This might be of interest:

Water & Earth
<https://signsandscience.blogspot.com/2017/09/water-earth.html>

On Tue, May 14, 2019 at 11:45 PM Philip Thrift <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>
> On Tuesday, May 14, 2019 at 11:24:06 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 13 May 2019, at 20:24, Philip Thrift <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On Monday, May 13, 2019 at 12:25:38 PM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On 10 May 2019, at 09:12, Philip Thrift <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> When someone says "consciousness is not a material thing" I think of
>>> Wile E. Coyote.
>>>
>>> Consciousnesses need something (matter) to hang on to. Consciousnesses
>>> just don't go floating around willy-nilly. The Coyote finds that out when
>>> he finds out he is hanging on to nothing, and looks down.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> That is nice Aristotelian poetry. But you just repeat you ontological
>>> commitment in a material world, where no physicist has a consistent theory
>>> of it, nor even have tried to test its existence. What the Aspect
>>> experience has only shown, is that IF there is a physicaly reality then it
>>> can’t be a boolean reality (which would have already annoyed Aristotle).
>>>
>>> Then with Mechanism, “Matter” invocation needs to add some magic
>>> incompatible with YD+CT.
>>> It is like invoking a God to impeach testing simpler theories which do
>>> not commit a so strong ontological commitment.
>>>
>>> Bruno
>>>
>>
>>
>> I was shooting for Epicurean poetry (or Lucretian; Lucretius's *De rerum
>> natur*a [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_rerum_natura ] was a poem
>> about the philosophy of Epicurus).
>>
>> Aristotle's philosophy is *confused nonsense*, especially when compared
>> to Epicurus’s.
>>
>>
>> This is weird. I appreciate Aristotle, because it is rather clear, and
>> enough precise to be refuted, with in the natural science and the theology.
>> I tend to consider him as the inventor of the notion of primitive matter,
>> that is the first which postulate the existence of a physical universe (in
>> metaphysics), but that is also the only place where he get confused (his
>> metaphysics).
>>
>> As a materialist (a “believer in matter”) it is astonishing you don’t
>> appreciate Aristotle. He is really the one who got the idea that “God” is a
>> physical universe, even if he add the chiquenaude divine to create the
>> first move.
>>
>> Bruno
>>
>>
> The atomistic materialist Democritus came before Aristote, and Epicurus,
> the most advanced of the atomists (as written about by Lucretius) was about
> the same time as Aristotle.
>
> But way before them was Thales, who inspired Aristotle's thoughts on
> matter:
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thales_of_Miletus#Water_as_a_first_principle
>
> Thales' most famous philosophical position was his cosmological
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmology> thesis, which comes down to us
> through a passage from Aristotle <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristotle>
> 's *Metaphysics <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphysics_(Aristotle)>*. In
> the work Aristotle unequivocally reported Thales’ hypothesis
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypothesis> about *the nature of
> all matter <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matter#Historical_development> –
> that the originating principle of nature
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arche> was a single material substance
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_monism>*: *water*. Aristotle then
> proceeded to proffer a number of conjectures based on his own observations
> to lend some credence to why Thales may have advanced this idea (though
> Aristotle didn’t hold it himself).
>
> Aristotle laid out his own thinking about matter and form
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hylomorphism> which may shed some light on
> the ideas of Thales, in *Metaphysics
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphysics>* 983 b6 8–11, 17–21. (The
> passage contains words that were later adopted by science with quite
> different meanings.)
>
> That from which is everything that exists and from which it first becomes
> and into which it is rendered at last, its substance remaining under it,
> but transforming in qualities, that they say is the element and principle
> of things that are. …For it is necessary that there be some nature (φύσις),
> either one or more than one, from which become the other things of the
> object being saved... Thales the founder of this type of philosophy says
> that it is water.
>
> In this quote we see Aristotle's depiction of the problem of change and
> the definition of substance
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substance_theory>. He asked if an object
> changes, is it the same or different? In either case how can there be a
> change from one to the other? The answer is that the substance "is saved",
> but acquires or loses different qualities (πάθη, the things you
> "experience").
>
>
> Aristotle conjectured that Thales reached his conclusion by contemplating
> that the "nourishment of all things is moist and that even the hot is
> created from the wet and lives by it." While Aristotle's conjecture on why
> Thales held water as the originating principle of matter is his own
> thinking, his statement that Thales held it as water is generally accepted
> as genuinely originating with Thales and he is seen as an incipient
> matter-and-formist.
>
>
> Now Thales may have been wrong about matter=water per se (unless you are a
> wave-function monist), but that is water under the bridge.
>
>
>
> @philipthrift
>
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