lol, Nils, of course I do and that is by reason first and foremost, therefore by faith.
Nils wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:04 pmWhen I check Marriam Webster for ‘explain’ they say
“Definition of "explain"
transitive verb
1 a : to make known: explain the secret of your success
b : to make plain or understandable: footnotes that explain the terms
2 : to give the reason for or cause of: unable to explain his strange conduct
3 : to show the logical development or relationships of : explained the new theory
intransitive verb
: to make something plain or understandable: a report that suggests rather than explains”
#2 says: to give a reason for or cause of. Self-explaining seems to be a way to say that no reason or cause is needed.
Self-explanation most certainly does not entail no explanation. That's just a violation of the law of non-contradiction. Brute facts have no explanation (and a violation of the PSR). Self-explanation is an explanation which is entailed in the very nature of thing explained. It is very much in agreement with the PSR.
Nils wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:04 pmBut why shall we accept such a concept, a concept that is really mysterious. You say it is obvious but self-explanation doesn’t seem intelligible.
I think you have to explain.
I've already stated why self-explanation is not just intelligible, it the only logical consequence of the PSR (along with extrinsic explanations). There is no other choice but 'no explanation' and 'no explanation' is in fact unintelligible.
But to go a bit further and answer the so-called "mysterious" charge, let's look at what we can logically deduce from the self-explanatory nature. What does it exactly mean?
- The first thing we can deduce is that this entity must not have any potential whatsoever. For if it had any potential to be actualized, it would have to depend on an extrinsic explanation to bring about the actualization of that potential. Since it cannot in principle have any potential, it must then be pure act.
- A thing whose nature entails its explanation and is pure act, could not, even in principle, have never existed nor go out of existence. For the coming into existence and going out of existence are potentials to be actualized, and since the entity is pure act, it follows that it has always existed and always will.
- There is a real distinction between the essence of a thing and its existence. the essence of what it is to be a human being is distinct from being a human being. Think of essence as the potential to become a human being and becoming a human being as the actualization of that potential.
A thing whose nature entails its explanation is pure act with no potential whatsoever. Hence, there is no distinction whatsoever between its essence and its existence, which is why it is said to be subsistent existence itself.
Obviously much more can be logically deduced but this should suffice to dispel any notion of mystery.
One final note on the last point, i.e. subsistent existence, I'm not entirely sure you've thought this all the way through Nils, and what are the logical ramifications entailed. An entity whose essence is identical with its existence entails not only that it be the extrinsic explanation of everything that exists and has ever existed anywhere, anytime, in any universe. It also entails that this entity
sustains this contingent existence every second of every minute of every day because nothing can in principle even exist apart from existence itself. It is a rather obvious point when it sinks in.