If meaning and acts of interpretation are physically inexplicable, it implies the existence of a nonphysical thing, oui? — Agent Smith
Matter is the substance of which all physical objects are composed. The density of matter is the ratio of its mass to volume and is a measure of the composition of matter and the compactness of the constituent entities in it. — Garrett Travers
If meaning and acts of interpretation are physically inexplicable, it implies the existence of a nonphysical thing, oui? — Agent Smith
This is a philosophy forum, I don't come here for lessons in high-school physics. — Wayfarer
I'm not interested in engaging with you, that is correct, nor anyone else who thinks Ayn Rand is a philosopher. — Wayfarer
And you are disengaging because your position has been defeated. — Garrett Travers
If you thinking that is the price to pay for never talking to you again, I'm very happy for you to think it. — Wayfarer
Right. Hence, dualisms of various schools. That is not self-contradictory but it contradicts materialism. — Wayfarer
Reminds me of the fairy tale the Emperor has no clothes. It's not that meaning and acts of interpretation are nonphysical, it's just that you're too stupid to see their physicality. :grin: — Agent Smith
This is because you're angry that Ayn Rand is a superior philosopher to the Buddah...in every single way conceivable. — Garrett Travers
I'm happy just knowing that the nonphysical is possible i.e. it doesn't entail a contradiction as such.
The next step would be to prove that if possible that p then necessary that p [◇p →→ □p] aka Modal Realism. — Agent Smith
I think what you're grappling with is how to even think about it. The way you originally phrased the question was 'are there non-physical things?' To which I think the answer is 'no'. And I think that this way of thinking about the problem goes back to Cartesian dualism, in particular. Why? Because of Descartes' 'res cogitans', which means literally 'thinking thing'. Unravelling all of that is the key. — Wayfarer
:broken: :broken: :broken: — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yeah, I mean it's clear you cannot contend with empiricism and materialism. It's not that I think as much, I'm quite literally watching you run away from a discussion because of basic facts of physics. — Garrett Travers
In my case the true meaning is a dual observation: giving one piece of information when viewing from one perspective, and another when viewing from the other perspective. Take a Necker cube for example. It can be seen two ways, each a valid cube. What is "the meaning intended by the author"? — jgill
According to Wikipedia, the Necker cube is an ambiguous drawing, "it can be interpreted to have either the lower-left or the upper-right square as its front side". My argument is that neither of the two possible interpretations is the correct one. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well. It looks like my question has been answered . . . . in the negative. Empirical Science versus Theoretical Philosophy is non-negotiable . . . for the emotional extremists among us. It's just as polarized & politicized as Western society in general.NON-PHYSICAL REALITY
Are there any non-physical aspects of reality that are proper topics of calm collegial philosophical dialog? Can such ideas be discussed without eye-rolling, name-calling, mud-slinging, ideological labeling, and anathematizing? Is philosophical dialog even doable in the current climate of polarized Us vs Them & Orthodox vs Heretical posturing? Has modern Philosophy become "politics by other means"? — Gnomon
Why do you keep bringing up the word correct? The only thing correct is one gets two pieces of information from one image, like my mathematical example (a bit too complicated to relate here) - one expression yields two pieces of math information depending on how it is interpreted (seen). — jgill
And I recently posted a short note concerning a math expression that implies two distinct conclusions depending on how one interprets it. Both interpretations are correct simultaneously. — jgill
I'm not up to speed on modal theories. Are Realism & Idealism merely different modes of thinking, or modes of being? Aristotle seemed to view Potential & Actual as different modes of being. But hard-core Materialists might dismiss "Potential" & "Possible" as meaning "un-Real" and "non-Existent", hence not worth thinking about, even by feckless Philosophers. Can you expand on the application of modality to the question of Non-Physical Reality? :smile:Sure. Even setting aside ontological disputes, physicalism vs idealism vs dualism, you have the whole question of modality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
rather than your claim that contradictory interpretations could be simultaneously correct — Metaphysician Undercover
Complementary, not contradictory. — jgill
No, it isn't. Measurement is the essence of accurately assessed perception. Reality doesn't care about measurements in an active way, only in a chemically balanced way; regression toward the mean. — Garrett Travers
Hey. Could you explain what you mean by "regression towards the mean"? — Daniel
Your example was the Necker cube. As I quoted from Wikipedia the two possible interpretations exclude each other by way of contradiction — Metaphysician Undercover
If one expects two pieces of information simultaneously, yes. But with a slight passage of time one perceives cube#1, then a moment later cube#2. Two different objects arising from one symbol. — jgill
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