(2019-03-08, 09:16 PM)Paul C. Anagnostopoulos Wrote: There is an explanation, just not all the way down to the axioms. But you won't end up with axioms that you can explain, either.
When I freely choose chicken, why didn't I choose fish?
Final Cause exerted via Intentionality / Subjectivity / Rationality.
Perhaps my reply to Valmar on the intellectual bankruptcy of physicalism may help?
Quote:The circuit must be making free decisions if there are absolutely no events that happen by necessity, which I believe is Laird's contention.
~~ Paul
I think Laird just means the seemingly necessary events of physics are contingent, but events can be "stabilized" by some Law Giver to which the natural laws would then be contingent upon.
Likely - assuming I am reading Laird correctly - something along the lines of the following argument from Feser:
Magic versus metaphysics
Quote:Indeed, if any view is plausibly accused of being “magical” in the sense in question, it is atheism itself. The reason is that it is very likely that an atheist has to hold that the operation of at least the fundamental laws that govern the universe is an “unintelligible brute fact”; as I have noted before, that was precisely the view taken by J. L. Mackie and Bertrand Russell. The reason an atheist (arguably) has to hold this is that to allow that the world is not ultimately a brute fact -- that it is intelligible through and through -- seems to entail that there is some level of reality which is radically non-contingent or necessary in an absolute sense. And that would in turn be to allow (so the traditional metaphysician will argue) that there is something which, as the Thomist would put it, is pure actuality and ipsum esse subsistens or “subsistent being itself” -- and thus something which has the divine attributes which inexorably flow from being pure actuality and ipsum esse subsistens. Hence it would be to give up atheism.
But to operate in a way that is ultimately unintelligible in principle -- as the atheist arguably has to say the fundamental laws of nature do, insofar as he has to say that they are “just there” as a brute fact, something that could have been otherwise but happens to exist anyway, with no explanation -- just is to be “magical” in the objectionable sense. In fact it is only on a theistic view of the world that the laws of nature are not “magical”; and the Mackie/Russell position is (as I argue in the post linked to above) ultimately incoherent for the same sorts of reason that magical thinking in general is incoherent.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell