Should there be a licence to have children? Short answer: yes. Will such a legislation ever be established in a nontotalitarian regime? No. — Janus
What personal characteristics would you look for in approving or disapproving parenthood? — BC
Do you think you are a competent prospective (or actual) parent? Why? — BC
But hasn't it been failing off and on for like 800 years? — frank
Would this be the right interpretation for Kant? — Corvus
My answer to that question was, when I am not perceiving the world, there is no reason that I can believe in the existence of the world. I may still believe in the existence of the world without perceiving it, but the ground for my belief in the existence is much compromised in accuracy and certainty due to lack of the warrant for the belief. — Corvus
A thing in itself is in fact the object = x which stands outside of our knowledge, over and against our representations, and which in some way we suppose corresponds to the knowledge that we have of it. That would be the straightforward Cartesian view of things. In Kant's theory, however, all those functions of an "object" have been taken over by the object-forming functions of synthesis, and Kant's own awareness of this is evident enough in his conclusion that things in themselves are not known by us and so do not, in any familiar fashion, correspond to our representations after all.
It is essential, therefore, that just how "realism" and "phenomenalism" are going to be distinguished from each other be pinpointed, both in Kant and in the larger picture of knowledge. Let me do this now by saying that the defining criterion for the difference, and the origin and essential feature of the whole matter, is as a question of existence: that we are all distinct, separate, and independent in existence from the things (except the body) that we know through perception. They can exist when we don't; and we can exist when they don't; and our veridical perceptions are supposed to represent them.
The difficulty of phenomenalism, where "the representation alone must make the object possible," is that this feature of existence is easily lost. Indeed, if what phenomenalism means is that the reality of an object is exhausted by its features in the representation of a subject, then it is hard to see how this differs from solipsism or subjective idealism
There's no doubt that the meaning of "cricket" is being extended but I don't think it is being transformed in quite the way that a metaphorical use would extend it. "Cricket" is defined as a noun and we understand how it is constituted. But "cricket" in Austin's example is being used as an adjective, in a different category. This change, or stretching, is different from a metaphorical use. — Ludwig V
He was certainly influenced by Wittgenstein; I'm not sure how much Austin was present in his thinking, although the separation of literal and pragmatic meaning can be traced to How to do things with words. — Banno
Are you studying pathology? — Vera Mont
You kind of reminded me to give more play to sunsets in the novel I've just started. — Vera Mont
this one takes place in the north-west of England - lots of hills and water, and no city lights. I wish I could go there to see what the light is actually like, but will have to settle for pictures. Don't we just love Google? — Vera Mont
t's a good read, showing that understanding a metaphor involves understanding its literal meaning. — Banno
.A metaphor makes us attend to some likeness, often a novel or surprising likeness, between two or more things. This trite and true observation leads, or seems to lead, to a conclusion concerning the meaning of metaphors. Consider ordinary likeness or similarity: two roses are similar because they share the property of being a rose; two infants are similar by virtue of their infanthood. Or, more simply, roses are similar because each is a rose, infants, because each is an infant
Perhaps, then, we can explain metaphor as a kind of ambiguity: in the context of a metaphor, certain words have either a new or an original meaning, and the force of the metaphor depends on our uncertainty as we waver between the two meanings. Thus when Melville writes that "Christ was a chronometer," the effect of metaphor is produced by our taking "chronometer" first in its ordinary sense and then in some extraordinary or metaphorical sense.
I cannot always leave the building in time so that I am there to witness the explosion. It's a grand show, no tickets needed. — L'éléphant
Not surprising, then, they figure so largely in painting and literature. — Vera Mont
The podcast 'philosophize this' by Stephen West is very interesting. — Double H
That would save time, effort, money and a possible health risk, depending on the age of the building. — Vera Mont
Anything before 1977-80 is likely to contain asbestos. — Vera Mont
Of course you could go deep burnt orange for the wall colour and that would be reminiscent of sunset. — Vera Mont
I don't take kindly to your mocking insult. — Massimo
but I smile whenever an explosion of crimson/salmon color so low that it's literally a backdrop of an otherwise plain road and buildings stops me in the middle of the road. — L'éléphant
I feel similiar. I'd never think of myself as a 'philosopher'; rather, at most, a lifelong freethinker. — 180 Proof
as a successful nihilist in search for something more, to overcome, to become, to learn to guarantee myself as a future. — Vaskane
Problem Solving. I'm interested in deep diving into problems and help overcome them. — Vaskane
As a metaphysician you should be careful of your tables of opposite values, they prime within you responses that trigger without thinking — Vaskane
The forum is definitely a lil intimidating — dani
What's your ideal trajectory for learning about philosophy? — dani
This is true, but it is also true that we don't need language in order to understand the act of cutting. Think beavers, for example, or leaf-cutter ants. — Janus
The problem then arises with the philosophical division between words and things. That's the bit that creates unnecessary problems. — Ludwig V
But words are also part of the world and words are also things in the world. The distinction between the two may have uses for certain purposes, but if misapplied, just generates false puzzles. — Ludwig V
Can you change the tree with words? Ordering it cut down will certainly change it. — Banno
You can't cut down a tree, or influence it in any way, with words. You can of course influence other language users with words, you can induce them to cut down the tree. So, it is of course true that we are influenced by our own words and the words of others, that is we are influenced by our understandings of the meanings of those words, and not by the words themselves as mere physical phemomena, whether they come in the form of visual symbols or sounds. — Janus
The point, way back, is that we do things with our utterances. — Banno
In the sense that we may act on other people (and some animals) with our utterances, such as to cause, or at least influence, them to do things, I agree. — Janus
I'm using all this as an excuse to write about trees I like...
My favourite kind of tree is the pine. It's partly to do with the beautiful coastal pine forests of the Mediterranean, which I experienced at about ten years old on holiday in Catalonia and never forgot. — Jamal
More recently, I had a couple of big sprawling pine trees in my garden in Spain, which harboured a small ecosystem of beasts and birds. — Jamal
I think I'm more of a sunrise man :grin: — Jamal
Please don't assume mathematicians are like this in general. Among then you will find musicians and artists. We are not bean counters. :cool: — jgill
she's just very young and earnest and has not yet discovered that you can have both scientific rigour and aesthetic awareness. — Vera Mont
There is nothing that anyone can do to make an object that has four equal length sides and simultaneously has zero equal length sides. — PL Olcott
I want to define a task that is logically impossible. — PL Olcott
Most people don't know what logically impossible means. — PL Olcott
I wanted to define a task that even God could not do. — PL Olcott
Larches are my favourite tree and they're magnificent in October. — Vera Mont
Almost bare now. — Vera Mont