For what it’s worth, Grice says something like this too with his thing about “natural meaning” and “non-natural meaning”. He claims a kind of continuity between “clouds mean rain” and “‘clouds’ means clouds”. (Heidegger slips ‘signs’ and ‘symbols’ into that torturous discussion of phenomena and appearance, so we’re not far off.) — Srap Tasmaner
Being isn't any-thing, including a "happening," including "becoming," including "change." It is very much like nothing. We interpret this "nothing," but that's all we can say about it. — Xtrix
Who, as I said, got it from Husserl.
I'm not much interested in who said it first, so much as who said it best - the point is to be clear about what is being claimed. — Banno
Davidson phrased the same point in a less misleading way when he pointed out that the world is always, already, interpreted. — Banno
What would it mean for it to have a fixed identity? If we say
that it is composed of subatomic particles , do these particles have a fixed identity? Let’s say a quark exists for a millisecond. Does it have an identity that endures for this span of time? — Joshs
The crucial hermenuetic point is that Buddhism never posits any everlasting entity, thing, or object. — Wayfarer
What if the object doesn’t crumble into pieces? Does it have an identity up till the time it crumbles? If the identity doesn’t lie in the thing , where does it lie? — Joshs
It sounds trite compressed to a few lines but I think it makes an important point regardless. The point I take from it, is that the natural acceptance of the reality of the objects of perception has to be modulated by critical awareness of the role of our own faculties in arriving at such judgement. This is something like what I believe is meant by 'critical realism'. — Wayfarer
We can say that ‘something’ is there to act as affordances or constraint on our accounts, but we can’t identify it as a field , since that’s already an account. — Joshs
I mean, the horror of the realization that nobody will ever love or value me nearly as much as they do themselves. That in the end, myself, my life, and my hopes don't mean a shit to anybody else...that to them, I am just an object to be used in the achievement of their ends, and am otherwise utterly expendable. — Michael Zwingli
Though of course we don't actually "see" potential uses; we consider that what we see may, in the future, be used in certain ways. — Ciceronianus
'The deathless' is an apt synonym for 'eternal joy' and is plainly spelled out as the fullfilment of Buddhist life. — Wayfarer
Three guys looking at a field. One is a real estate developer, one a cattle farmer, and one a geologist. Even though they're looking at the same scene, they all see different things, because they're looking at it from different perspectives. That's an analogy for the sense in which 'the world' is, for us, a construction, 'vorstellung' in Schopenhauer. Having insight into how we construct it is what wisdom is, according to him. — Wayfarer
My belief, along the lines of Kant's phenomenon and noumenon, is that all understanding we have of complex objects in the world is fictive, whether "unicorns", "tables" or "multiverses". — RussellA
However, even if our understanding of complex objects in the world is fictive, this is independent of the question as to whether such complex objects as unicorns, tables and multiverses actually exist as facts in the world. — RussellA
Quantum mechanics, like any physical theory, comes equipped with many metaphysical assumptions and implications. The line between metaphysics and physics is often blurry, but as a rough guide, one can think of a theory's metaphysics as those foundational assumptions made in its interpretation that are not usually directly tested in experiment.
If by metaphysical all that is meant is ' something not directly observable", which might be better termed 'metaempirical' then fine. — Janus
You have been reading to much Nazi material- - - lol!! — boagie
How can we talk about "multiverses" when multiverses are unknowable ? — RussellA
If this is to be argument by definition, then I’m happy with the usual position that metaphysics is an inquiry into the nature and causes of being, Then as a debate, transcendence vs immanence is one of its familiar organising dichotomies, — apokrisis
They certainly ought to constrain what would be considered credible.
Like after Darwin, you might quarrel about how humans arose from apes. But no longer do you need to worry about the mechanics of turning ribs into first wombs. — apokrisis
