Pluarity is impossible because we are dealing with explanation. One cannot have two forms of explanation. If something is explained, true, etc., it is so in the same sense: the thing in question has been accounted for. — TheWillowOfDarkness
My Spinozisic intentions must not have been clear enough...
Pluarity is impossible because we are dealing with explanation. One cannot have two forms of explanation. If something is explained, true, etc., it is so in the same sense: the thing in question has been accounted for. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Correct. More than one substance is incoherent. :clap: — TheWillowOfDarkness
Ordinary objects and fundamental particles are on the same level, each is a thing we may describe. Fundamental particles are really just another ordinary object. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Stop using it to do things we cannot do with it.
— creativesoul
You mean don't use mountains when doing philosophy? — Marchesk
It's an issue of whether nature is the way we conceptualize it to be. — Marchesk
The problem with real mountains as objects is where to draw the line on what constitutes a mountain versus a hill or some other formation. — Marchesk
Whoops, I apologize. That was meant for Wayfarer — PessimisticIdealism
Well, it's a problem with how we're talking about the world and/or ourselves. Typically, I fix such problems by changing how I talk.
— creativesoul
One way would be to stop using the word mountain. — Marchesk
Analysis of how the word mountain is used? — Marchesk
I agree that that's the real problem. Where we will inevitably disagree is how to solve the problem.
— creativesoul
What's the solution? Analysis of how the word mountain is used? — Marchesk
You are exactly right, Creativesoul. — PessimisticIdealism
Alright, so do mountains exist? And by mountains, I don't mean the rocks, dirt, snow making them up. I mean do objects called mountains exist?
What's the issue here? It's an issue of whether nature is the way we conceptualize it to be. The problem with real mountains as objects is where to draw the line on what constitutes a mountain versus a hill or some other formation. — Marchesk
To put my objection another way: the realist position doesn't hinge on finding something out about the world (about X and what we don't/know of it); it hinges on finding something out about ourselves. — StreetlightX
What is there to say about ancient people’s assuming that our vision ‘shone outward’ rather than light ‘shining inward’? — I like sushi
a much better understanding of all the things which are existentially dependent upon and/or consist of both the objective and the subjective.
— creativesoul
You don't seem to have discarded the distinction between the objective and the subjective. Can you rephrase the above sentence without using the terms "subjective" and "objective"? If not, and you need to use the terms, then they will be of no use unless you maintain the distinction between them. — Janus
There are countless historical records of things existing unbeknownst to humans that killed vary large numbers of them long before we gained enough knowledge of those things to name them and eradicate or treat them effectively. That's more than adequate ground for believing that some things(Mt. Everest included) exist in their entirety prior to our awareness of them.
— creativesoul
You probably won't get this, but the point of the anti-realist position is that your mind, or rather, human knowledge generally, is providing the background, as it were, against which all such judgements are made. Where, after all, does 'the historical record' reside? — Wayfarer
What kind of realist are you then? — PessimisticIdealism
"Mt. Everest" picks out a particular mountain. That mountain existed in it's entirety prior to being named.
— creativesoul
I agree, but where does nature draw the line on what is Mt. Everest and what isn't? — Marchesk
The objective/subjective distinction is rendered inherently inadequate in that it's use cannot take proper account of what all experience consists of.
Discard it.
— creativesoul
Fine. Go ahead. Try discarding it. — Mww
You're going to have to replace it with something... — Mww
Pure reason? As in reasoning from an armchair?
— creativesoul
No, that’s just plain ol’ run-of-the-mill thinking, or, practical reason. No one consciously thinks in terms of merely theoretical pure reason, armchair-bound or otherwise.... — Mww
What are logical forms taking account of?
— creativesoul
Illogical thought; irrational reasoning. — Mww
"Mt. Everest" picks out a particular mountain. That mountain existed in it's entirety prior to being named.
— creativesoul
That doesn't really answer Marchesky's question. How do we know that that mountain existed before we knew about it? — Michael
I don't see the problem here. — Chris Hughes
The works of Shakespeare (the product of his mind) are the subject of the monkeys/typewriters thought experiment, which is used by many scientists to defend the idea that DNA code could arise by chance, given a very long time.
How do we know that Mt. Everest existed before we knew about it? — Marchesk
That question doesn't make sense to me. Does it to you? Is that what you meant to ask?
— creativesoul
No, but I can substitute real in there: How dow we know Mt. Everest to be real? — Marchesk
Oh okay, Cart, horse, idealists being trampled. — Marchesk
If it is the case that Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety prior to it's discovery, then it does not matter what one's philosophical bent may be... Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety regardless of whether or not one believes that.
— creativesoul
Agreed, but three possible objections:
1. How do we know that to be the case? — Marchesk
...time is somehow dependent on the perspective of an observer...
— Wayfarer
No. No. No. No.
— creativesoul
You panic because your sense of the nature of reality is being called into question. Do not adjust your set, this is a philosophy forum and it's normal programming. — Wayfarer
...time is somehow dependent on the perspective of an observer... — Wayfarer
Please set out the referent for the term "that". I
— creativesoul
Oh okay, Cart, horse, idealists being trampled.
Mount Everest is the reference of "that". How do we know that Mt. Everest existed before we knew about it? — Marchesk
"How do we know that to be the case?"
If it is the case that Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety prior to it's discovery, then it does not matter what one's philosophical bent may be... Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety regardless of whether or not one believes that.
— creativesoul
Agreed, but three possible objections:
1. How do we know that to be the case?
2. What if the concept of things existing independent of us (or perception) was incoherent?
3. What if mountains and everyday objects is just a human (or animal) carving up of the world?
All of these arguments have been made against mountain realism. I'm not saying they necessarily exceed, only that it's a contentious topic in philosophy. — Marchesk
Well, in the context of subjective experience, humans, since we know that for ourselves. Most likely other animals, given similar enough biology and behavior. But we don't have a means of being sure. Thus "what it's like" to be a bat.
But we can stick with humans as perceivers — Marchesk
We certainly have had such arguments on the old forum regarding Everest, apples and chairs. They tended to go over a 100 pages.
But yes, for everyday object realists, the mountain existed prior to humanity. — Marchesk
Experience is a quality?
Consisting entirely of Quale?
— creativesoul
I don't know, but it's something perceivers generate in the act of perception, memory, imagination, dreams, hallucinations, etc. — Marchesk