Saying “change is something” is a human conceptualization, which is, metaphisics. — Angelo Cannata
As such, it is exposed to criticism. It is humanly impossible to guarantee that our reasonings are true and correct: we never know if tomorrow we might discover an error in our reasoning. — Angelo Cannata
So, you have no way to guarantee that your statement “change is something” is true or correct — Angelo Cannata
ust wonderin’.....if a base a priori intuition informs unavoidably, how might it be altered? Wouldn’t experiential consistency be questionable? — Mww
That there is something is a given — Xtrix
This is exactly the problem of metaphysics: how can you say that something is a given, since, in order to say it, you need to use your brain? — Angelo Cannata
This is exactly the problem of metaphysics: how can you say that something is a given, since, in order to say it, you need to use your brain? — Angelo Cannata
1) there is.
2) There is something.
3) Change is something.
Where does the disagreement lie? — Xtrix
This is exactly the problem of metaphysics: how can you say that something is a given, since, in order to say it, you need to use your brain?
— Angelo Cannata
No— in order to say it, or think it, you have to be. Anything we think, say, feel, or do presupposes existence.
I’ll repeat: unless change is nothing, it “has” being.
So again:
1) there is.
2) There is something.
3) Change is something.
Where does the disagreement lie?
— Xtrix
If you’re arguing that nothing exists— or knowledge of any kind, or statements of any kind are impossible, which is what it sounds like, then that’s your own business. I can’t argue with absurdities.
If change is a thing, it’s part of existence. This is logic— this is truism. — Xtrix
So from the Kantian perspective for example, we should see that these fundamental limitations are described as the a priori intuitions of space and time. These base intuitions inform the way that we see and apprehend things, in a way which we cannot avoid. When we come to understand this basic reality, we can move beyond these intuitions, to a deeper level, to see how these intuitions themselves, might be altered toward something more real, by locating the basic limitations at an even deeper level. — Metaphysician Undercover
ust wonderin’.....if a base a priori intuition informs unavoidably, how might it be altered? Wouldn’t experiential consistency be questionable?
— Mww
I think experiential consistency is questionable....... — Metaphysician Undercover
.......That's why we have difference of intuitions, differences of preference, and so on. These are the peculiarities of the individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
1) there is.
2) There is something.
3) Change is something. — Xtrix
The consequence of taking into account the subjectivity that has been inevitably involved to produce the statements is that the statements cease to be universal, because they are implicated in the non universality of subjectivity. — Angelo Cannata
In a post-modernist style of reasoning, we could consider the universals to be universal for the ones applying them. — Haglund
In a philosophical context: how can you think that something is your opinion (“In my opinion I think...”) and at the same time think that it is not your opinion (“...I think that it is not just my opinion”). — Angelo Cannata
If the way things are seen and apprehended change, the experience of those things must change. — Mww
And if it is the case I am not presented with exactly the same thing because the base intuitions might be altered, then how am I to explain, e.g., my experience of a pencil that is subsequently, merely as a condition by some other time and place, experienced as something not a pencil? — Mww
But it isn’t; the human intelligence is experientially consistent. For any individual, a pencil apprehended today is apprehended as a pencil tomorrow, all else being given. It must be that either the Kantian notions of a priori intuitions as the unavoidable way we see and apprehend things is false, or, such notion is the case but rather, the idea that alteration of those intuitions into something deeper and more real, is false. — Mww
It still must be considered, how it is that you and I, and humanity in general, no matter the particular word used to represent it, see and apprehend this one thing, say, a pencil, and agree that it is an experience common to all of us. — Mww
I’m surprised that you, of most participants herein, would advocate the alteration to a deeper level, of that which is already given as a basic foundational conception. To suggest the reduction of a fundamental is self-contradictory, is it not? Furthermore, and possibly even more surprising, is what could space or time be altered to, such that there is a deeper level to them? — Mww
Then, too, if basic a priori intuitions are given as limits for seeing and apprehending things, which does seem to be the case, then to alter them to a deeper level implies the possibility for removing such limitations, which is also self-contradictory, insofar as we are certainly limited. — Mww
I can declare my absolute reality be the one for all, the universal one, and so can you — Haglund
I can declare my absolute reality be the one for all, the universal one, and so can you
— Haglund
This is what dictators do. The difference between this example and dictators is that dictators do not admit that what they think belongs to their subjectivity. — Angelo Cannata
So the given is always a mental construction. — Haglund
If it’s a mental construction, then the mental construction exists. — Xtrix
I have just described in a structured way what has already been noticed by Heidegger, nothing new. — Angelo Cannata
Here's the first article I've seen that discusses the possibility of determining whether alternate universes might exist. It still seems a reach.
In mathematics, a dynamical system might proceed to evolve along alternate paths at points of bifurcation. But what happens in math may be mere fiction in the physical world. — jgill
“First, each metaphysical question always encompasses the whole problematic of metaphysics and in fact is the whole of metaphysics. Secondly, to ask any metaphysical question, the questioner as such must also be present in the question, i.e., must be put in question. From this we conclude that metaphysical questions must be posed (1) in terms of the whole and (2) always from the essential situation of the existence that asks the question.” — Angelo Cannata
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