onesteptwostep
Junior Hegelian
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- Dec 7, 2014
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- 4,253
Hume argued that causes and effects could simply be a habitual reoccurence that we observe. Hume uses an explanation of using the sunrise and sunfall as an explanation of the things that happen around us. We know from the telescopes now about the orbits of the planets and the effect mass has on gravitation pull. But Hume argued that these events may just happen because simply observe them happening everyday. If you saw the sunrise and sunfall on day one, observe the same thing on day two, then on day three, and on and on, you might establish yourself the notion that, indeed, the sun rises and and the sun falls everyday, as a rule.
My argument is this, but with an illustration of a hoarder. If someone depressed was sustaining a mess within the room something which he or she did not really come to care, that person might fail to register that the place is a mess. This person might think, yeah it's messy, but this thought would not be a catalyst for 'oh this is such a mess, I need to clean this place up'.
I think in a sense the person who is depressed and is hoarding might be employing the logic of person watching the sun rise and fall. You see oneself as a phenomenon rather than an agent of oneself, someone fully in control in life and one's senses to execute the tasks which life thrusts at us.
So what I'm trying to get at here is that noncausality is like in the philosophical sense a hoarder in the mind.
This kind of inductive reasoning,
1) the sun rises and falls on the 1st day
2) the sun rises and falls on the 2nd day
3) the sun rises and falls on the 3rd day
Therefore the sun must rise and fall on every day, is a passable but poor reasoning of the phenomena of reality and does not come to grasp with the notion that the sun may move because of certain universal laws. Sometimes we may see the sun disappear. But if our understanding of the laws deepen, we come to realize that it was an eclipse, not the glitching of the sun.
I'm going to end with a C.S. Lewis quote I found which was insightful to me: 'If you look for truth, you may find comfort in the end: if you look for comfort you will not get either comfort or truth -- only soft soap and wishful thinking to begin with and, in the end, despair.' Lewis, Mere Christianity
My argument is this, but with an illustration of a hoarder. If someone depressed was sustaining a mess within the room something which he or she did not really come to care, that person might fail to register that the place is a mess. This person might think, yeah it's messy, but this thought would not be a catalyst for 'oh this is such a mess, I need to clean this place up'.
I think in a sense the person who is depressed and is hoarding might be employing the logic of person watching the sun rise and fall. You see oneself as a phenomenon rather than an agent of oneself, someone fully in control in life and one's senses to execute the tasks which life thrusts at us.
So what I'm trying to get at here is that noncausality is like in the philosophical sense a hoarder in the mind.
This kind of inductive reasoning,
1) the sun rises and falls on the 1st day
2) the sun rises and falls on the 2nd day
3) the sun rises and falls on the 3rd day
Therefore the sun must rise and fall on every day, is a passable but poor reasoning of the phenomena of reality and does not come to grasp with the notion that the sun may move because of certain universal laws. Sometimes we may see the sun disappear. But if our understanding of the laws deepen, we come to realize that it was an eclipse, not the glitching of the sun.
I'm going to end with a C.S. Lewis quote I found which was insightful to me: 'If you look for truth, you may find comfort in the end: if you look for comfort you will not get either comfort or truth -- only soft soap and wishful thinking to begin with and, in the end, despair.' Lewis, Mere Christianity