I really don't understand your argument. You seem to be declaring what we do and then complaining that we're not doing it. I'm saying that Anscombe is saying that there are positions she will not engage with. If you want to engage with them, that's up to you. As a vegetarian, I am simply not interested in the nutritional value of meat. — unenlightened
This is true. Very true. The saddest part is, that ethical principles are what each person who refers to them calls them. They are arbitrary, while appearing to have a certain theme (but that is only appearance.)
Ethical principles either don't exist, or we haven't discovered them yet. Therefore the referring to ethical principles is a snow job, a wool over other's eyes, it is a pungent force of argument, without any essence or logical backing. — god must be atheist
nteresting observation. My take is that the LEM applies to individuals - the thing - as you say. But at the same time, if the LEM is either-or, the fellow who gave us that, Aristotle, also gave us neither-nor.
It follows, then, that if it's true of some people that they're either male or female, and modern insights are also correct, then it's also true that there are people who are neither male nor female, in the sense just given. — tim wood
Edit: artist statements are an academic notion. — Brett
It's simple, it picks out an obvious theme, and it usually tries to relate the artwork to the child in some manner. It's not altogether different from - as the OP put it - a kindergarten show and tell. — StreetlightX
Strictly speaking, we can only judge hypotheticals. We dont know future events and so there's nothing to judge. 'Looking backward, living forward'. We enter the future ass first. — frank
Well indeed. So they remain unsupported. — unenlightened
So MU is an anti-Peircean. That actually helps me understand Peirce. Sounds like I'm a Peircean and never knew it. — fishfry
This simply your "take" on language. It has nothing to do with the definitions, purposes, and functionality of the idea as used by its users and represented by them in this phrase as term of art. — tim wood
You would deem the mathematics "supporting" the moon landing and Mars' vehicles non-existent. You would also label the very thoughts you post here non-existent. — jgill
Morality is ultimately about judgement. It's about living with the consequences of our past actions. We head into the future with the innocent but potentially destructive desire to live. — frank
Outside of sociopathy, all humans seek to please some authority (but a better word than 'please' is needed here.) & not just any authority - an authority that is legitimate. This fuzzy idea of legitimacy (which begins in childhood) brings with it all kind of ideas of what makes someone legitimate. — csalisbury
If I have a corrupt mind, I will have corrupt ethics and make corrupt calculations. This much must surely be accounted for, as one has ample evidence for its occurrence in the world. "I am an exceptionally fine fellow, and therefore anything that helps me is a good thing and anything that hinders me is a bad thing." I don't need to name names do I? — unenlightened
Once you make the backbone of morality the idea that you're culpable for any consequence of your actions that could be foreseen, you set up, perhaps despite yourself, a moral situation where people develop a system of calculating consequences in advance. What may have started as possibly reasonable (taking into account consequences) metastasizes into something like insurance companies predicting risk. It turns morality into something totally different, something approaching plausible deniability (to your conscience, but the same principle: youre your own pr guy to yourself) — csalisbury
He won't weigh the intrinsic badness of an action, but focus on the consequences. — csalisbury
Assuming that by "foundations" you mean the acceptable accumulated knowledge and practices up to any particular moment of mathematical history. Weierstrass and Cauchy laid the critical foundations for my interests, above and beyond what came before. — jgill
Nothing really exists because there are no entities of sufficient purity that they are not compositions of things, many of which fail to exist themselves. — jgill
History demonstrates otherwise, as fishfry has pointed out. — aletheist
The axioms of pure mathematics are neither true nor false, and claiming otherwise is a category mistake. — aletheist
Typically what we end up selecting is either the least expensive solution or the one that in our judgment properly balances cost with risk. — aletheist
In other words, the "best" foundation can only be determined relative to a specific purpose. Why would philosophy be any different? — aletheist
A philosophy of mathematics identifies the foundations that have already been established by the practice of mathematics. Most people who use mathematics, including most professional mathematicians, have little or no knowledge of its foundations--and little or no need to have such knowledge. Likewise, most people in general have little or no knowledge of philosophy in general--and little or no need to have such knowledge. — aletheist
In other words, philosophy is useful in relation to the goal or end of knowing for the sake of knowing. Well, so is pure mathematics in relation to the goal or end of knowing what follows necessarily from certain axioms, purely for the sake of knowing it. — aletheist
Rubbish. — Banno
Why not just say that courage is worthy of cultivation - and if you disagree, that's not a fact about courage, but a fact about you. — Banno
Well, the point of virtue ethics was to avoid rules, so... — Banno
Knowledge of the history of math.
But it's the same in any discipline. There's science, and then there's the philosophy of science. One can and does do science without regard for its philosophy. That's true in every field. X precedes the philosophy of X. — fishfry
The task of the philosopher is to explain how it comes to be that math and science are abstract yet useful. — fishfry
He rejects the idea of taking math on its own terms; insists that it must refer to something outside of itself. Nobody believes that, not about pure math. Why does Metaphysician Undercover believe that? What is the basis for his ideas? — fishfry
On the other hand, the ideas/concepts represented under the name "empty set" certainly do exist. They're functional and purposeful. So also is my imaginary hippopotamus friend: he exists too, but also not at the store. — tim wood
What do you say of a chair? "Chair" is certainly an abstract noun. Actually, all nouns expect for proper names are abstract. Where do you go with that? — tim wood
I would say that the laws of Mathematics and Logic are normative principles pertaining to conduct regulation so as to make the world easier to describe and manipulate.
These normative principles cannot be given a logical justification on pain of circularity, rather their justification stands or falls with their general overall usefulness. — sime
Think of mathematicians sitting around a table and creating a game, discussing the pieces that are played, the environment in which they are played, and the rules that are agreed upon. Once done, would you then say, "The game does not exist."? You fail to recognize that math is a social endeavor, frequently deriving from observations of the physical world, but just as frequently not. — jgill
From this perspective, would you say the rules are the axioms? I would say no, there are ill-defined patterns of thought that precede the establishment of the rules, and that might be the subject of study and formalization at a later time - as is the case of the foundations of mathematics. — jgill
Physicists thought one day there must be atoms. Then they discovered the atoms are made of protons and electrons and neutrons. Then they discovered the protons are made of quarks. Now they think the quarks are made of strings. Do any of these abstractions exist? Yes they do, in the sense that they are part of an abstract mathematical theory that explains the experiments we're capable of doing at any moment in history. — fishfry
Physicist invent new existing things all the time. And de-exist things to. The luminiferous aether was once regarded as existing, till Michelson and Morley couldn't find it and Einstein did away with its necessity. — fishfry
A scientific entity has existence when it's a necessary ingredient of a successful physical theory. — fishfry
I gather you call "real" only what is "really out there." But if the 20th century taught us anything, it's that the existence of such a thing as "real things out there" is an assumption and not a fact. I believe if I'm not mistaken this is called scientific realism. It's only an idea. We could kick it around. But you have no logical basis for claiming it's true and everybody else is wrong. The days of Euclidean geometry and Newtonian physics are gone. Now we know the world consists of probability waves that are everywhere at once till we measure them. What can that mean? We don't know. But you claiming that you personally know what things are real, is a delusion on your part. Since you called me delusional the other day, which I can live without. — fishfry
t's apparent from discussion elsewhere that infinity holds a terror for you that I, and I think most others, do not share. — Banno
Arguably Aristotle sort to promote, say, courage because it presented a path to eudaimonia; but I don't see why we could not simply accept courage as worthy in itself. — Banno
One can step over the pit of regress. — Banno
Isn't it possible to have an ethical outlook that is not law-bound, and yet still hasa philosophical infrastructure?
Isn't that what virtue ethics is? — Banno
nd what is completely absurd is an otherwise educated individual who cannot grasp that there are terms of art, and what they mean as terms of art is just what the people who use them as such say they mean, period. — tim wood
For example, I have a chair. By your standards, that's incoherent because "chair" is an abstraction.... — tim wood
o, sounds like you do not agree w/ Zelebg that a robot operating 100% deterministic on its program is acting out 'free will' because it actions are necessitated by the thing it is responding to. is that right? — Sir Philo Sophia
So, would you say that human type/level of 'free will' is pretty much equal to the 'free will' of, say, a bee? Why so or why not? — Sir Philo Sophia
The actual meaning of mathematical existence is that it's whatever working professional mathematicians say it is. You don't accept that, but that is how it works. — fishfry
You have the same objection to football, baseball, Chinese checkers, and whist? You reject playing poker because the only Queen you know is Elizabeth? Nihilism. Childish rejection of the very concept of abstraction. — fishfry
The empty set comes quite naturally from two principles:
(1) The ability to state what elements sets have in common.
(1a) The elements that sets have in common must always be equal to a set.
(2) That two sets might be disjoint. — fdrake
Maybe - maybe - we can sharpen this with an example. What is a warehouse? If you hold that a warehouse is a place where goods are stored, then there can be no such thing as an empty warehouse, and if you say there is, then I reject the entire idea of warehousing. — tim wood
but you each end up saying that math itself is flawed therefore there's no empty set. There must be a name for such an argument. You want to argue a very narrow technical point and your only argument is to blow up the entire enterprise. — fishfry
Math precedes foundations. Not the other way 'round. — fishfry
are you saying that the standard definition/meaning of "free will" does not require an agent? — Sir Philo Sophia
is that a bad example? I mean, are you saying that breathing is an example of carrying out our 'free will'. That example actually makes my point, that is breathing is a pre-programmed part of the agent's system so cannot be part of the agent's free will. If you believe otherwise, please try hard to use your will power to stop breathing for more than 5 (or even 10) minutes and let us know how successful 'you' were at that test of 'free will'. I'm sure you have the 'will power' to do so... If we do not hear back from you anymore then we will assume you were right and you have ‘free will’ the way you say you do. — Sir Philo Sophia
'free will' is not about only about anything that makes a choice. If it were then you can say the Earth is an agent and it has 'free will' to make weather of its choice. If the choices always happens automatically then no 'choice' by an agent is ever made at all. If you disagree with that then everything like inanimate objects have 'free will' according to your (et. al.) definitions and you've thereby reduced the term to be meaningless wrt how it is used for humans. — Sir Philo Sophia
The one I particularly enjoyed delved into the nature of mind and consciousness. — jgill
Does the knight's move have chess existence? The other day you said you reject chess because it doesn't refer to anything in the real world. That's extreme nihilism. You can't get out of bed in the morning with a philosophy like that. How do you know it's your own bed? Property's an abstraction. — fishfry
Your "proof" of inconsistency, as I just said before, is not something that contemporary mathematics would accept as valid. — Mephist
When I challenged you on this point, you admitted that it's not only the empty set, but set theory in its entirety that you object to. — fishfry
So, according to your definition, have I not invented/created a robot which has 'free will'? — Sir Philo Sophia
Does the smiley mean that you don't actually believe what you wrote but that talking to Metaphysician Undercover has caused you to lose your grip? — fishfry
When I put the same question to Metaphysician Undercover, he admitted that it's not the empty set he objects to, but rather the entirety of set theory. That's a nihilistic position but at least it's a position. You have none that I can see. — fishfry
Our friend Metaphysician Undercover is a special case. — fishfry
Maybe you are right: sets cannot be empty. — Mephist
nept? Maybe incomplete. Not inept. — tim wood
"null" is an attribute of "extension": an extension can be "null" or "not null". A set can be defined as something having extension (following your definition). null extension => empty set; not null extension => not empty set. Maybe this is a trick of sophistry, but it avoids the contradiction. — Mephist
A segment is defined by giving two points. if the two points are coincident (the same point), then it's the same thing as only one point. If the two points are distinct, the length is the measure of their distance from each-other. I don't see any problem with this definition. — Mephist
Yes, that's the same thing: you don't define what a set is, but just give some properties that any set should have, and one of the attributes of a set is the fact to be empty or not: this is just an attribute of any set: no need to define the word "extention". — Mephist
In my opinion to say "A line is length without breadth" is like saying "A line is a rectangle with zero width". He means that real objects have 3 dimensions, but a line is like a real object that has only 1 dimension. The other two dimensions are missing. — Mephist
Well, we could do the same with sets: adding properties instead of subtracting
- an "point-set" is a set with no parts
- a "line-set" is an extension of the "point-set" that introduces a new property: the number it's parts.
For me, that's the same logical construction. Why this should not be allowed?
At the end, they are all similar ways to do the same thing: attach some properties to an object to describe it without giving an explicit definition in terms of other objects! — Mephist
P.S. Try to take a look at Euclid's elements (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclid%27s_Elements)
Here are the definitions, from Book 1 (taken from the book 'The elements of Euclid" by Oliver Byrne)
1. A point is that which has no parts
2. A line is length without breadth
5. A surface is that which has length and breadth only
Are these definitions contradictory? — Mephist
P.S. Try to take a look at Euclid's elements (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclid%27s_Elements)
Here are the definitions, from Book 1 (taken from the book 'The elements of Euclid" by Oliver Byrne)
1. A point is that which has no parts
2. A line is length without breadth
5. A surface is that which has length and breadth only
Are these definitions contradictory? — Mephist
OK, let's follow you definition of "set" (that is not the definition used in ZFC set theory, but we are considering an alternative definition because we do not accept MY mathematical rules). — Mephist
But now we are not finished yet: we have still to define what is "extension".
I think you have two possibilities:
1. define "extension" in terms of another property (something like "occupation of space"? I don't know..)
2. consider "extension" as an undefined "primitive" notion
- In case of 1. you end up in an infinite chain of definitions (of course you cannot define "extension" in terms of "a set", right?)
- In case of 2. you just did what today's mathematics do, just replacing the primitive notion of "set" with the primitive notion of "extension" and changing the definitions accordingly. — Mephist
But now what prevents me to consider a "null extension"?
"extension" at this point is an undefined notion, so "null extension" does not generate any contradiction now.
And if you allow "null extension", why not allow "empty set" and consider "set" to be a primitive notion instead? — Mephist
Following this argument that "null extension" is not allowed, you could say for example that a segment with "null length" is not allowed, so a point is not a segment. That is OK, but it's not due to a contradiction: it's only a choice of your definitions. Defining a point as a segment with no length does not create any contradiction, if you consider a segment as a primitive notion and a point as a derived notion. — Mephist
I'm not trying to make it consistent with your perspective. Where ever did I say that?
I'm trying to demonstrate its consistency with itself, despite your assertions that your premise "is well supported by hundreds of years of scientific experimentation, empirical evidence". If your assertion is true, then all these hundreds of years of experimentation and evidence should have in some way by now falsified the alternative premise, and yet that premise remains taught in schools. — noAxioms
'The present' means the objective current time which defines the actual current state of any given object. I made that up just now. Not trying to put words in your mouth. — noAxioms
There is just the current state of everything (not a short duration), and that is continuously changing to a new state in place. I really don't care how you choose to word it. The alternative premise doesn't have a present at all, so how you want to defined it is essentially moot. — noAxioms
You're wrong about it being undeniable since it is denied by plenty, including Einstein who resisted doing so even beyond publishing Special Relativity, but GR could only be worked out with the premise dropped. So we're back to you admitting you can't consider any view that conflicts with your biases. That's being closed minded. — noAxioms
The existence of a present moment is one of the premises of Aristotle's argument, so if that premise is wrong, his argument is unsound. How do you not see this? You claim to be 'trained in philosophy' and yet you don't see these trivial flaws in your argument. I have no training at all, but I at least took some courses requiring some basic elements of logic. You're the one who cannot back his assertions. — noAxioms
Because it doesn't have to be true. That's actually the reason.
Being open minded to all valid views is the first step in making an informed choice. Your choice is made, but it is a completely uniformed one. My choices are at least more informed, and I make no claim as to the necessary truth of them when I'm aware of a viable alternative. — noAxioms
Yes, my model defines the words differently. It has no 'the past' and 'the future', hence there is no issue to dodge. It denies the existence of such properties. — noAxioms
You pronounce that light is waves. No educated person I know of says that. Most of us, having some familiarity with the double slit experiment, know the the correct locution is that light acts like a wave when looked at as a wave, and otherwise as a particle. No one (except you) says categorically it's either. — tim wood
