why can't you judge yourself as having been wrong — Metaphysician Undercover
How can anyone judge someone as having made a wrong interpretation? — Metaphysician Undercover
What measure of "right interpretation" does anyone have? — Metaphysician Undercover
It is the same issue whether the rule is public or private. — Metaphysician Undercover
On what principle do you insist that the idea of private rules ought to be rejected because there could be no "right" interpretation? The 'right" interpretation is nothing other than an ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Truth and Probability" changed my life, but I'm no Ramsey scholar. What did you have in mind? What should I reread? — Srap Tasmaner
There's a natural, even evolutionary process here of local competition enabling global cooperation. That's a bit of a fairy tale, sure, but that fairy tale is part of the system, as norm and goal. — Srap Tasmaner
it would be rather like a fairy story starting 'Once upon a time there was a man who ...' or 'Once upon a time there was a frog which ...', the rest of the story going on to describe the adventures of the man or the adventures of the frog. A treatise on electrons, in Ramsey's view, starts by saying 'There are things which we will call electrons which ...', and then goes on with the story about the electrons ... only of course you then believe the whole thing, the whole 'There is ...' sentence, whereas in a fairy story of course you don't.
1. Cooperation is baked into language -- that much you should have learned from Wittgenstein. Vervet monkeys don't do their "predator" calls if there's no monkey near enough to hear them. — Srap Tasmaner
2. Thus if you want a purely competitive encounter with another human being, words are not the best tool for the job. You cite evidence of people straining against that limitation. That's interesting. Truly. It's a question how far you can get and what techniques you'll use to impose your will on others by imposing your will on words. As you say, that's rhetoric. But Humpty-Dumpty always falls. — Srap Tasmaner
3. From competitive use of language comes argument; from argument comes logic. Logic gives us both new ways to compete and new ways to cooperate, and it cannot do otherwise. — Srap Tasmaner
4. That's how philosophy becomes the incubator of science. Compete how you will and you are still also cooperating. (As you acknowledge -- you can gain something from my attempts to master you.) The war of all against all is, here, in this context, only a myth. — Srap Tasmaner
"Dog" is abstract. — Harry Hindu
for any word to mean anything useful it must refer to something in the world. — Harry Hindu
"Meaning" is the same thing as information and I defined information as the relationship between cause and effect. So when using the term, "meaning", you are referring to some causal relationship. — Harry Hindu
The words on this screen mean what the authors intended when they wrote them. — Harry Hindu
Value" is how organisms behave in ways that show that something is important to them. — Harry Hindu
(1) Why would we think we're communicating when we're not? — Srap Tasmaner
(2) Why would we think we need agreement in definitions to communicate? — Srap Tasmaner
Nonsense. How did you learn what the word, "dog" means, if not establishing a connection between the string of symbols, "dog" and the image of a dog? I could show you the word, "dog", or a picture of a dog, and I would end up getting my message across all the same. — Harry Hindu
I'm not sure what you are getting at here. — Harry Hindu
For any discussion, participants need to agree on the definitions of the terms used. Philosophical discussions are different from other types of discussions in the terms that are used and how they are defined. Philosophy itself is about questioning what we take for granted, which could be the definitions we use. — Harry Hindu
The rule is relegated to memory, and we act most times by habit without consulting the rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since interpretation is a major source of mistake, this procedure is unacceptable. — Metaphysician Undercover
In that instance, it's easy to know you made a mistake. You go back and revisit the move while holding the rule in your mind, and see that you made the move absent mindedly. — Metaphysician Undercover
These would be cases of misinterpretation. And, as you describe, in these cases you do not know whether or not a mistake was made. That's life. We cannot liberate ourselves from the restrictions imposed by the facts of life, by changing the definition of rule-following, as Wittgenstein tries to do.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, mistakes are possible but this occurs when we do not hold the principle, or do not adhere to it. At this time, it is impossible to be thinking that you are following the rule, because thinking that you are following a rule is to hold the principle and adhere to it. — Metaphysician Undercover
You define until you reach agreement. If what you agreed on later raises issues, you define again. — Srap Tasmaner
(a) there must be common ground to have a discussion at all; — Srap Tasmaner
(b) to explain your position to someone, you must put it in terms they understand; — Srap Tasmaner
(c) to convince someone of the <correctness, usefulness, whateverness> of your position, you must give them reasons and reasoning they'll accept. — Srap Tasmaner
simply don't believe you actually are confused about all definitions you asked for here, since you seemed to have understood my post too well for that in order to be so. — Tomseltje
As I said, if you think that you can formulate a private language argument without that premise, then demonstrate it. — Metaphysician Undercover
definitions that apply to words used in this question:
use : value to participants
discussing : exchanging ideas with the common goal to get a better understanding of each others position eventually leading to a better formulated unified position that all participants can agree upon.
philosophy : the rational investigation of the truths and principles of being, knowledge, or conduct.
definition : A statement of the exact meaning of a word. — Tomseltje
I was talking about a situation when a person appears not to be following a rule, but really is. These are the situations which serve as evidence that Wittgenstein's description of rule-following is unacceptable... A person thinks up a rule and starts following it. In these situations there is also "no way of knowing" that the person is following a rule, but it must be concluded according to the definition, that the person is not following a rule. This is an unjustified conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
I follow rules all the time, don't you? I hold a principle within my mind and adhere to it. There is no "god-like insight" involved in me knowing this, just a little bit of self-reflection. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, so my argument is that Wittgenstein didn't account for a vast amount of usage of "rule-following" when he defined it. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is a misunderstanding of what I said. I was not talking about a situation of when a person appears to be following a rule, but is really not following that rule, I was talking about a situation when a person appears not to be following a rule, but really is. — Metaphysician Undercover
A person thinks up a rule and starts following it. — Metaphysician Undercover
but it must be concluded according to the definition, that the person is not following a rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
But Wittgenstein's principles leave us without the capacity to judge a rule as right or wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
Instead of having principles for judging a rule as right or wrong, which is what Wittgenstein avoided the need for, we now need principles for judging a goal as good or bad. — Metaphysician Undercover
By his principles, if we cannot say anything concrete about the rule which a thinker is following, we must conclude that the thinker is not following a rule. This is the critical point which renders Wittgenstein's principles ineffectual for dealing with instances of creative thought. Such choices are left by Wittgenstein as arbitrary, unruly. — Metaphysician Undercover
The op turns to "aim", purpose, to deal with these choices. This puts us back into the minds of the thinkers, which is what Wittgenstein was trying to avoid. — Metaphysician Undercover
Funny that you were okay posting scientific references and articles when it fit your agenda, but then when I refuted it with an article from Gaverick Matheny, you suddenly state that this is not a science forum. The dishonesty is transparent here. — chatterbears
And you still haven't address that your linked 2002 Study [by Steven Davis] was refuted by Gaverick Matheny in 2003. — chatterbears
A sentient being of higher consciousness can improve the lives of other sentient beings. They also have the capability to improve the lives of members from a different species. Therefore, a sentient being has more value, because it can provide benefits to other species, as well as members within its own species. We see this in nature, where one species will save and protect the babies of a different species from outside predators. Non-sentient life, such as plants, does not have this value of being able to protect other life. — chatterbears
So far, the only answers I've received are flawed and superfluous. — chatterbears
I never claimed that one ethical value outweighs another value. — chatterbears
However, as I explained, it doesn't apply to a vast quantity of instances of rule following, therefore we would be foolish to accept it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you accept a description of "plant" which was inapplicable to a large number of things which we call by that word? I would reject the definition as unacceptable, wouldn't you? — Metaphysician Undercover
According to Wittgenstein's description, a person is only following a rule if the person acts in the right way. This excludes the possibility that a person who is acting in the wrong way is actually following a rule. So all the instances when a person is acting in the wrong way, yet is still following a rule, are excluded as instances of rule following. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is the point in defining "rule-following" such that it excludes a vast number of instances which we refer to as following a rule? — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein did not provide an adequate description of what it means to follow a rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
"What can a machine do? (Not this or that machine, by the way, but machines in the abstract) Tell me! Oh you can't tell me what a machine can do? Well, obviously machines cannot be evaluated as to their usefulness because you can't answer my question!". — StreetlightX
In my view this statement is pretty much the point of the thread, the math thing was just illustrating this point. — fdrake
What I want to add to this is that philosophical concepts are just like this. The concepts we employ are a function of what we aim to capture with them; to employ one concept rather than another is to bring out one aspect of the world rather than another. Moreover, the deployment of our concepts is not governed by truth, but by their range of illumination. This is not on account of their being arbitrary ('subjective'), but absolutely necessary.
So, philosophers are full of shit when they talk about hinge propositions? — Posty McPostface
Can hinges be analysed in contexts in which they are not presumed? It isn't as if everything that's required to philosophise about X is required to philosophise about Y. I take it that we're actually doing this at the minute; we're arguing about the framing of philosophy itself. — fdrake
Each of us is using a different framing device. This is supposed to be an impossibility, but it's not. — fdrake
To operate on this level of abstraction has as a hinge that we can take other hinges and philosophise about them. — fdrake
I've grown to understand that pragmatism is what your reffering to when it comes down to assessing the utility of various beliefs. No? — Posty McPostface
To my mind, you're characterising the adoption of hinge propositions as a kind of psychological excess to the discourse; why engage in this rather than that? Must be mere feeling. — fdrake
1) 'Sensible/Intelligible': The intelligible/sensible distinction is thoroughly Platonic in provenance and refers to the sensory ('feelings/affects') and the rational. You can find it in Plato, Averroes, Descartes, Kant and Sellars, among other places. It's pretty much among the most classic distinctions in all of philosophy. That your first associations were with - of all people and things - Austin, Tarski and 'coherence theory' - just speaks to, well, the completely different universe of discourse that you occupy. — StreetlightX
2) 'Measurement': Sorry, but this one really is just pure and unadulterated sophistry. Leaving aside the obvious fact that 'measurement' in the context it was used was clearly a synonym of 'assess' or 'evaluate', the idea that 'measurement' belongs exclusively to a scientific vocabulary is only something a non-native speaker of English could ever think. When Protagoras declared that ἄνθρωπος μέτρον - man is the measure of all things - do you think he meant that humans are scientific instruments? That this has to be even pointed out is embarrassing for us both. — StreetlightX
3) 'Necessity': you think necessity refers to deflationary theories?? Really? Really really? You think necessity has not been thematized with truth in philosophy until a bunch of boffins in early 1900s decided to do it? Try Plato. — StreetlightX
Most of what you say is not even wrong, it's just... irrelevant and uneducated. — StreetlightX
"The great debates of philosophy are questions of how existence should be framed. — StreetlightX
Every great philosopher then, is measured by what he or she brings into view; — StreetlightX
is not the resolution to a problem, but the elaboration, to the very end, of the necessary implications of a formulated question — StreetlightX
Any philosophical distinction - say between the sensible and the intelligible, — StreetlightX
Philosophies are only more or less useful, more or less interesting, more or less significant. — StreetlightX
All of that ambiguity was removed from the problem because there are signposts in the problemscape already interpreting what the problem consists of and solution methods. — fdrake
I think Witty drew the wrong conclusion from his own argument, — StreetlightX
Post it again so I can read the study. — chatterbears