Is the OP asking only for exegesis on the early Witti? Because his treatment of ostension became quite different, and pivotal, as he grew up. — Banno
Can you explain what it is you think Wittgenstein thinks is only names? — Banno
To understand the Tractatus is to transcend the text, to see the whole picture. — Banno
Would that we could avoid "...isms"; it's not clear what sort of nominalism Q. meant.
I don't think that Q's conclusion follows. As I mentioned before, Wittgenstein is setting out that the primary metaphysical consideration is not things, but predications to things. Now predicates include relations between things. It's not obvious that this is a rejection of holism.
Indeed it is arguable that the conclusion of the Tractatus is holistic. — Banno
But the claim is that the fact that the tree fell is a fact that depends on there being a witness. So the antecedent in your statement ("if a tree falls in a forest and nobody is there to witness it") can never obtain. That this antecedent entails the consequent is irrelevant. — Michael
The question is "can a tree fall in a forest without witnesses?", not "if a tree falls in a forest without witnesses, does it fall?" The latter is just a logical matter, not a factual matter. — Michael
The question is whether or not the antecedent can obtain ("a tree falls in a forest and nobody is there to witness it"), not whether or not the antecedent entails the consequent. — Michael
Actually, I did in my first post, and you just confirmed I was right by showing that another English phrase ("it has fallen") could represent the action, meaning "it fell" doesn't succeed in fully representing it. And there are thousands more such phrases in English that could partially represent the action but fail to fully represent it as my first post and your last posts have just shown. — Thanatos Sand
Then you should be silent as you've shown a clear incapability of discussing the matter. And if you think observation fully elucidates representation, you should remain silent on those matters, too. — Thanatos Sand
the physical reality that the phrase "it falls" does not fully capture the physical dynamics of the tree falling. — Thanatos Sand
No, that's not semantics; it's linguistic reality. I'm sorry you can't get that. — Thanatos Sand
It's also physical reality since "it falls" doesn't come close to even representing the action that occurs. — Thanatos Sand
The tree physically moves in that way "it falls" aims to represent, but the action itself is not fully represented by the phrase "it falls;" "it falls" only fully represents the symbols of the English language working to point to other symbols in the English language to best represent the action of the tree. — Thanatos Sand
That seems to me like you didn't write what you wanted to write there. If you believe that if nobody is around to hear a tree fall, it still falls regardless of our observation, then it wouldn't be the case that you have a hard time seeing facts as observer-independent. So I'm not sure what you're saying there. — Terrapin Station
This makes absolutely no logical sense to me. Why couldn't one believe that universal, mutually dependent and holistic facts exist? I have no idea what you're thinking there implicationally. — Terrapin Station
So one might say that the proposition that grass is green is made true by the fact that grass is green. But then what is the difference between the fact that grass is green and the green grass? Are they the same thing? If so, and if the latter is a thing, then facts are things. Are they different? If so, can we deduce the observer-independence of the fact from the observer-independence of the thing (assuming, for the sake of argument, that green grass is observer-independent)? To answer the latter we must first determine how the fact that grass is green differs from the green grass. — Michael
The world does not consist of individuals - cats , mats, and so on; but of cats on mats.
Facts, unlike individuals, have predicate content. — Banno
There is a scene in the movie Dr. Strange Love where he talks about how any country (I believe he is referring to one of the more powerful industrialized nations) can build a doomsday weapon ; which in the movie was supposedly a massive nuclear weapon filled with radioactive Cobalt which "supposedly" could render much of the earth unlivable for tens to hundreds of years.
Little did people know that this "doomsday weapon" in the movie was based an ACTUAL weapon being consider by the USSR at the time. It was never built because the primer at the time thought it was too crazy which is kind of funny since he was know for taking off his shoe and beating his desk with it to get attention while at the UN. — dclements
Are you kidding? The nuclear weapons, instead of being amassed by just a few super powers, are now in many different hands. The great fear of annihilation which we had in the sixties and seventies has just been replaced by complacency, because it hasn't happened. — Metaphysician Undercover
Distinct from what object? The assigned value is what can be said about red that is distinct from the red sports car? Or is it what can be said about red that is distinct from every red item? — Banno
Is it? That's not how, for example, Searle used the term. — Banno
Further, what is the assigned value of a property, as distinct from the property? — Banno
Or are you saying that a brute fact is a property and an individual of which that property is true? — Banno
But if that is the case, how does a brute fact differ from a fact per se? — Banno
