I had a precisely 2 dreams which I have not forgotten in roughly 50 years which concerned "possible worlds" -- alternative routes that I could take. — Bitter Crank
Mostly I think dreams should not be taken seriously. — Bitter Crank
So, to save the PSR all we need to do is say that the agent is the sufficient cause of his or her choice. One can deny this, but not on the ground of the PSR. One simply has to decide if agents can determine their own choices or not. If they can, they are sufficient to the task of making the choice. If they cannot, there is no free will. Either way, the PSR is unviolated. — Dfpolis
My first forum post, way back, was about the reality of number. I argued that numbers are real on the basis that they are the same for anyone who can count, and also because they make actual predictions; to put it another way, because you can be wrong about them, then they are real. If I ask you to show me a number, you will point to a symbol - but that is what it is, a symbol. The number itself is a quantity which can only be grasped by a mind that is capable of counting. So on that basis, I argued that numbers are real but not existent - at least, not existent in the way that tables, chairs, and stars are existent, because they only exist in and for a rational intellect.
And indeed on that basis, I then went on to argue that God might also be ‘real but not existent’, but I’ll save that for later. — Wayfarer
The problem is that to avoid an infinite regress, you need at least one self-explaining fact that explains all below it. — Dfpolis
My dictionary (Concise Oxford English Dictionary 11th Edition) implies there's a significant difference in the mode of operation of these two schools of thought.
That is:
Stoicism => an ancient Greek school of philosophy which taught that it is wise to remain indifferent to the vicissitudes of fortune and to pleasure and pain.
Cynic (Cynicism) => a member of a school of ancient Greek philosophers characterized by an ostentatious contempt for wealth and pleasure. — BrianW
I think, in principle, the different attitudes make them quite distant from each other but I suppose in practice, due to convergence from human interactions, they may have many characteristic points of similarity. However, I feel it's somewhat a negative transition for a stoic to become a cynic and would rather suppose the reverse to be more acceptable. — BrianW
"God" and "two" exist as words in a language. And as such, they mediate some pragmatic conceptual relation we might have with the real world. — apokrisis
Now of course you can go on from that to talk about whether they in fact relate us conceptually to the "real world" or just "metaphysically possible worlds", or whatever other kind of world you want to then name. — apokrisis
But that boils down to modality. Two-ness is being conceived of as completely generic - true of all possible worlds (where counting would work). And God is conceived of as completely fictional - not actually true of the actual world ... for the atheist at least. — apokrisis
So semiosis provides the larger encompassing framework already. It subsumes "material realities of the world" and "abstractions of the mind" into an over-arching semiotic relation. It cannot be a simple case of either/or - either God and two physically exists, or else mentally exists. It is already being said that for the words to exist, and be used within a language system, requires that both the mind and the world are "places" where they "exist". The existence is in fact the process which is a relation that works. Something about the world, and something about the mind, must be in fruitful co-ordination. — apokrisis
Of course - the next familiar Kantian difficulty - it is the "world" as it is for "us".
So it is the world as the phenomenal or an Umwelt, not the world as the noumenal. And it is us as an emergent modeller, not us as some Cartesian and unphysical res cogitans. — apokrisis
Well "maths, numbers" are clearly a useful "abstraction of the mind" concept or universal. Whether numbers "exist" or are "actual" generally tends to be a word or language game. — prothero
...or demonstrably useful?
(Again, is there a good reason to debate realism vs idealism for the billionth time when you have pragmatism as the better choice?) — apokrisis
What was your purpose then? — apokrisis
Hahaha. As dialectically clear as can be. — Modern Conviviality
Can you find a use for them? Is there a meaning beyond that use? — apokrisis
To be free of feeling, then, is to be free of this enslavement, to no longer care, and no longer care that one does not care. Indifference is the "highest" form of consciousness because the subject is quite literally free of the world itself. They have "woken up" from the nightmare. — darthbarracuda
We put arbitrary, fiat-like value on a goal to keep our minds at peace and impose stability. If we are to truly look at what we are doing, we are constantly thinking of ways to make sure we have something to work towards. — schopenhauer1
The foreign exchange market doesn't do that? — Purple Pond
What do you think? What makes paper bills valuable? — Purple Pond
Want me to pass you an ice cold CEZKA? — Sir2u
I'll accept this as authoritative (for now). — tim wood
So I'm having difficulty with the idea of "a necessary outcome." — tim wood
Let's be absurd for a moment. Imagine you're compelled to beat me with a stick to force me to acknowledge a certain truth (that through the benefit of the beating I do finally see and acknowledge as a truth). Is that a Rogerian agreement? — tim wood
Do you mean conducted in a Rogerian manner, or end with a Rogerian product, notwithstanding the how it's got? — tim wood
"Charade"? I noted what people seem to do (how they actually live their lives), and (if my observation is accurate) this is what is. Your mention of "competent minds" and "charades" looks a lot like what you think ought to be. OK, drop the insulting vocabulary and tell us why you think this is wrong. Better still, tell us why you disagree with (what looks like, to me) the vast majority of humans, and how they choose to live their lives? — Pattern-chaser
