Agreed, but does to exist carry the same meaning as to be named? I maintain that the objects in pictures meant to demonstrate human perception shouldn’t have names. Objects don’t come pre-named, right? — Mww
How does "shared experience" even make sense to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
You, and I honestly think ↪Manuel, and perhaps ↪Janus may well agree, that all those pictures on this thread that show objects outside the human skull, depicted as actual named objects, is catastrophically wrong. — Mww
I think I got you on this one. Who ever said Shakespeare or Cantor were great? That sounds like an appeal to authority to me. — green flag
Take the old fraud down a notch. — green flag
The way I'd try to solve that kind of problem is to say that the world seems to offer such richness and complexity that we'll never run out of novelty. I find it implausible (unimaginable?) that humans will ever be a loss for further inquiry. So the world is infinite, one might say, with no bound on the depth of its detail and so on. — green flag
Of course I like Wittgenstein. But that's like liking Shakespeare. To me it doesn't make sense as a polemical thing. One disagrees with this or that, but denying the quality altogether ? That'd be bold. Sort of like denying Cantor. — green flag
Still, all these layers are confusing. — green flag
Isn't it weird though to believe so passionately in something so methodically empty? — green flag
My position is that we see and touch and describe the world but can still say something wrong about it. The world is not constructed from private images of the world. Appealing initially, it makes no sense upon closer investigation. So how does it stay so popular ? Its tempting feature is perhaps The Given. — green flag
How does the 'occult sphere' of Consciousness figure into this ? Why are people attracted to a position which I'd say is refuted ? — green flag
Is the wall-of-sensation or wall-of-representation vision of reality attractive because it offers certainty ? — green flag
But something like ineffable Enlightenment is also possible in this vision of the possibility (perhaps the necessity) of privacy. In the secrecy of my immaterial soul I can know God and nobody can tell me wrong. — green flag
Chatbots 'must' not have consciousness, even as they threaten to explains themselves better than we can. The pre-solipsist 'must' have an interior which is invisible to 'physical' technology. — green flag
bout how to navigate the world fairly smoothly. But does it follow our perceptions give us accurate information about the world? Don't optical illusions, criticisms of naive realism, etc. show it does not? — Art48
The way I read Heidegger, the experience of persisting presence is a kind of illusion , or better yet, distortion, flattening, closing off of the what happens when we experience something as something. Experiencing the world is not accomplished by a subject directing itself toward objects. Dasein is not a consciousness but an in-between. Heidegger traces the modern idea of being as persisting presence to Descartes: — Joshs
Well it depends on what kind of thought. My junk thought doesn’t seem dualistic in any sense. When I’m contemplating myself or my world I’ll schematize the world that way, but that’s not my typical state. — Mikie
I think the point is that being is being-in-the-world-as-time-spirit-etc. Equiprimordiality may be the key thought ? — green flag
How do my words get to your control room ? Please give me the entire journey from my control room to yours. Where are these control rooms, please ? — green flag
What is a 'command of language' ? Another metaphor, this 'command.' — green flag
(1) No one denies that you can go on with your life and chug along in the usual idletalk and its average intelligibility. You might end with more money in your bank account and more friends.
(2) I claim that most of the real work in philosophy is semantic. You can prove God is dead or blue or made of numbers. Fine. But I want to know what you've proved exactly, as exactly as a finite human can manage in a finite time. Of course even here we have to choose what is worth clarifying in the first place.
(3) If the clarification of meaning is the essence of philosophy, then it makes sense to clarify clarification (seeing its own metaphorically, for instance) -- and to get a better sense of what sense is. This is fairly obviously Heideggarian, but that just means he found a good path to explore and not authoritative answers. — green flag
Well, I mean, it's not that we "can just be naive realists" - it's that we are naive realists the vast majority of the time, despite how incoherent it may be to us.
We don't have a choice.
Maybe if someone us mystical or something, maybe they can avoid being naive realists most of the time, we can't.
The funny thing is that really simple arguments begin to show how weak such belief actually is. — Manuel
I don't think you are seeing the issue.
Do you think are all trapped in individual control rooms ? Locked forever in sensations and concepts ?
Where do other people exist for you ? Only on your screen ? Is the idea that other people are trapped behind there screens something you see on your screen ? Or the truth about screens that transcends your screen ? — green flag
You claim that we "represent" an X that is otherwise completely unknowable. But somehow you believe there is a we in the first place, that we all represent this weird X. This, sir, is itself a claim about the world. — green flag
Your account leaves out how we have contact with one another in the first place. Do we have Kantian bodies in the thing-in-itself ? If so, we shouldn't be able to know that. If not, how do we 'meet' to create the intersection of our private representations of the one X that we seem to call the world in your account ? — green flag
Our perceptions of the world need not resemble the world in any way, in order for us to develop some sort of understanding. All that is required is consistency in usage. For example, the words we use, and mathematical symbols we use, do not resemble in any way the things they refer to, yet the usage of words and symbols develops into an understanding. This is the nature of "meaning", it is based in consistency of usage, not in resemblance. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yep. I was asking what those grounds actually are, in this case. I'm aware they will only ever be those grounds which 'seem to one to be grounds' but I haven't had any such grounds yet.
Saying "it seems to me" only tells me that there exist such grounds (in a rational person), it doesn't tell me what they are. — Isaac
. It seems clear to me that many of our perceptions have specific, enduring sources, and that specificity grounds our property concepts. — Dfpolis
Since when does "it seems to me" constitute grounds? — Isaac
Since when does "it seems to me" constitute grounds? — Isaac
But 'cause' and 'event' are terribly blurry. — green flag
The sign (the sentence) gets its significance from the system of signs, from the language to which it belongs. Roughly: understanding a sentence means understanding a language.... As a part of the system of language, one may say “the sentence has life”. But one is tempted to imagine that which gives the sentence life as something in an occult sphere, accompanying the sentence. But whatever would accompany it would for us just be another sign. — green flag
How does one establish or verify that X is the true form of wisdom without having that true form of wisdom ? — green flag
I think we can make true statements about the unobserved tree, based on our other observations. — Banno
How can one reconcile the scientific view, say that the the universe is billions of years old or that natural selection functions on individuals, with the idealist view that nothing exists without a mind to believe it exists? — Banno
No real disagreement but how does this reflect on our capacity to talk meaningfully about ontology and metaphysics? Nevertheless it often does seem a metaphysical puzzle that we are able to understand each other at all. No wonder some religious folk consider God foundationally necessary for intelligibility. — Tom Storm
Are you coming at this as a Kantian? — Tom Storm
What exactly do you mean by 'causal' or 'mechanical' though ?
The problem of meaning haunts everything, which is not to say that it itself is not haunted in return. But that gets us back to the structuralism half of my point. — green flag
Yes, that seems to be the hub of it to me - what correspondence is there between the world and language? It's a pretty tentative connection and interpretive and context dependent, but there's certainly an illusion of signifier and signified mating to produce meaning, even if the post-structuralists have demonstrated the limitations of this relationship. — Tom Storm
I hope and trust we are actually talking about the world and not our individual 'images' of the world. — green flag
The icon is as good a candidate for being the "real" word document as are the things in RAM, on the hard drive, on paper or emailed. — Banno
Just a suggestion. Let's call whatever it is that is behind the appearance of the rock, a "rock". — Banno
