As Dylan said, "Don't criticize what you can't understand." — Hanover
The brain, more important than the mouth, is the brain. The brain is much more important.
If only statements can be truth-apt, and a state of affairs is not a statement, then a state of affairs cannot be truth-apt — Sapientia



And then he got rid of atomic facts - see Philosophical investigations. — Banno
This remark provides the key to the problem, how much truth there is in solipsism. For what the solipsist means is quite correct; only it cannot be said, but makes itself manifest. The world is my world: this is manifest in the fact that the limits of language (of that language which alone I understand) mean the limits of my world. (5.62)
The world and life are one. (5.621)
Original German: Die Welt und das Leben sind Eins.
I am my world. (The microcosm.) (5.63)
Original German: Ich bin meine welt (Der Mikrokosmos.)
The subject does not belong to the world, but it is a limit of the world. (5.632) — Wittgenstein
We get "world" for all obtaining atomic facts; "reality" for all obtaining and not obtaining atomic facts; I think it turns out "state of affairs" is kept around for its useful ambiguity: it covers the case where you only have a subspace defined, the case where only the positive facts are defined, and the case where absolutely everything is defined. — Srap Tasmaner
Here's one thing I keep thinking about: can we think "state of affairs" as always short for "state of affairs in logical space"? — Srap Tasmaner
If I put it politely for you, it is play that is the beginning of knowledge. Play is imitation, recitation, messing about. — unenlightened
One does not go looking for Roderickite that one has no idea what it is, one plays in the sand and something different comes out of that, and one calls it Roderickite. — unenlightened
If there is any knowledge which bears the mark of truth, if the intellect does have a way of distinguishing the true and the false, in short, if there is a criterion of truth, then this
criterion should satisfy three conditions: it should be internal, objective, and immediate.
It should be internal. No reason or rule of truth that is provided by an external
authority can serve as an ultimate criterion. For the reflective doubts that are essential to
criteriology can and should be applied to this authority itself. The mind cannot attain to
certainty until it has found within itself a sufficient reason for adhering to the testimony
of such an authority.
The criterion should be objective. The ultimate reason for believing cannot be a
merely subjective state of the thinking subject. A man is aware that he can reflect upon
his psychological states in order to control them. Knowing that he has this ability, he
does not, so long as he has not made use of it, have the right to be sure. The ultimate
ground of certitude cannot consist in a subjective feeling. It can be found only in that
which, objectively, produces this feeling and is adequate to reason.
Finally, the criterion must be immediate. To be sure, a certain conviction may rest
upon many different reasons some of which are subordinate to others. But if we are to
avoid an infinite regress, then we must find a ground of assent that presupposes no
other. We must find an immediate criterion of certitude.
Is there a criterion of truth that satisfies these three conditions? If so, what is it? — Cardinal D. J. Mercier
The method of F-ing about is how it actually works. — ChatteringMonkey
Don't start with knowledge at all, start with a method - the method of no method. — unenlightened
"Fuck about and see what happens." There's your solid foundation. Then start giving names to what happens when you fuck about like this. — unenlightened
Orgasms are proof that God wants us to be happy. — Bitter Crank
There is no question whatsoever of QM 'definitively affirming' your conjecture. — andrewk
Uhm...
Sex is fun, not a sterile fertilization ritual. :roll:
Deny natural fun all you like, it's just self-alienating. — jorndoe
I think I am a dissolutionist about this problem. To pose the problem is already to have distinguished properties of knowledge that make it different, and thus to already have both a sample and some criteria and a method. — unenlightened
To deny it is to deny knowing what the problem is that one is posing. It is to talk of 'knowledge' whilst denying that there is knowledge. That's nonsense. — unenlightened
Both are two sides of the same coin and only together can we make a purchase. — TheMadFool
What I'm saying is there's a plethora of ''particulars'' in favor of the logical method. — TheMadFool
Said differently, logic works as the method to prove the truth of propositions. — TheMadFool
