But, I think a difficulty here, when one reads a work like De Anima is the desire to see it as some sort of contemporary empirical theory, which it sort of is, but this isn't really where its value lies. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And in virtue of what is a stance adopted? Reason? Sentiment? Aesthetic taste? Sheer impulse? — Count Timothy von Icarus
If they are disputable they will certainly be disputed, hence "how philosophy actually proceeds." — Count Timothy von Icarus
and also morally questionable.
I don't get this one. How so? — Count Timothy von Icarus
And would a strong epistemology of rational obligation mean that we were wrong in doing this?
Wrong in doing what exactly, not affirming truth? — Count Timothy von Icarus
One of the problems with relativism as a nice solution to disagreements is that it doesn't actually allow "everyone to be right" anyhow. It says that everyone who isn't a relativist (most thinkers) is wrong. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It leads to implausible claims. Joe has the property of being awake at T1, and the property of being asleep at T2.
Indeed. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Which might put a spanner into Kripke. Point 1 about how "if water is H2O" -- it's not, if we include D2O, for instance. — Moliere
What would the opposite of this be? You start with premises that are foundational and then refuse to affirm what follows from them? — Count Timothy von Icarus
But this seems to make reason extrinsic to the rational nature, a source of constraint rather than the very means by which finite natures can transcend their finitude by questioning current belief and desire. — Count Timothy von Icarus
As noted in the other thread, PA just lays out the challenge to scientific knowledge and demonstration. The full justification of the solution spans a good deal of the corpus because it involves the way man comes to know, and a sort of "metaphysics of knowledge." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Essentially, what we want to know is whether "a reason" must cash out to "an obligatory cause" of holding a particular belief. This is troubling, as discussed on the thread.
— J
So, not so sure about the "obligatory". — Banno
It's a point about how there are a posteriori necessary truths -- it doesn't say that water is H2O; it's not relying upon the science for its point. Only if water is H2O then it is necessarily H2O, and this was a process of discovery from terms we previously would not have associated with H2O. — Moliere
I think I'd push against the notion that D2O is water, after all, because it's not potable. — Moliere
Different ways of talking about the same stuff. Are we obligated to say one is right, the other wrong? I don't see why. — Banno
Actually, I'm inclined to think that liberalism may be the best way of coping with the fact that we have to work out how to proceed from where we are, with all our different perspectives . . . — Ludwig V
What is that difference? The similarity is here with the concept of God would be Deism, and in that case also, the consequences for us are irrelevant as we are probably an unknown entity of the simulation to those running it. — Christoffer
If we are in a simulation, it is so advanced it is essentially reality for us, meaning, what's the difference between reality and a "simulation"? — Christoffer
Wittgenstein is unknowingly retreading the ground of Aristotle's Posterior Analytics re "justification must end somewhere," and Aristotle himself suggests this is an old problem by the time he is writing about it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'll insist that there can be no "pre-linguistic metaphysical practice" that we cannot put into words post-hoc; otherwise how could we be said to recognise it as a practice? — Banno
It seems the problem with hermeneutics lies in specifying what criteria there could be for a reading to count as a correct reading. — Janus
What could it mean to say I know the theory of relativity is correct beyond saying that there is reliable evidence that it works? — Janus
You seem to be hung up on the idea that every property of an object is essential to that object's identity. If not, then two distinct objects could have the same identity. Why is this difficult for you to accept? — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is not that the symbols on the paper somehow force you to add them, merely that when you add sums on a paper those signs determine which numbers you add. — Count Timothy von Icarus
There has to be some sort of "physical-ish causality," right? Else how could ink in a paper book (a physical object) lead you to have the very specific thoughts of War and Peace, or a light reliably make people apply their brakes? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'd like some coherent story of what these NHI people are doing here. — unenlightened
Yes, that's a useful distinction, although I don't think the two are unrelated. The numbers you are adding up play a role in the second sense of "reasons." They are the reason you add those numbers and not any other. The signs on the paper are the content determining cause of some of your thoughts. That's the causality unique to signs, to make us think one thing instead of any other. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Misunderstand, or just don't agree with? — Count Timothy von Icarus
You apparently have the idea of a government that can "give answers" on matters such as human telos, or avoid doing so. But what would this mean in practice? - J
. . . when [the state] answers such questions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
One person's individual liberty can be justly constrained only because it "gums up the works for everyone else," i.e. because it infringes on other's individual liberty. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Here is a potential confusion. We might say we think or do something "for no reason at all," when what we really mean is "we acted without any rational deliberation." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Causes and reasons are fairly synonymous in some senses. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I realize that's grossly over-simplified, but starting from the premiss that society and government are impositions on us is a mistake. — Ludwig V
Well I don't want to say that interpretations of mystical or religious experience cannot be correct, but I would say that there is no way of determining whether or not they are correct. — Janus
It seems we have three sources of grounding for our beliefs, or if you prefer, the premises upon which we base our (hopefully) consistent reasoning―logic, perceptual observation, and reflection on and generalization from experience. The latter is what I would say phenomenology at its best consists in. — Janus
Likewise we have no way of determining whether our beliefs about the reliability of others' judgements, or our scientific theories are correct, even though it seems reasonable to think we have a better idea about the veracity of those based on whether the predictions they yield are observed.
The only certainties would seem to be the logical, including mathematics, and the directly observable. — Janus
Oh, and the obvious reason that LNC is taken as a metaphysical or epistemic principle is that it is a grammatical principle, and our language is common to both. Language underpins both. — Banno
The leap from "no determinate causes" to "no reason at all" in particular still eludes me, too, and in particular because it "raises the unpleasant spectre of there being only one reasonable way to think and do". — Banno
Thanks for a considered and sympathetic response. — Banno
So better, perhaps, to say that agreeing with either p or ~p is what we do, rather than a rule. — Banno
There's this, about (p v ~p): "My puzzle is: How is it that these are two phenomena, which resemble each other so closely yet have such different objects?" The trite response is that p and ~p are not phenomena. What they are has been answered at length and in different ways. But further, what is salient, and what we discussed in our previous conversations concerning Frege, is that we read (p v ~p) as about one thing, not two. That's part of the function of "⊢" in Frege. — Banno
Our difference may be that I think there is a point at which our spade is turned, a point at which the only answer is "It's what we do", but that you would try to dig further. I take the "counts as..." function to be sufficient, so that putting the ball in the net counts as a goal, no further explanation being possible. You seem to me to want to ask why it counts as a goal, to which the answer is it just does.
Does this seem a fair characterisation? — Banno
So I'll throw the ball back - can you convince me that there is a further issue here that remains unanswered? — Banno
Setting some criteria of relevance, to me, is a sibling to just saying there is such a thing as a definition. — Fire Ologist
So while I don’t disagree with what you are saying, I don’t think you’ve said enough, or as much as I am saying. — Fire Ologist
And so on. — Ludwig V
It's all a convoluted mess with the mind, with thoughts about things, or with language about thoughts about things, and further convoluted when we try to get two people to agree on the language about thoughts about things. It's why so many threads devolve into this same issue - "what can be said clearly, at all, ever, about anything?" — Fire Ologist
you were forced to draw a clear line, provide a provisional, cursory, placeholder definition of "definition" to show a distinction between your concept of things and mine.
That is all my point is. — Fire Ologist
We dance around the elephant we keep inviting into the room when we think we are not defining things as we speak about things. — Fire Ologist
It's the question of "how do we know." It's "what is truth?" It's "What is meaning?" It's "What is a thing?". Same ultimate issues presented. Words-concepts-communication. — Fire Ologist
it does rule out action that is not determined by prior actuality. Defaulting on this would be defaulting on things having causes and the world being intelligible. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But that isn't what "your house key" means. If someone changes the locks on my door while I'm out, my key doesn't cease to be mine. And if I bend the key, it won't turn the lock, even though it is still the same key and the same lock. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If we allow "why does my key turn my lock?" to become an aporia, then what won't be? — Count Timothy von Icarus
What would it mean for them to have different objects? It would mean that thought is arbitrarily related to reality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If reality is arbitrarily, randomly related to appearances . . . — Count Timothy von Icarus
. . . unrelated to any thought or experience anyone has ever had, or could ever have? — Count Timothy von Icarus
PNC can be formulated as a metaphysical, epistemic, or semantic principle. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ultimately, the latter will tie back to the former if the former is affirmed because being (existence) is prior to being experienced and being spoken about. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Now we might be tempted to ask why p v ~p is so much more useful than p ^ ~p. But isn't one answer here just that we can do more with it? That it is more useful because it is more useful? — Banno
I'm not sure that qualifies as an answer, even generously.
— J
It's not so much an answer as an attempt to show how the question misfires.
You seem to be in the position of someone who asks how it is that their key just happens to fit their front door and no one else's. — Banno
In a funny way, that is what I'm asking. It seems too good to be true -- not that the key fits, but that I find myself with that particular key to hand. — J
If we do not accept that the frog can be both alive and dead, then a logic that allows this is not suitable. — Banno
Conversely, if we do accept it, then such a logic would be suitable? — Count Timothy von Icarus
The problem is that my "ordinary accumulations of experience cannot be obvious to anyone else, so I think my intuitions about something like choosing intuitively who to hire as Tom Storm gave as an example does not seem to offer any cogent justification for my believing his choice was correct unless I had my own accumulated experience that showed a substantial history of his good judgement of character. — Janus
the belief in the existence of God or that some metaphysical thesis is the true one are not experiences, but may be held on account of experiences, and in turn give rise to experiences. — Janus
