n other words, the whole point of existence is that question. — Dharmi
Socrates went to his death asking those questions, and all should model his life in that regard. He never said, "I don't know the answer yet, so I guess I'll just stop asking the questions." That's laziness. That's a cop-out. That's what I'd call philosophical suicide. — Dharmi
I don't know why theists think "God" will guarantee the validity of science. — Gregory
A number is simply a concept. There's no difficulty that I can see here. — Olivier5
That sounds both defeatist and strangely preposterous. — Olivier5
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squaring_the_circle[The first of these two misguided visionaries filled me with a great ambition to do a feat I have never heard of as accomplished by man, namely to convince a circle squarer of his error! The value my friend selected for Pi was 3.2: the enormous error tempted me with the idea that it could be easily demonstrated to BE an error. More than a score of letters were interchanged before I became sadly convinced that I had no chance. — Carroll
You're right, he is not addressing the point as such but then both guys are talking past each other, which seems the necessary end result of competing epistemologies like this. I am more in sympathy with Norm's worldview than Dharmi's. — Tom Storm
and this range of contexts has a certain stability , at least enough of one to appear to him to indicate grounded truths. — Joshs
He is likely hearing you saying that we have to dissolve that stability( thus the accusation of nihilism), when in fact to follow Wittgenstein here would be to respect that relative contextual stability and show how we can see our concepts as intertwined in much more intimate ways as interpersonally founded events than as the abstractive templates that dualist thinking sees them as. So what you are doing isnt substituting chaos for his ordered truths , as it appears to him, but enriching and interrelating his
notions. The problem , though , is that the most superordinate understandings that we carry with us are very resistant to transformation. — Joshs
Sometimes numbers/equations are needed to describe a system, sometimes graphs are. We can't avoid the pictures. — Ryan O'Connor
It's only obvious to me because I only know a handful of real numbers so I assume you're talking about sqrt(2). But it's not a matter of laziness, no finite amount of terms would have allowed me to eliminate any possibility. From this view (when there is no algorithm) it seems like the only important number in a Cauchy sequence is the last one...and there is no last one! Anyway, sorry for putting you in a position having to defend a position you don't support! — Ryan O'Connor
Yes, something magical happens at infinity... — Ryan O'Connor
I think this question is very important. In my view, the topological graphs that I drew actually exist. The geometric graphs that we imagine imagining don't exist, but they are incredibly convenient approximations of what we could do in reality to topological graphs. — Ryan O'Connor
True, but what if we reinterpret real numbers as real processes which describe continua, not points? Wouldn't we be able to keep the same math? Can't we just say that our algorithms for calculating the 'number' pi can never output the number completely and that pi actually corresponds to those (potentially infinite) algorithms? Why do we need the number pi anyway? We have never precisely used it as a number anyway. — Ryan O'Connor
Weird stuff, IMHO. Low priority in the world of mathematics. — jgill
However, just a few points on the wiki page seem concerning to me, like I have no problems with discontinuous functions but I do have a problem with infinitesimals. — Ryan O'Connor
For Riemann integrals, how do we know that it corresponds to a real number if we are only ever able to approximate it? — Ryan O'Connor
Okay, but then making things even more unclear doesn't help anyone solve those problems. This is one thing Wittgenstein is right about. Trying to conjure up obscurantistic vocabulary to bewilder and confuse, doesn't help one get closer to the truth. — Dharmi
No, you just clearly say what you mean. — Dharmi
This really isn't a language problem, thought. I know full well what I mean by "it hurts to stub my toe" and I also know full well the meaning of "how does matter produce my subjective experiences?" There's no vagueness there. Even if I can't communicate to someone else what my subjective experiences are like, I certainly know what they're like for me. So the question "how does matter cause subjective experiences?", for anyone who has subjective experiences, is a meaningful question that needs to be answered. — RogueAI
It seems like you're just a usual academic obscurantist. — Dharmi
What my position is, is very clear: whether we come to know the meaning/purpose/nature etc. of existence or not, we shouldn't give up on that question. — Dharmi
It's possible that getting that answer is impossible. But that doesn't mean we throw in the towel, and accept nihilism. — Dharmi
Nice quote. — Tom Storm
Does it ever come to you that you're looking at yourself when you look at others? — frank
And he said, "Whoever finds the interpretation of these sayings will not experience death."
— Gospel of Thomas
That sounds kind of crazy until you compare it to:
Blessed are the meek
For they shall inherit the earth.
How do you inherit the earth? What do you do with it once you've got it? — frank
I think ordinary language should be the default starting position. J.L.Austin explains why: — Andrew M
Knowledge is never about ultimate truth, it is about what we can justify with reasonable confidence. — Tom Storm
My favorite quote from Hume:
“ For my part, when I enter most intimately into what I call myself, I always stumble on some particular perception or other, of heat or cold, light or shade, love or hatred, pain or pleasure. I never can catch myself at any time without a perception, and never can observe any thing but the perception…. If any one, upon serious and unprejudic'd reflection thinks he has a different notion of himself, I must confess I can reason no longer with him. All I can allow him is, that he may be in the right as well as I, and that we are essentially different in this particular. He may, perhaps, perceive something simple and continu'd, which he calls himself; tho' I am certain there is no such principle in me.” — Joshs
But again, this is where idealism has an advantage. We can ask "what is matter," we can ask "what is mind," but in the end, we know mind exists. We can't be wrong about that. — RogueAI
After all, I create worlds populated by real-seeming people in my dreams, so isn't it entirely possible I'm still doing all that even when I think I'm awake? I think the knowledge of dreaming strengthens the idealist position. If world-building during sleep is a thing, than world-building during non-sleep (or what we think is non-sleep) is definitely on the table. — RogueAI
I posted a message on my messaging app and someone responded with "no comment" but isn't "no comment" itself a comment? Is not taking sides tantamount to creating a side, a side that takes no sides? There's a difference between remaining silent and uttering the words, "I don't want to say anything". It's like saying, "I'm not exhaling" but to say that one has to exhale.
Comments... — TheMadFool
But obviously we're not satisfied with that. We want to shrink this interval as much as possible. And we can do so by making cuts closer and closer to x=47 and finding the average velocity across those shrinking intervals. This is what the limit describes (in my construction), it is a potentially infinite process.
What calculus does is describe the potential of that process. — Ryan O'Connor
Imagine that lines are fundamental, not composite objects. Take a string and mentally label the two endpoints -∞ and ∞. In my world, this string only has two points - the endpoints (I'd actually call them pseudo-points but that's not important here). — Ryan O'Connor
With a certain aplomb. I admire his spirit while avoiding his critiques. :cool: — jgill
You might be interested in this perspective as it offers a different perspective (granted, probably wrong and certainly half-baked). Nevertheless, I'd love to hear your thoughts on this view, especially if you can find flaws in it...but no pressure at all! — Ryan O'Connor
In this view of mind-body-environment no clear-cut interior or exterior can be discerned. — Joshs
I'm not asserting the existence of just one mind. I'm claiming that we know for certain that at least one mind exists. There might be one, there might be billions of minds, but there can't be zero minds. That's powerful. We don't have that kind of certainty about the existence of anything else, except logical/mathematical truths. — RogueAI
I don't agree. I don't think our situation is that hopeless. — RogueAI
I'd be more keen to have thousands spent on keeping me alive so I can hike Dartmoor with my family than having the same money spent so I can watch daytime TV and complain about my arthritis. — Isaac
yah it's all relative, and that's exactly my point, I only see my level of happiness relative to my own prior level of happiness declining as my body breaks down. There was a guy in his early 60's in my gym who said that every month he got a little weaker...I'd rather not.
The little lady will be fine, if I really decide to go down this path, I won't let her stick around, I will set her free to find a new partner. — dazed
yeah I was raised a theist and my brain became a little hard wired with the God gives meaning and purpose to everything and now that's been taken away, and I face the reality that we are complex machines, it does seem all rather hollow in contrast — dazed
my brother!
my wife also hates when I talk this way
and I also love the sense of freedom that comes with conscious recognition of the choice to choose the timing of your exit — dazed
Were you born into it? Or did you join as an adult? — frank