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Part IV: Metaphysics

Part IV: Metaphysics. Chapter 8: What is really real? Chapter 9: Are we free or determined? Chapter 10: What am I? Chapter 11: Who am I? Chapter 12: Is there a God?. Chapter 8: What is Really Real?.

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Part IV: Metaphysics

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  1. Part IV: Metaphysics Chapter 8: What is really real? Chapter 9: Are we free or determined? Chapter 10: What am I? Chapter 11: Who am I? Chapter 12: Is there a God?

  2. Chapter 8: What is Really Real? • Metaphysics has to do with the construction and criticism of theories about what is truly real • Ontology – “the study of being” • Mechanistic – the nonintentional way that material objects are causally determined

  3. Introduction • Materialism – metaphysical theory that matter is truly real and immaterial things are not • Idealism – metaphysical theory that ideas (in the sense of thoughts, concepts, and minds) are ultimately real • Dualism – theory that reality is both material and immaterial • Monism – In contrast to dualism, the theory that being, or reality, is fundamentally of one nature • Problem of the one and the many – Debate between dualism and monism: Is there one reality, or are there many different real things that cannot be reduced to a single thing? • Pluralism – position that there are many different real things

  4. The Dao • Dao – the “way of nature”, comes from the Chinese “road” or “way”. The Dao is the source of all reality • Process ontology – emphasizes change and becoming as fundamentally real • Substance ontology – emphasizes permanence and unchanging being as fundamentally real • De – “virtue,” “power,” or “excellence”. Laozi’s “Dao De Jing”could be translated “The book of the Way and Its Power.” • Wuwei – “no action”. Refers to manner in which the Dao acts. A no-thing acts by not acting. • Yin/yang – yin is for the passive or receptive force and yang is for the active and aggressive force

  5. Dao De JingLaozi • Laozi developed the philosophy that became Daoism • The Tao is the eternal, nameless source and substance of all things • Nameless = non-being Named = being • Everything has an opposites that are mutual causations of each other • Substance is as important as function • Water is a moral symbol

  6. Dao De JingLaozi • Non-being is not nothingness but something useful • There is nothing more important than the hidden • Tao is revealed most fully through tranquility • Taoist cosmology – in the beginning there is something undifferentiated, which is forever operating and produces heaven and earth and then all other things • Things “transform spontaneously” because the Tao takes no action and leaves things alone • The One is the original material force of the Great Ultimate • Evolution of simple to complex

  7. Platonic Dualism • Forms - Ideas characterized by permanence • Theory of Forms – matter is less real than immaterial Forms

  8. The RepublicPlato • Describes good through three analogies • Analogy of the Sun: Like the sun, Good produces light by which to see and understand • Simile of the divided line: compares opinion (which comes from sensations of material objects) with knowledge (which comes from knowing the Forms via reason and understanding • Allegory of the cave: compares the philosopher to a prisoner who has escaped from a cave and seen the light of the real world

  9. Nondualism • Advalta Vedanta = nondual + end of the Vedas. • Indian philosophy advocated by Shankara. • Ultimate reality is undifferentiated unity beyond positive prediction • Brahman – ultimate reality • Atman – the true Self, the real identity behind our individual egos • Sublation – the act of correcting a previous judgment in light of a subsequent one

  10. The Crest-Jewel of DiscriminationShankara • Search for the true Self, or Atman • The Atman, which is unsublatable, is the same as the Brahman, the really real • Discrimination between the eternal and non-eternal refers to the conviction that Brahman is real, but the universe is unreal • Tranquility is detaching the mind from all objective things to direct it toward Brahman • True mental poise is achieved by not letting the mind react to external stimuli

  11. The Crest-Jewel of DiscriminationShankara • Forbearance is to endure afflictions without rebellion, complaint, or lament • Conviction based on intellectual understanding and belief is faith which leads to the realization of Reality • Self-surrender is keeping the mind fixed on the pure Brahman • Longing for Liberation is the desire to be free from ignorance because of the realization of one’s true nature

  12. The Crest-Jewel of DiscriminationShankara • Atman is known by the controlled mind and pure and tranquil intellect • The mind is the mental covering • The body is the physical covering of the Atman within • Intelligence and the perceptive organs make up the covering of the intellect • Atman is Brahman

  13. Subjective Idealism • Subjective idealism – George Berkeley’s metaphysical ideas that reality consists of finite or created minds, an infinite mind (God), and the ideas these minds have. Physical objects do not exist apart from the subject (mind) that perceives them. • Objective idealism – reality exists independently of the human knower because it is a manifestation of an absolute mind • Realism – Advocated by Descartes, the belief that objects can exist apart from any knower or mind

  14. Primary qualities – characteristics that constitute the properties of physical objects • Secondary qualities – characteristics of our sensation of physical objects

  15. The Principles of Human KnowledgeGeorge Berkeley • The objects of knowledge are ideas imprinted on the senses or ideas formed by memory and imagination • Ideas are perceived by the self, or mind, spirit, and soul • Physical objects do not exist apart from the senses that perceive them • The being of objects is to be perceived or known • Refutes the idea of primary and secondary qualities and the existence of matter that exists apart from perception • We cannot know that unperceived substances exist

  16. Pre-Columbian Cosmologies • Our understanding of the world may be different than that of those who lived before Columbus’ discoveries, but we must try to eliminate biases as in critiquing other cultural beliefs

  17. Pre-Columbian Philosophical PerspectivesJorge Valdez • Four kinds of integration of reality in the Mesoamerican metaphysical perspective: • Internal structural interconnection of different components of the universe • Integration of fundamental dualities that were perceived as complementary instead of oppositional • Holistic integration of astronomical science and religious beliefs • Integration of everyday life with the cycles and rhythms of the cosmos through practice of rituals

  18. Pre-Columbian Philosophical PerspectivesJorge Valdez • The Mesoamerican beliefs were characterized by: • an interactive universe with multiple levels and interaction between natural and supernatural • Complementary dualities, such as life/death, celestial world/underworld, night/day • A scientific-religious worldview, such as the use of astronomy • Cosmic responsibility – religious rituals were of central importance for maintaining the existence of the cosmos

  19. So what is real? • Is there any way to know for sure that what you believe is real? • How do you distinguish waking from dreaming, good from bad, or reality from appearance?

  20. The Circular RuinsJorge Luis Borges • Fictional story of dreaming that raises philosophical issues such as how we know which perspective is right and if we can be confident that our way of distinguishing appearance from reality is correct

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