And that's a totally trivial observation that nobody ever disagreed with. — Marchesk
I presume that you're asking what justifies the rules, and the answer is that the rules don't need to be justified, no more than the rules of chess need to be justified. The question is mostly senseless — Sam26
The cat on the mat is true if and only if the cat is on the mat. — Marchesk
I'm of the opinion an actual infinity cannot exist. I feel strongest about the impossibility of an infinite past, because that would entail a completed infinity: how could infinitely many days have passed?
That doesn't imply the philosophical analysis is wrong, it just means that we don't know of any particular limits
My opinions are consistent with the dominant opinion among philosophers prior to Cantor's set theory, but that doesn't seem like a very good reason to believe an actual infinity exists in the world.
"When you observe a particle of a certain type, say an electron, now and here, this is to be regarded in principle as an isolated event. Even if you observe a similar particle a very short time at a spot very near to the first, and even if you have every reason to assume a causal connection between the first and the second ob servation, there is no true, unambiguous meaning in the assertion that it is the same particle you have observed in the two cases. The circumstances may be such that they render it highly conve nient and desirable to express oneself so, but it is only an abbre viation of speech; for there are other cases where the 'sameness' becomes entirely meaningless; and there is no sharp boundary, no clear-cut distinction between them, there is a gradual transi tion over intermediate cases. And I beg to emphasize this and I beg you to believe it: It is not a question of being able to ascer tain the identity in some instances and not being able to do so in others. It is beyond doubt that the question of 'sameness', of identity, really and truly has no meaning."
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However, the cat might not be on the mat, and thus the assertion could be false. What makes the statement true or false? Whether the cat being referred to is actually on a mat. And that's a situation in the world, which we might call a state of affairs or fact of the matter. It is the world which makes statements about the world true or false. But this is the correspondence theory of truth. — Marchesk
The thing you missed here is the unspoken inference you make. The cardinality of the set of Natural Numbers is not infinity (which is defined as having no limits) as by referring to Natural Numbers you are limiting it to Natural Numbers alone. You are not including anything which is not a Natural Number, it does not include different colours, shapes, texture etc. It is a concept limited to that which is considered a natural number.
You can say that the numbers have no end.. or could go on forever.. or go on indefinitely.. but you cannot refer to them as infinite as you contradict yourself by describing them as such. As they are limited... to Natural Numbers. I am aware that mathematicians are fond of using the word infinite, but I would argue that its an illogical thing to do. As I think I have sufficiently shown.
No because then you're not talking about the infinite any more.
Consider the following:
1. There are two infinite numbers, A and B
2. A is not B, and B is not A.
3. A is larger than B.
this isn't a description of something without limits. You are specifically saying that A is limited to A and does not include B. And that B is limited to B and does not include A. These are limits.
You can say it has no limits in one specific sense but has limits in others, but then you are not referring to the infinite or to a limitless thing anymore.
You are if you are saying this thing has no limits when it defined within the specific limits of Real or Natural numbers as in the examples you gave. You are therefore saying that this thing is both limited and not limited simultaneously. Which is a contradiction. It cannot be A and ~A.
Of course [one] is correct. Logic has to rest on something. It’s not controversial, although it never ceases to surprise how many people seem to think it’s fishy or suspect.
That said, logic is not a form of omniscience. There may indeed be many things beyond logic, or for which logical analysis is unsuitable. But insofar as it is real, then the law of the excluded middle, or the law of identity, don’t need further justification - they simply are, they’re what Frege would regard as ‘primitive elements’, like natural numbers. If you ask why one and one equals two, the response can only be: just is so. — Wayfarer
You may consider it a working presumption, if you like, which enables all kinds of things, including our talk.
You actually said "No" in answer to the proposition that metaphysics is journeyed through by personal choice (as opposed to rational necessity) — Pseudonym
I wouldn't deny that *in general* preferences guide what we believe.I was just saying axioms in particularare not, necessarily, simply picked arbitrarily on grounds of preference. — MindForged
It's a very convoluted interpretation that has this exchange saying what you claim. Not only do you specifically make the claim that "both metaphysical theories and logical theories have the worth assessed via how virtuous their theories are." — Pseudonym
I wouldn't deny that *in general* preferences guide what we believe.I was just saying axioms in particular are not, necessarily, simply picked arbitrarily on grounds of preference. — MindForged
The arguments people use to justify their theories and the reason they chose them are not the same thing. — Pseudonym
If, however, you're claiming that regardless of how theories are actually chosen, they are defended using rational theory choice models, then your argument is a non sequitur, the OP is about how theories are chosen, not how they're defended. I very much doubt the OP was confused into thinking that philosophers actually admitted to his claim. — Pseudonym
Differences in choice of axioms must originate with our preferences (likes and dislikes).
Therefore, philosophy is not so much about rationality as it is about our personal preferences. — TheMadFool
Yet your claim is that it is responsible for selecting one set of axioms over another. I can't think of very much that matters more in explaining the differences in fundamental philosophical lines of thought, which is what the thread is about. — Pseudonym
A theory with little evidence that is organized and worded in a pleasing manner may very well get more attention than a theory with better evidence but poor organization. A theory that sparks the imagination, makes people really wonder, can be completely false yet nevertheless garner significant support. — darthbarracuda
Supposedly, the natural world is amoral and so the further away we keep scientific inquiry from morality, the better (or so it goes). — darthbarracuda
But "most rational" theory may still be give too much credence to the theory. Often theories are taken as true because they cohere well to other theories, and ultimately cohere with a naturalistic picture of the world. But the evidence going for it is still not very strong. — darthbarracuda
Why are they like this? Because relativism threatens the moral project. Under relativism, they can't argue for absolute moral truths. Why do religious fundamentalists hate atheists? Because atheism threatens the central pillar of Judeo-Christian-Islamic religious belief. As such theory in general is threatened by skepticism. Yet skepticism is ignored, treated as "childish". Why? — darthbarracuda
Literary flamboyance can be used to mask theoretical gaps.
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They may repeat banal observations at key points in time, so as to create the illusion of complexity. They may quote a long-dead poet to add intrigue, mystique or garner an impression of being a "worldly" person who has interests in a variety of tastes, when in reality, a poem by itself does not prove anything "scientifically" - it's fluff. — darthbarracuda
Sometimes, a theory is taken to be true in the absence of any other contenders. — darthbarracuda
Yet once again, its usefulness does not prove it is true. It merely means it is useful, which may be completely accidental. — darthbarracuda
By and large the assumption seems to be that the world is a rational place and thus can be ascertained and understood rationally, when in fact there is no possible evidence that could prove or disprove this assumption. — darthbarracuda
I don't know what model of theory choice you might be referring to, but I can't think of a single exposition to which "everyone" refers. There are perfectly well respected critics of pretty much every version from Popper to Becker. Its just wishful thinking to suggest we have some universally approved means of judging the value of theories (prior to formal proofs). — Pseudonym
the only difference being how highly respective parties rate particular theoretical virtues and how they conceive of them. — Me
The specific value given to each weight probably doesn't matter, all you need is to be able to give them different weights (of we have to get deep down, primitive recursive arithmetic is more or less never doubted). I already said people disagree on the particulars of this.And even if the above were the case (which I'm certain it isn't) then the weight to give to each factor would itself be axiomatic and so subject to rational choice theory, and so on.
So the popularity of theological-based metaphysics just about the time when most people were religious, and it's subsequent waning as atheism grows is just a coincidence?
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you're still trying to claim that philosophical theories are largely accepted or rejected on their virtues? — Pseudonym
I wouldn't deny that *in general* preferences guide what we believe.I was just saying axioms in particular are not, necessarily, simply picked arbitrarily on grounds of preference.
Even logically, axioms shouldn't lead to contradictions. — TheMadFool
In such cases isn't it personal preference, not rationale, that swings our vote? — TheMadFool
Reflexivity of the accessibility relation just says that the actual world (whatever that is) is always a possible world (whatever that is). So: — fdrake
You could say the same of any possible world, actuality becomes just an indexical property if its sense is equated with the reflexivity of an accessibility relation. — fdrake
physical possibility < metaphysical possibility < logical possibility — fdrake
possible is internalised to the world — fdrake
I think the whole attempt to cash out possibility in terms of possible worlds is a giant mistake, and that any analytic metaphysics that takes that route is basically a new scholasticism not deserving of being taken seriously. — StreetlightX
attempts to take seriously the need to account for the individuation of possibility. It does not take the possible as a 'given', simply waiting in the wings to be actualised, even if as a second-order 'non-live' possibility. In the scientific context in which the concept was elaborated, the adjacent possible is created or brought into being where it simply did not 'exist' before hand even qua possible
Or to put it otherwise, what I like about the adjacent possible is that it provides what I think is another, far superior, scientifically grounded way of thinking about possibility than the idealist logical toys of modern day analytic metaphysicians. — StreetlightX
that as enabling constraints “create” the Adjacent space of possibilities into which evolution can become. — Kauffman
You're saying that the respective axioms must cohere with each other and that counts as reasons supporting the entire collection of axioms. — TheMadFool
It, being the first, doesn't have the luxury of such a support structure because no other theories exist alongside it. — TheMadFool
metaphysics is a region of space which is filled with contradictory philosophies and there is no actual process by which we may verify or disconfirm theories in it. Such a place is journeyed through only per choice; no rationale. — TheMadFool
In other words, possibility itself can be thought of as indexed to the real, and is not simply 'prior' to it — StreetlightX
Axioms, by definition, have no supporting reasons. So, can't be rational. — TheMadFool
The interesting thing is that any two conflicting stances are reasoned positions. — TheMadFool
Therefore the difference between thesis and antithesis must lie with the axioms of the arguments offered in support of them. — TheMadFool
Differences in choice of axioms must originate with our preferences (likes and dislikes). — TheMadFool
It's not just the wealthy that have power, it's not that simple. The government is also an entity in its own that has power over the rich people, — BlueBanana
That's too deep underlying imo. It's the actions that matter more, not their reasons, especially if we're looking at the reasons for the fear of citizens. — BlueBanana
Charming" is probably not the word I would use. If the intention all along was to start a discussion about racial differences in intelligence, then "misleading" is more appropriate. — T Clark
What we have is something that clearly works, but we haven't got the vocabulary to express it mathematically. That's a mental state familiar to everyone who's ever had to construct a proof. We get to the point where we can SEE what's going on, but we can't mathematically SAY what's going on. That's where Newton and the mathematicians of the 18th and 19th century got stuck till they finally worked out a proper formalization. — fishfry
The Russell set is not what anybody had in mind when they first had the idea of sorting the world into classes. The Liar is not what anybody had in mind when they first had the idea of communicating a fact about the world to another person. What you're both missing is how perverse the paradoxical cases are — Srap Tasmaner
This means either our math is fundamentally wrong or it is incomplete. — Jeremiah
Ah ... a while back you objected that I misquoted you saying that incompleteness was on point here. But in fact I believe I was originally correct. You think this is about incompleteness. It's not. In incompleteness we fix a given system of logic (first-order predicate logic in fact) and draw conclusions about sets of axioms. In paraconsistent logic we alter the logical rules to obtain different theorems. That is not the same thing at all. — fishfry
Appreciate that! Of course that doesn't mean that 20 or 30 years from now we won't be teaching paraconsistent logic to the undergrads. But it doesn't have much debating force today. — fishfry
This is recency bias, not a reasonable explanation IMO. — fishfry
(Answering these together)Unrestricted comprehension "seems reasonable" till we prove it's not. You're privileging an incorrect intuition and saying, "Who are you going to believe, an absolute logical proof, or my vague intuitions?"
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Nice intuition, turns out to be false. No reason to privilege this intuitive error. You assume it and you derive a contradiction, so it's false.
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What do you mean by dismissing the possibility of paradoxes? — fishfry
Arggg! That's EXACTLY what I'm disputing. And even though it's still called a paradox, nobody treats it that way. We treat it as a rigorous and convincing demonstration that naive comprehension must be rejected. — fishfry
He got the point right away. You agree that Frege himself got the point right away. Yes? — fishfry
It would not be reasonable for a physicist to reject a method that works in practice simply because it lacks mathematical rigor.
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And for what it's worth, nobody rejected calculus; but they worked very hard for 200 years after Newton to get it straightened out. — fishfry