↪Arcane Sandwich
Yeah, i'm not very good hahahaa. That said, I held me own against Kendall Reusing, which is, while a total cheat, a decent feeling against a multiple-world champion. — AmadeusD
The problem is people tend to think it's not a joke, and that somehow they have a clear, complete view of an entire continent. Australia is nothing like Texas other than the wide open spaces. It's nothing like most places except NZ. Also, Texas is fantastic. LOL. — AmadeusD
Most Theists would not say that they lack good reasons to believe. What you are describing here is something that is irrational: you are saying that one is justified in believing X when they know they are unjustified in believing X. — Bob Ross
and it is a rhertorical question. So I wasn't asking you anything.
You ask me how I proposed to solve this in practical terms—the only solution (more a dissolution) I am offering was the one at the top of the post you were responding to:
As I said earlier: "If the infinitely many integers are understood to be merely potential as a logical consequence of a conceptual operation—in this case iteration—and are not considered to be actually existent, then the need for a Platonic 'realm' disappears." — Janus
Does that count for you as a practical solution? If you are seeking an empirical solution to such questions, I'd say you are wasting your time. Seems it would be impossible to establish a fact of the matter. — Janus
Yes. Why would one be justified in holding belief in X if they recognize that they have no good reasons to believe X? — Bob Ross
My original and main point in joining this thread despite knowing nothing about the book, is that the ideas expressed in the OP were not directed—ironically—at the book and of which I can provide food-for-thought. It turns out, that the OP is so disorganized—which violates the very guidelines you mentioned—that it gives false impressions. — Bob Ross
My biggest issue is not the informality of the OP (as we’ve all been there) but, rather, that you clearly don’t understand the basic building-block concepts of your own OP; and, as I mentioned before, is the source of a lot of the issues you wish to resolve. I don’t say that to be mean: it is easy to tell when someone is not very familiar with the subject because they give nothing but vague notions and muddied explanations. I suspect you appreciate to some extent what I am saying here; because you say this OP is for “exploration”. — Bob Ross
I wish the best of luck for you in this thread; and hopefully by the end of it you will actually know what factiality means :wink:
Bob — Bob Ross
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If oysters don't know they are oysters, then is it right to call them oysters? — Corvus
I am going to be honest, I don't think you know what 'The Absolute' means (based off of the fact that you can't explain it at all); and I therefore don't think you have good reasons to believe it exists. No offense meant. — Bob Ross
Philosophy is not science. — Bob Ross
Sure, but science requires the scientific method; which, in turn, requires a positive verification of the hypothesis through strict experimentation. — Bob Ross
We are not doing that in philosophy; and we can’t. — Bob Ross
It sounds like Meilassoux might be claiming that facts are grounded, in part, in the a priori modes by which we cognize; and thusly is taking a Kantian approach.
My problem is that you clearly don’t know what they mean by facticity; because you still haven’t given me a clear (or even vague) definition.
Here, I’ll go first. A fact, by my lights, is a statement about reality which corresponds appropriately to what it references about reality; and thusly I accept a version of correspondence theory of truth. What do you mean by facticity? What does Meilassoux mean by facticity? — Bob Ross
¡Increíble! Qué delicia lo qué acabo de leer y todo lo que estoy aprendiendo contigo hoy. Kusch dejó una excelente frase para la historia. ¿Ves? Otra razón por la cual nos podríamos sentir orgullosos (aunque no creo que esta sea una palabra acertada del todo. No me gustaría sonar fanfarrón) de hablar castellano. Es un gran ejemplo, y seguro que hay otros. De hecho, ahora que estamos tratando las perlas de nuestro idioma, recuerdo que el pasado verano hicieron la siguiente pregunta: provea una sinónimo de ausente.
Me quedé pensando durante horas cuando lo dijeron en la radio. Aseveré qué podría tratarse de "desaparecido", pero ¡no! Busca y verás. Es interesante cómo ausente y desaparecido son distintos y así con muchas palabras. — javi2541997
Desafortunadamente, desconozco todo ello que me explicas. Ahora estoy orgulloso y feliz de que tú (vos; si te puedo tutear aunque creo que ya lo he hecho) me enseñes tales conocimientos. En la educación elemental básica española se estudia poquísimo de América. Es un tremendo error. Cuando allí se empezó a fraguar las independencias, aquí había períodos muy convulsos. Bueno, nosotros estudiamos ésto último. La Constitución de 1812, la época de Fernando VII, Isabel II, el trienio liberal.
Así qué con tristeza, admito qué soy ignorante respecto a la historia de Argentina. — javi2541997
Por ejemplo, este del poeta Antonio Machado:
"En España lo mejor es el pueblo.
Siempre ha sido lo mismo.
En los trances duros, los señoritos invocan la patria y la venden; el pueblo no la nombra siquiera, pero la compra con su sangre y la salva",
Aquí trata de asegurar qué la patria es el pueblo (¿la gente popular?) Y no los señoritos (la burguesía gobernante de siempre). — javi2541997
If you managed to count them, you would know how many. It is not infinity for sure. — Corvus
¡Ostras! No lo sabía. Es una grata sorpresa, sinceramente. — javi2541997
Claro, porque el inglés es una lengua muy simple sinceramente. Qué sea una lengua muy básica tiene como ventaja que sea hablada en todo el mundo y se haya establecido como lengua estándar entre personas qué no comparten un lenguaje común. — javi2541997
Otro ejemplo más: recuerdo que a los estudiantes de intercambio les costaba distinguir entre ser y estar. Verbigracia: yo soy argentino pero estoy en Madrid de vacaciones.
Porque para ellos sólo existe el verbo "to be". Para los angloparlantes es más que suficiente y no parece que se quieran comer mucho la cabeza en distinguir entre ser y estar. — javi2541997
Se diría que el idioma castellano es el único idioma que ofrece dos posibilidades de existencia, una es la de ser y otra la de estar. — Rodolfo Kusch
De ahí el concepto de estar. Me ha obsedido durante toda mi producción. Se trata del estar como algo anterior al ser y que tiene como significación profunda el acontecer. En el estar se acontece, porque se está en la expectación de una posibilidad que se da en un ámbito pre-óntico, al margen de cualquier necesidad de crear superestructuras a eso que acontece; antes, por lo tanto, de la constitución de los objetos. — Rodolfo Kusch
Creo que no se comprende el mero estar si no se le asigna además un cierto requerimiento implícito de lo absoluto. El estar, en tanto es una instalación o radicación en la realidad, sin embargo trasciende la simple circunstancia, por aquello de que es común a estar vivo o estar muerto, y esto no se explica sino en tanto lo que está, sólo puede hacer esto en absoluto. — Rodolfo Kusch
Bueno, siendo honesto, yo creo que tener una nacionalidad es muy importante, aunque hay qué pasar por trámites burocráticos. — javi2541997
¿Puedo ser australiano? ¿Puedo ser japonés? Me temo que no... ni aún con esfuerzo. Habría ciertas cosas de esas nacionalidades que no se ajustarían en mi esencia de ser castellano. Sobretodo en cuanto a la japonesa. Su cultura es de respetar el silencio, todo lo contrario a la mía, que es ruidosa. — javi2541997
Así, a bote pronto, la españolidad está ligado a ser español. Pienso que al formarse las repúblicas en Sudamérica, se perdió todo atisbo de hispanidad o españolidad allí, y empezaron a surgir otra esencia, la cual yo no puedo comprender al encontrarme tan lejos. — javi2541997
Los que tienen por patria el miserable terrón en que casualmente vieron la primera vez la luz del día, escuchan sólo los primeros dictámenes de su amor propio que se interesa hasta en lo que no le toca. La elevada torre de su Parroquia es para ellos un objeto lisonjero de que se jactan sin saber por qué. Ésta es la patria accidental; pues la formal Patria, la Patria a quien debemos sacrificarnos es aquella comunidad que con providencias bien hechoras cuidó de nuestra existencia desde el primer momento. Nacimos al mundo inhábiles para socorrernos, nuestros padres no siempre pueden alimentarnos. Necesitamos después de una educación ventajosa, y pocas familias pueden darla a sus hijos. Y cuando hemos de subsistir a expensas de nuestra industria; ¿cómo nos moveríamos de un lugar a otro sin caminos, sin posadas, sin puertos, y sin barcos? Ocupados en nuestro trabajo, ¿quién nos defiendede las vejaciones del más fuerte de nuestros compatriotas, de las hostilidades extranjeras? Cuando al cabo de una vida laboriosa la fortuna no ha correspondido a nuestros esfuerzos, y llegamos a una vejez decrépita sirviendo de peso a los demás hombres, cargados de enfermedades, sin arbitrio de remediarlas, ¿Quién se duele de nosotros? ¿Quién atiende a nuestra miseria? ¿Quién prolonga nuestros días hasta su término natural? La Patria, la dulce Patria, la Patria anhelosa, y próvida trata de precavernos de toda incomodidad, de todo insulto. Aquella comunidad de hombres, que viven bajo de una potestad, de unas leyes, y bajo unas providencias económicas, ésta es la Patria; el caro objeto de nuestra gratitud. — Manuel José de Lavardén
Nuestras leyes, y nuestras ordenanzas se aproximan a nuestra situación, pero son generales a toda la América, y ésta abraza todos los climas, todos los temperamentos, todas las calidades de terrenos; tiene países interiores, y costa; canales abiertos para la comunicación, y tierras empinadas que la dificultan; en una parte hay minas, en otras se buscan en vano; en unas provincias habitan los antiguos dueños, y constituyen la principal población, en otras apenas se conocen. En este laberinto necesitamos que los genios profundos echen a buscar el hilo de Ariadna. La falta de noticias, y de monumentos hace fluctuar las opiniones cuando no tienen un principio fijo de que partir. Acostumbrémonos pues a deducir nuestras consecuencias de antecedentes incontestables. La historia nos provee importantes sucesos de que extraer verdaderos conocimientos y las ciencias están convenidas en certísimos datos, cuya aplicación es el único arbitrio para desenvolver el enredo de ideas, que confunde la variedad de nuestros intereses. El interés de cada uno de nosotros varía numéricamente los juicios, y hará toda disputa, en que se mezcle interminable. — Manuel José de Lavardén
I am pretty sure that oysters don't know they are oysters. — Corvus
Yo pienso que el español debería más bien identificarse con el castellano. — javi2541997
qué es "el Español en general", en tanto lenguage, exactamente? — Arcane Sandwich
También incluye al valenciano, balear, aragonés y gallego. En cambio, no sé si incluir el euskera. — javi2541997
En verdad, español deriva del país España, pero igualmente tu eres de Argentina y puedes hablar mi mismo idioma. — javi2541997
Por lo tanto, creo que sería más acertado decir que el castellano es la lengua en general y español una nacionalidad. — javi2541997
Quedaría así: tú eres argentino, yo soy español, y ambos hablamos castellano — javi2541997
Yo soy madrileño y toda mi familia viene de Toledo y otras zonas de Castilla La Mancha. Es evidente que soy totalmente castellano. Pero pienso que mis orígenes se caracterizan por la lengua en la cual me expreso. Estoy convencido de que si fuera Vasco o catalán, daría mucha importancia a mis raíces y a la lengua. Seguro. — javi2541997
El concepto "Hispanidad" es deficitario porqué tristemente sólo se observa desde el prisma político. Ni leyendo a Ortega y Gasset he dado con la definición filosófica o metafísica de la hispanidad. — javi2541997
Para mí la hispanidad es la lengua. — javi2541997
Yo tampoco celebro el día de la Hispanidad. — javi2541997
Well, which things have essences, according to Meillassoux? Apparently, just one: facticity itself. Nothing has an essence, except for facticity. In other words, there is only one essence in the world: it is the one that facticity has, and he wants to call that: "factiality". — Arcane Sandwich
Let us go back to Kant. What is it that distinguishes the Kantian project - that of transcendental idealism - from the Hegelian project - that of speculative idealism? The most decisive difference seems to be the following: Kant maintains that we can only describe the a priori forms of knowledge (space and time as forms of intuition and the twelve categories of the understanding), whereas Hegel insists that it is possible to deduce them. Unlike Hegel then, Kant maintains that it is impossible to derive the forms of thought from a principle or system capable of endowing them with absolute necessity. These forms constitute a 'primary fact' which is only susceptible to description, and not to deduction (in the genetic sense). And if the realm of the in-itself can be distinguished from the phenomenon, this is precisely because of the facticity of these forms, the fact that they can only be described, for if they were deducible, as is the case with Hegel, theirs would be an unconditional necessity that abolishes the possibility of there being an in-itself that could differ from them. — Quentin Meillassoux
Let us try to attain a better grasp of the nature of this facticity, since its role in the process of de-absolutization seems to be just as fundamental as that of the correlation. First of all, from the perspective of the strong model, it is essential to distinguish this facticity from the mere perishability of worldly entities. In fact, the facticity of forms has nothing to do with the destructability of a material object, or with vital degeneration. When I maintain that this or that entity or event is contingent, I know something positive about them - know that this house can be destroyed, I know that it would have been physically possible for this person to act differently, etc. Contingency expresses the fact that physical laws remain indifferent as to whether an event occurs or not -they allow an entity to emerge, to subsist, or to perish. But facticity, by way of contrast, pertains to those structural invariants that supposedly govern the world - invariants which may differ from one variant of correlationism to another, but whose function in every case is to provide the minimal organization of representation: principle of causality, forms of perception, logical laws, etc. These structures are fixed - I never experience their variation, and in the case of logical laws, I cannot even represent to myself their modification (thus for example, I cannot represent to myself a being that is contradictory or non self-identical). But although these forms are fixed, they constitute a fact, rather than an absolute, since I cannot ground their necessity - their facticity reveals itself with the realization that they can only be described, not founded. But this is a fact that - contrary to those merely empirical facts whose being-otherwise I can experience - does not provide me with any positive knowledge. For if contingency consists in knowing that worldly things could be otherwise, facticity just consists in not knowing why the correlational structure has to be thus. — Quentin Meillassoux
Facticity is the 'un-reason' (the absence of reason) of the given as well as of its invariants. Thus the strong model of correlationism can be summed up in the following thesis: it is unthinkable that the unthinkable be impossible. I cannot provide a rational ground for the absolute impossibility of a contradictory reality, or for the nothingness of all things, even if the meaning of these terms remains indeterminate. Accordingly, facticity entails a specific and rather remarkable consequence: it becomes rationally illegitimate to disqualify irrational discourses about the absolute on the pretext of their irrationality. From the perspective of the strong model, in effect, religious belief has every right to maintain that the world was created out of nothingness from an act of love, or that God's omnipotence allows him to dissolve the apparent contradiction between his complete identity and His difference with his Son. These discourses continue to be meaningful -in a mythological or mystical register - even though they are scientifically and logically meaningless. — Quentin Meillassoux
I come from a country were military service is compulsory for men and voluntary for women, hence military service is very normal. — ssu
Above all, if the country or nation state doesn't have an imminent outside threat, there's not going to be compulsory service and military service will look like an oddity. — ssu
Unfortunately there's not enough Swedes and Finns (or other Nordic people) for a Swedish discussion site. And anyway, Swedish is usually worst for the Finns and the Danes, Norwegians do better. — ssu
I am not familiar enough with what you are referring to by metaphysical conservatism, eliminativism, and permissivism to comment adequately on this one; but I suspect you are addressing a view which has no relevance to substance theory (in the sense of rebuking a position that holds that everything is one concrete entity). — Bob Ross
So, I mean that we can describe the type of substrate a substance is to meaningfully discuss things. Idealists accept hat there is a mental substrate; physicalists accept a physical substrate; a substance dualist accepts both; a non-dualist adds a third; etc. — Bob Ross
Ok, cool. So, then, under your view, is this “Absolute” of a different type of substrate than physical stuff? — Bob Ross
Ok, so are you just noting by “The Absolute” the totality of reality and negation? I know that much about Hegel haha…. — Bob Ross
No, I don't have a firm grasp of what it is. I don't think anyone does. I don't think Hegel did either, for that matter.
Then why do you believe in it? — Bob Ross
How am I supposed to discuss it with you, if you can't give a basic description of what the word refers to?
You want me to step through the door, when I can't until you tell me the password. — Bob Ross
As I said earlier: "If the infinitely many integers are understood to be merely potential as a logical consequence of a conceptual operation—in this case iteration—and are not considered to be actually existent, then the need for a Platonic 'realm' disappears." — Janus
Not perplexity, just plain old oddness. I'm not suggesting anything about essences; I think the very idea is problematic. Identity is just an idea. The odd thing is that the "in itself' the very thing which is conceived as having no identity or identifiability for us, is an expression couched in terms of identity. — Janus
The odd thing about the idea of "in itself" is that it is saying "in its identity". Identity suggests integrity. When we eat the oyster, it is broken down, loses its integrity, and thus loses its identity. Once eaten it is "in us" now a part of our identity. We cannot eat the oyster's identity, because the act of eating progressively destroys it—in eating the oyster we do not digest the oyster's identity, but its brokenness. — Janus
I mean it in the Analytic Philosophy sense of a substrate which bears the properties of things. — Bob Ross
Ok, so you are a ‘materialist’; so there’s, so far, two types of substrates for you: the physical and the kind that bears the properties of this ‘Absolute’. — Bob Ross
Are you a bundle theorist? — Bob Ross
Otherwise, how does things which are of this non-physical (and non-mental) interact with or relate to the stuff which is bore by the physical substrate? The hard problem of interaction seems to plague this theory. — Bob Ross
Ok, it isn’t physical. What is it? When you say ‘The Absolute’, I am thinking of just reality as it is in-itself. Why should be posit this thing as being real? — Bob Ross
I think you should be able to briefly explain what the Absolute is, conceptually, if you have a firm grasp of what it is. — Bob Ross
Answer me this (in all honesty): how have you published multiple books on their works and yet cannot give me a simple explanation of what factiality is? — Bob Ross
You have to be able to appreciate my frustration here. I haven't written anything on Transcendental Idealism nor Aristotelianism, and I can give you an in depth (an adequate) explanation of both views. — Bob Ross
Let me try one more time: what is factiality? What would be mean for there to be non-facts about facts that aren't just non-objective dispositions? — Bob Ross
↪Arcane Sandwich
I love posting in Spanish with you, yet I think we are not entitled to do so in this thread. It is fine to do it a bit, but the moderators might scold us next time since the forum is an English-speaking site. :smile: — javi2541997
Let me just ask you: are you familiar with the book, or are you using this OP to familiarize yourself with it? — Bob Ross
Nonetheless, Spain—as the union of Castille and Aragon—is the representative entity of Spaniards, whether Catalans like it or not. — javi2541997
Bueno, la mentalidad colectiva podría estar relacionada con los valores, costumbres, ideas... Por ejemplo: Creo que la famosa sobremesa española forma parte de nuestra mentalidad colectiva. — javi2541997
Military is an integral and essential part of historical and modern societies, even if we don't admit it. — ssu
You cannot seriously tell me that Cataluña is better than El Reino de Aragón y Castilla. — Arcane Sandwich
-- Alas, an international organisation appears to be insufficient for the most relevant matters. Look at the attitude of the UN towards Palestine, for instance. Furthermore, if Australia would have a dispute with Spain because of the eucalyptus, both nations would resolve it bilaterally. No supranational entity can do anything. — javi2541997
it is doing its best to get a multi-national peninsula. — javi2541997
Al final, las raíces y la idiosincrasia pesan mucha en el alma y la mentalidad colectiva de cada pueblo. — javi2541997
Could it be because they are the Kantian oysters? Oysters in themselves are in noumenon. They are not available in the physical world. You can only eat the oysters in phenomenon, which are are brought under the physiological and chemical conditions — Corvus
