JoeDawg said:
Ahh... that's a problem, you have a pretty good understanding of the physical, but your non-physical definition is simply a catch all.
It was intended to be just that. How would you describe the nonphysical? I like "baywax's" answer, how about you?
Do you intend on telling me what caused matter and energy when I do?
No! I don't believe the "ultimate stuff", whatever it turns out to be, needs an antecedent cause. This is no less logical than to assume that there must be a first cause. If you assume the latter, you still have to say what caused the first cause or define it as self-caused which is tautological.
I might add that the idea that something comes from nothing is unappealing. I'm a bit surprised that such a claim is made here. Before you react, you may want to carefully read our last two posts.
You've never had an idea, which you then implemented? You've never designed (mental) and built something? By your definition mental is non-physical.
Not by MY definition; I think mental states are brain states but others claim otherwise which is why I listed the mental as an example of the nonphysical.
So you're saying that everything, including the non-physical, has to follow physical laws?
No! I'm saying that talk about the mental is talk about what does not exist. There are no mental states, there are only brain states some of which we mistakenly refer to as mental. This is what the Churchlands and others call folk psychology.
I'm not saying it, you are...
Then, what are we to make of what you say here?..."even in physics the idea of a big bang and the beginning of time/space, which means something arose from nothing. Physical from non-physical?"
Its your binary definition. Something is either physical or not, no? I'm thinking the problem is your use of the negation non-physical. If its not matter or energy it could be no-thing. Unless you mean no-thing is actually physical, in which case, its something and therefore physical.
Not sure how you could interpret what I said as you do above. This is what I said and it is quite clear what I mean.
"There are many so called "before the BB theories"; the one I like--QMF--does refer to a scientific notion of "nothingness". But this is a bit of a misnomer in that the so called void or vacuum is not empty. It is filled with energy acting on quantum mechanical fluctuations of fundamental particles (physical stuff) that burst in and out of existence. However, the net result of particles coming into "existence" and being annihilated is not zero. In other words, in this theory anyway, the origin of the universe came from something not nothing and that something is physical. To claim otherwise--something arose from nothing--is to claim a known value in violation of the uncertainty principle.
Moreover, I think you make a common error by saying something that is nonphysical is nothing or without being. Nothing is not something, it means no thing, nonbeing. I presume when folks talk about the nonphysical, they believe they're talking about something not nothing. If nonphysical things are no things at all or nonbeings, then we have the answer to my original question."
Do you not see how this is a false dichotomy?
Not at all; recall mental states are brain states so it follows that the mental is just a name which over the years has mistakenly come to be thought of as a thing; yet, it is no thing.
My main problem is with your insistence that you understand the non-physical. Clearly the non-physical would not be held to the same set of rules as the physical. So using logic based on the physical might simply not apply. In fact, as a physical being, assuming the non-physical exists, you would really have no way to reference or understand it, since it is separate from you in every way. You could not even interact with it, it would need a physical aspect for you to do that.
I think you make my case in the last part of the above statement. Taking "you" as a stand-in for the physical, you again provide an answer to my original question when you say: it [the non-physical] is separate from
you in every way. How can anything separate fron the physical in every way be the cause of anything physical?
So your argument comes down to: The universe is physical, because its physical.
No! My argument is that since there is absolutely no evidence for the nonphysical, it is more reasonably to posit that the "ultimate stuff", whatever it turns out to be, is something physical.