However, you might have a more restrictive notion of what it would take to resolve a philosophical issue than I do. You may even have a more restrictive notion of what counts as a philosophical issue in the first place. — jkg20
Wrong to us, yes. But this itself assumes some correspondence theory of truth about something "out there." — Xtrix
On the other hand, all action and investigation is conducted on the basis of tacit meanings -- otherwise it'd be a matter of pure instinct. — Xtrix
Right, in that case it was "consistent with the universe" too. — Xtrix
That alone makes examining how words are used a useful activity for philosophers to engage in. — jkg20
"Consistent with our universe" is meaningless. Maybe it implies some correspondence idea of knowledge, I don't know. — Xtrix
They don't exist? Do numbers exist? Depends on the meaning of "existence" -- which is a word, with various meanings. Guess that matters. — Xtrix
Regardless, your claim was that words and word usage doesn't matter. That's still completely wrong.. — Xtrix
That's just not true. If it were so easy as simply being a "matter of what kind of world we live in," then we'd all still believe in Ishtar and Yhw and a geocentric universe. — Xtrix
If I understand Wittgenstein correctly (and I might not), then it is not the subjective experience of dreaming that determines the meaning of the word. Obviously, we are all taught how to use language, including words such as 'pain', 'dream', and 'remember', by others who cannot access one's private sensations. This all relates to Wittgenstein's remarks on the misguided notion of a private language. — Luke
What's the problem, exactly? Someone has to tell us what "consciousness" is. Likewise with "God's existence." Why is that not a "hard problem"? It certainly was for centuries, but that essentially drifted away. — Xtrix
But as I've pointed out elsewhere, the very notion of subject/object, "inner and outer worlds," mind and body, etc., already presume an understanding of what it is to be. They themselves operate in the context of an ontology. In the West, at least, that ontology is still very much Greek. Until we understand this point fully, we're operating in a blind alley.
(This is not to say these problems don't exist, or that they're "wrong," by the way.) — Xtrix
This is the point of the conditional, that if the word has a use in these people's language, then the word "beetle" would not be the name of a thing and this thing does not belong to the language game at all. The word would not be used to refer to anything in particular, but would only refer generally to whatever is in a box, which could include nothing. As Wittgenstein says: "The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something" — Luke
If reality has no common natures,.why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
According to the eternal inflation model, which I tentatively accept as the best science we have at the moment, nothing caused the universe to expand initially because there is no initiation, runaway expansion has always been the normal state of the universe going back potentially forever. The big bang was a random temporary slowdown of a small part of it, which became our known universe, which has been slowly accelerating back up ever since and will someday resume that runaway expansion like everything else beyond it. — Pfhorrest
It seems to me the entire question of "why is there something rather than nothing" is just a result of a mistake in our reasoning. We tend to subconsciously reify categories and relational terms into ontological "things". In this case, we turned relative absence into it's own absolute thing "nothingness". — Echarmion
Questions (and answers) are not separable from semantics. — Janus
Forget about modal realism; there couldn't have been nothing simply because nothing cannot be; it's a contradiction in terms. — Janus
If modal realism is true, then the “innate potential for reality to exist” just consists of the trivial fact that there is no possible world at which there is no world, i.e. at every possible world there is some world, so some world or another existing is not only possible, but necessary. There couldn’t have been nothing. — Pfhorrest
I don't even understand how Adam's act of eating from the tree of good and evil was evil if he didn't know what evil even was until he ate the apple. — Hanover
Yeah, physicalism isn't the same thing as materialism. — Pfhorrest
then phenomenal experience is just the input into our function of signals from other functions of that structure, which in turn have their own inputs that constitute their own phenomenal experiences, and outputs that constitute their behaviors, which constitute all of their observable, empirical, physical properties. To do is to be perceived, to perceive is to be done unto, and to do or perceive or be perceived or be done unto is to be. — Pfhorrest
MUH is not incompatible with physicalism (it just reframes what physical things are), — Pfhorrest
Some, like Dennett, just don't accord "phenomenal consciousness" the kind of autonomous metaphysical status that philosophers like Searle, Nagel and Chalmers think it ought to have. — SophistiCat
Is this your position or your proposed reading of theirs? — bongo fury
Oh, I get it. You come to expose the illusionists, not to praise? — bongo fury
Your overly long analysis simply ignores the fact that economies are part of the natural ecology of the Earth. — Janus
There is no hard problem for a monist. — Harry Hindu
A picture in the head? — bongo fury
Wait, I thought we needed many people to tell us what an object is, yet now you are asking what an object is without people. You're not being consistent. — Harry Hindu
They even overlap providing fault-tolerant and reaffirming information about an object's location relative to the body — Harry Hindu
So it seems to me that a very important part of the description of some object is it's location relative to the body. — Harry Hindu
Maybe the problem (illusion) is assuming some kind of dualism, like subjective/objective, physical/mental, direct/indirect, etc., — Harry Hindu
What is an "experience"? What does it mean for an object (a brain) to have, or generate, an "experience"? — Harry Hindu
How is the brain different from the experience? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that if you claim that it is an illusion, then you know how to overcome the illusion and see things as they truly are. — Harry Hindu
What is it that is being misinterpreted, and what is it being misinterpreted as, — Harry Hindu
If we see light and not objects, mirages and bent sticks in water is what you would expect one to experience. — Harry Hindu
If we're having any kind of illusion at all, we are having *some* experience, regardless of how it relates to physical reality. And the having of experiences is the definition of consciousness. — Daz
Why do you ask? — Janus
You can always prove you are conscious to yourself because you are the one experiencing the phenomena you just can't prove it to other people/ give it third person accessibility — Forgottenticket
Because it builds on "problem of other minds" Chalmers' argument is set up in a way that it can't be refuted. He even said as such to another neuroscientist. — Forgottenticket
Fwiw, don't bother with Dennett if you're interested in anything mind related. if you look at his earlier psychology work he denies dreams exist during sleep ignoring a lot of empirical evidence they do. — Forgottenticket