8 Difficult Philosophical Questions That We'll Never Solve
Philosophy goes where hard science can't, or won't.
Philosophers have a license to speculate about everything from metaphysics to
morality, and this means they can shed light on some of the basic questions of
existence. The bad news? These are questions that may always lay just beyond
the limits of our comprehension.
Here are 8 mysteries of philosophy that we'll probably never resolve.
1. Why is There Something Rather Than Nothing?
Our presence in the universe is something too bizarre for
words. The mundaneness of our daily lives cause us take our existence for
granted — but every once in awhile we're cajoled out of that complacency and
enter into a profound state of existential awareness, and we ask: Why is there
all this stuff in the universe, and why is it governed by such exquisitely
precise laws? And why should anything exist at all? We inhabit a universe with
such things as spiral galaxies, the aurora borealis, and SpongeBob Squarepants.
And as Sean Carroll notes, "Nothing about modern physics explains why we
have these laws rather than some totally different laws, although physicists
sometimes talk that way — a mistake they might be able to avoid if they took
philosophers more seriously." And as for the philosophers, the best that
they can come up with is the anthropic principle — the notion that our
particular universe appears the way it does by virtue of our presence as
observers within it — a suggestion that has an uncomfortably tautological ring
to it.
2. Is Our Universe Real?
This the classic Cartesian question. It essentially asks,
how do we know that what we see around us is the real deal, and not some grand
illusion perpetuated by an unseen force (who René Descartes referred to as the
hypothesized ‘evil demon')? More recently, the question has been reframed as
the "brain in a vat" problem, or the Simulation Argument. And it
could very well be that we're the products of an elaborate simulation. A deeper
question to ask, therefore, is whether the civilization running the simulation
is also in a simulation — a kind of supercomputer regression (or
simulationception). Moreover, we may not be who we think we are. Assuming that
the people running the simulation are also taking part in it, our true identities
may be temporarily suppressed, to heighten the realness of the experience. This
philosophical conundrum also forces us to re-evaluate what we mean by
"real." Modal realists argue that if the universe around us seems
rational (as opposed to it being dreamy, incoherent, or lawless), then we have
no choice but to declare it as being real and genuine. Or maybe, as Cipher said
after eating a piece of "simulated" steak in The Matrix,
"Ignorance is bliss."
3. Do We Have Free Will?
Also called the dilemma of determinism, we do not know if
our actions are controlled by a causal chain of preceding events (or by some
other external influence), or if we're truly free agents making decisions of
our own volition. Philosophers (and now some scientists) have been debating
this for millennia, and with no apparent end in sight. If our decision making
is influenced by an endless chain of causality, then determinism is true and we
don't have free will. But if the opposite is true, what's called indeterminism,
then our actions must be random — what some argue is still not free will.
Conversely, libertarians (no, not political libertarians, those are other
people), make the case for compatibilism — the idea that free will is logically
compatible with deterministic views of the universe. Compounding the problem
are advances in neuroscience showing that our brains make decisions before
we're even conscious of them. But if we don't have free will, then why did we
evolve consciousness instead of zombie-minds? Quantum mechanics makes this
problem even more complicated by suggesting that we live in a universe of
probability, and that determinism of any sort is impossible. And as Linas
Vepstas has said, "Consciousness seems to be intimately and inescapably
tied to the perception of the passage of time, and indeed, the idea that the
past is fixed and perfectly deterministic, and that the future is unknowable.
This fits well, because if the future were predetermined, then there'd be no
free will, and no point in the participation of the passage of time."
4. Does God Exist?
Simply put, we cannot know if God exists or not. Both the
atheists and believers are wrong in their proclamations, and the agnostics are
right. True agnostics are simply being Cartesian about it, recognizing the
epistemological issues involved and the limitations of human inquiry. We do not
know enough about the inner workings of the universe to make any sort of grand
claim about the nature of reality and whether or not a Prime Mover exists
somewhere in the background. Many people defer to naturalism — the suggestion
that the universe runs according to autonomous processes — but that doesn't
preclude the existence of a grand designer who set the whole thing in motion
(what's called deism). And as mentioned earlier, we may live in a simulation
where the hacker gods control all the variables. Or perhaps the gnostics are
right and powerful beings exist in some deeper reality that we're unaware of.
These aren't necessarily the omniscient, omnipotent gods of the Abrahamic
traditions — but they're (hypothetically) powerful beings nonetheless. Again,
these aren't scientific questions per se — they're more Platonic thought
experiments that force us to confront the limits of human experience and
inquiry.
5. Is There Life After Death?
Before everyone gets excited, this is not a suggestion that
we'll all end up strumming harps on some fluffy white cloud, or find ourselves
shoveling coal in the depths of Hell for eternity. Because we cannot ask the
dead if there's anything on the other side, we're left guessing as to what happens
next. Materialists assume that there's no life after death, but it's just that
— an assumption that cannot necessarily be proven. Looking closer at the
machinations of the universe (or multiverse), whether it be through a classical
Newtonian/Einsteinian lens, or through the spooky filter of quantum mechanics,
there's no reason to believe that we only have one shot at this thing called
life. It's a question of metaphysics and the possibility that the cosmos (what
Carl Sagan described as "all that is or ever was or ever will be")
cycles and percolates in such a way that lives are infinitely recycled. Hans
Moravec put it best when, speaking in relation to the quantum Many Worlds
Interpretation, said that non-observance of the universe is impossible; we must
always find ourselves alive and observing the universe in some form or another.
This is highly speculative stuff, but like the God problem, is one that science
cannot yet tackle, leaving it to the philosophers.
6. Can You Really Experience Anything Objectively?
There's a difference between understanding the world
objectively (or at least trying to, anyway) and experiencing it through an
exclusively objective framework. This is essentially the problem of qualia —
the notion that our surroundings can only be observed through the filter of our
senses and the cogitations of our minds. Everything you know, everything you've
touched, seen, and smelled, has been filtered through any number of
physiological and cognitive processes. Subsequently, your subjective experience
of the world is unique. In the classic example, the subjective appreciation of
the color red may vary from person to person. The only way you could possibly
know is if you were to somehow observe the universe from the "conscious
lens" of another person in a sort of Being John Malkovich kind of way —
not anything we're likely going to be able to accomplish at any stage of our
scientific or technological development. Another way of saying all this is that
the universe can only be observed through a brain (or potentially a machine
mind), and by virtue of that, can only be interpreted subjectively. But given
that the universe appears to be coherent and (somewhat) knowable, should we
continue to assume that its true objective quality can never be observed or
known? It's worth noting that much of Buddhist philosophy is predicated on this
fundamental limitation (what they call emptiness), and a complete antithesis to
Plato's idealism.
7. What is the Best Moral System?
Essentially, we'll never truly be able to distinguish
between "right" and "wrong" actions. At any given time in
history, however, philosophers, theologians, and politicians will claim to have
discovered the best way to evaluate human actions and establish the most
righteous code of conduct. But it's never that easy. Life is far too messy and
complicated for there to be anything like a universal morality or an absolutist
ethics. The Golden Rule is great (the idea that you should treat others as you
would like them to treat you), but it disregards moral autonomy and leaves no
room for the imposition of justice (such as jailing criminals), and can even be
used to justify oppression (Immanuel Kant was among its most staunchest
critics). Moreover, it's a highly simplified rule of thumb that doesn't
provision for more complex scenarios. For example, should the few be spared to
save the many? Who has more moral worth: a human baby or a full-grown great
ape? And as neuroscientists have shown, morality is not only a
culturally-ingrained thing, it's also a part of our psychologies (the Trolly
Problem is the best demonstration of this). At best, we can only say that
morality is normative, while acknowledging that our sense of right and wrong
will change over time.
8. What are Numbers?
We use numbers every day, but taking a step back, what are
they, really — and why do they do such a damn good job of helping us explain
the universe (such as Newtonian laws)? Mathematical structures can consist of
numbers, sets, groups, and points — but are they real objects, or do they
simply describe relationships that necessarily exist in all structures? Plato
argued that numbers were real (it doesn't matter that you can't "see"
them), but formalists insisted that they were merely formal systems
(well-defined constructions of abstract thought based on math). This is
essentially an ontological problem, where we're left baffled about the true
nature of the universe and which aspects of it are human constructs and which
are truly tangible.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
Comments
Post a Comment