If you were to make a truly complete map or model of something, you could not help but replicate its function, and so build a replica, a simulation. — Pfhorrest
it is a general feature of mathematics that whatever we find things in reality to be doing, we can always invent a mathematical structure that behaves exactly, indistinguishably like that, and so say that the things in reality are identical to that mathematical structure. — Pfhorrest
One may be tempted to say that that does not make the description identical to reality itself, as in the adage "the map is not the territory". In general that adage is true, [...] But a perfectly detailed, perfectly accurate map of any territory at 1:1 scale is just an exact replica of that territory, and so is itself a territory in its own right, indistinguishable from the original; — Pfhorrest
But whatever model it is that would perfectly map reality in every detail, that would be identical to reality itself. — Pfhorrest
perfectly accurate models of people like us would find themselves experiencing it as their reality exactly like we experience our reality. — Pfhorrest
There necessarily must be some rigorous formal (i.e. mathematical) system or another that would be a perfect description of reality. — Pfhorrest
"To make a faithful picture, come as close as possible to copying the object just as it is". This simple-minded injunction baffles me; for the object before me is a man, a swarm of atoms, a complex of cells, a fiddler, a friend, a fool and much more. If none of these constitute the object as it is, what else might? If all are ways the object is, then none is the way the object is. — Nelson Goodman: Languages of Art, p6
To be is to be the subject of a predicate. — Banno
Beauty is not the same exact thing as “rightness” though. [...] It’s more like beauty is a quality that we project on things — Pfhorrest
I do mean it all of those ways, as I went on to elaborate. It could be "right" as in true, or "right" as in good, in many different senses of "true" and "good". Just any kind of feeling of agreement, a "yeah!" kind of feeling -- which could be "yeah, that's a thing I want!" or "yeah, that's how things are!", etc. — Pfhorrest
I hold that beauty is, broadly speaking, the experience of apprehending something that seems, in some way or another,rightbeautiful. Thisrightnessbeauty may be either of a descriptive or a prescriptive nature: the feeling of apprehending some truth, or of apprehending some good. — Pfhorrest
I hold that beauty is, broadly speaking, the experience of apprehending something that seems, in some way or another, right. This rightness may be either of a descriptive or a prescriptive nature: the feeling of apprehending some truth, or of apprehending some good. — Pfhorrest
[facilitation of] the successful comprehension of [that] complexity by way of [the] underlying simplicity. — Pfhorrest
I found that difficult to follow. — Banno
But then I don't see much use in the type/token distinction. It seems to me to introduce unnecessary metaphysical entities. — Banno
Arguably, no statement is ever entirely bereft of any illocutionary force, and [such that it?] might be considered a "dud ticket". But we use them quite routinely when doing logic, so I'm not too concerned about that. — Banno
There is a distinction between the statement "there is a fire in the next room" and the assertion "there is a fire in the next room. — Banno
It'sraining[on fire in the next room] but I don't assert that it is [on fire in the next room] — bongo fury
What? Talk about human reference? As in, "Peter", "Jane"? — Banno
Do you suppose that beliefs sit in your mind like you sit in your comfy chair? — Banno
How many other unspoken speech acts are you aware of? — Banno
"Beliefs" are just assertions dressed in unhelpful mental woo. Better and sufficient to deal with,
It's raining, but I don't assert that it is. — bongo fury
Belief is a relation between an individual and a statement. — Banno
An assertion will be sincere iff the person asserting pbelieves pvocally also asserts p mentally. — Banno
It seems easy to credit animals with inductive reason and hard to credit them with deductive reason. — apokrisis
Again, the question is whether the ape reasoned [whichever the duction] by giving meaning to symbols, by being able to play the social game of pretending to point them at things. That would be logic in the human (as opposed to pocket calculator or trained neural network) sense. — bongo fury
But if you, MacIntosh, were to say exactly the same thing to McGillicuddy—“It’s raining, but I don’t believe it is”—your friend would rightly think you’d lost your mind. Why, then, is the second sentence absurd? As G.E. Moore put it, “Why is it absurd for me to say something true about myself?” — Wheatley
It's raining, but I don't assert that it is.
It’s not like someone behaves a certain way, then obtains a high IQ, and begins behaving differently. — Pinprick
The room grew silent. I cursed myself for losing control and creating a scene. I tried not to look at the boy as I paid my check and walked out without touching my food. I felt ashamed for both of us.
How strange it is that people of honest feelings and sensibility, who would not take advantage of a man born without arms or legs or eyes-how such people think nothing of abusing a man born with low intelligence. It infuriated me to think that not too long ago I, like this boy, had foolishly played the clown.
And I had almost forgotten.
I'd hidden the picture of the old Charlie Gordon from myself because now that I was intelligent it was something that had to be pushed out of my mind. But today in looking at that boy, for the first time I saw what I had been. I was just like him!
Only a short time ago, I learned that people laughed at me. Now I can see that unknowingly I joined with them in laughing at myself. That hurts most of all. — Daniel Keyes: Flowers for Algernon
yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
The problem with this account is that it underdetermines actual word use. I suppose you could (as has been tried) twist every word use example as drawing the listener's attention to something (object, concept, state of mind), but this is utterly trivial as everything falls into that parenthesised list, and following another's talk cannot be done without paying it some minimal attention.
— Isaac
Bang. — Banno
Woodger's term, p.17, is 'shared name'. Martin, in Truth and Denotation, Ch. IV, speaks of divided reference as multiple denotation. I applaud that use of 'denote', having so used the word myself until deflected to 'true of' by readers' misunderstanding; and Martin's 'multiple' obviates the misunderstanding. — Quine: Word and Object, p 90n.
Crows can plan three steps ahead, — Banno
I think what the crows (and current AI) are able to do is less than we are able, which we might distinguish as "rational" but I would propose clarifying as semantical: the ability to discern meaning in the sense of discerning what symbols are supposed to be pointed at. — bongo fury
the equivalent of a disjunctive syllogism where the ape could tell that if one food reward cup was empty, then the treat was hidden in the other. — apokrisis
But what I had supposed was that his theory of reference had some merit, it would be ill conceived to consider it an account of the whole of language. — Banno
Well, I'm going to continue to side with Quine and StreetlightX here, — Banno
and say that pointing is pointedly indeterminate. — Banno
You agreed with Harry as to "hello", but I find that most unconvincing; — Banno
it is not obvious that pointing up is a form of pointing. — Banno
Harry suggests that words are to be understood by determining to what they point. The reasonable response is to point out, as I and others have done, that there are words that do not seem to point. — Banno
Kids arrive at five by playing with beans, moving them around, sharing them, sorting the beans from the marbles, cooking them, embedded number in their lives.
Pointing is a gross oversimplification. — Banno
↪Banno Hello.
This is a scribble or sound used to point to the start of communication, — Harry Hindu
The "Na" in...
" Na na na na na na na na na na na na na " - My Chemical Romance. — Isaac
Maybe it's me. Maybe I'm too stupid to understand Goodman. — RogueAI
To sort out the wheat from the chaff and then watch the chaff complain about it. — StreetlightX
No, it's not raining or not independently of the state of affairs representation. But it is raining or not independently of any report or statement. — Andrew M
And on your view? — Andrew M
The pointing of symbols at things by social animals. — bongo fury
is it raining or not independently of any report or statement? — Andrew M
On your view, is it raining or not independently of any report or statement? — Andrew M
The states of affairs represent the weather and the talking. But states of affairs are not themselves talk. — Andrew M
The SA is a representation of the concrete situation so, no, not literally wet. — Andrew M
If so, perhaps one of them would suffice?
— bongo fury
No, because I make a distinction between what the weather is and what a person says the weather is.
It seems that you don't make that distinction. — Andrew M
And thus lack a model for what it means for a statement to be true. — Andrew M
Statements S1 and S2 are the weather-talk by Alice and Bob — Andrew M
(which are derived from states of affairs SA2 and SA3 respectively). — Andrew M
So, SA1 (or asserting it) is talking about the weather, while SA2 and SA3 are talking about the talking?
But SA1 isn't the weather (e.g. it isn't wet), but rather represents or talks about it. — bongo fury
or as some bizarre kind of weather sentence... with a fifty percent chance of predication, perhaps... something like that? :wink:
— bongo fury
Your comment would apply equally to Alice's statement. — Andrew M
But both her statement and the state of affairs refer to rain, not predication. — Andrew M
Platonism says (after a process of cosmic reasoning) that our pointing must also reflect the way the things really are, and introduces more things (properties, similarities etc. [and now states of affairs]) to create a new level of sorting. To correspond with the first. — bongo fury
The benefit of so doing is that it is now possible to apply logical operations or transformations on those formal structures.
— Andrew M
Such as? (You may need to decide if you are talking about the weather, or about the talking, or both.)
— bongo fury
Yes, but note that that information is implied by the structures. — Andrew M
I can represent the original concrete situation in a model with the following obtaining states of affairs:
(SA1) It is raining
(SA2) Alice says that it is raining
(SA3) Bob says that it is not cloudy — Andrew M
Finally, a conditional can be added that relates statements to states of affairs — Andrew M
this feeds the suspicion that metaphysics is not being easily given up by some of its supposed critics, who need to disparage nominalism because they would rather not be shown a way out. — bongo fury
So the concrete situation is that it is raining outside and Alice says, "It is raining outside".
Now suppose I want to model that situation. In my model, I can represent the weather formally as a state of affairs. This, it seems to me, is at least comparable to a physicist representing a physical system formally as a state. — Andrew M
The benefit of so doing is that it is now possible to apply logical operations or transformations on those formal structures. — Andrew M
Is that still metaphysics, on your view? — Andrew M
Can "that it is raining outside" please be the actual raining? Can Alice's statement please be her actual utterance?
— bongo fury
Yes, of course. All of these abstractions are grounded in the actual raining and Alice's actual utterance. — Andrew M
The pattern, then, is that the logical form of a state of affairs is the same as the logical form of a statement (i.e., they both contain a subject and a predicate). — Andrew M
this feeds the suspicion that metaphysics is not being easily given up by some of its supposed critics, who need to disparage nominalism because they would rather not be shown a way out. — bongo fury