Ludwig V
I agree with you. That's what I was trying to say - with the conclusion, which seems obvious to me, that it follows that it doesn't have a clear meaning to say that one domain is bigger than another.Of course that domain is not spatially vast, as number is not extended in space. But the domain of mathematics is vast in a different way, as it is something which has been explored and expanded by generations of mathematicians since the ancient of days, and seems to be inexhaustible. — Wayfarer
There's a complication - but a necessary one. There are different kinds or categories of existence. (one could put the same point in another way and say that there are different kinds of object, rather than different kinds of existence. But I think that's the same point from a different perspective. The most commonly identified are - physical, mental, and abstract (cf. Popper). I would posit many more, but I'm not sure that is relevant right now - and it may just be a question of notation.So - those kinds of 'intelligible objects' - numbers, logical laws, and the like - are real. But they're not existent in the sense that phenomenal objects are. — Wayfarer
Your problem here is that the consensus reality recognizes many things, especially physical things, as real and mind-independent even when they are not in the presence of sentience (perceived). If we can recognize things as existing and real when we perceive them, we can acknowledge them as existing independently of us and therefore as existing and real when they are not perceived. Dinosaurs, etc.My partition of existence and reality moves in the easier direction of arguing that representation and imagination create a socially embedded consensus reality, which is radiant in the presence of sentience, and therefore a small subset of what exists in the universe apart from sentient beings. — ucarr
The problem here is that the same things are real when seen in one way, but unreal when seen in a different way. Your system seems to oscillate between seeing existence and reality as consisting of different objects and seeing them as the same objects seen from different perspectives. A forged painting is not a real Rembrandt, but it is a real painting.Does a system with a sub-system nested within itself make sense to you in terms of a possible structure? This is one of the most important claims I'm putting forward: reality (by my usage) is a sub-system emergent from existence (by my usage). — ucarr
Only sentients talk about things existing. So on a world withing sentients, there's not talk of things existing. To put it another way, it is true of many things that they are real and exist whether or not they are talked about.Only sentients, probably only humans, talk about things being real. On a world without sentience there’s no talk of things being real. — ucarr
That doesn't mean that they are false.Your quoted comments are all rendered through the lens of your internal-model-making mind. — ucarr
Since existence and reality share the same ontology, math applies to both. Therefore, the structures of both existence and sentient-based reality are constrained by what math language narrates. — ucarr
Are you really saying that not everything that exists in reality also exists in existence, i.e. that some things exist in reality, but do not exist in existence? That looks like a self-contradiction to me.Everything that exists in existence also exists in reality, but not the reverse. That's why reality is a larger category of existence, but a smaller category of instantiation. — ucarr
If sentients can experience physics, does that not make physics part of sentience-mediated reality? If physics is part of sentience-mediate reality, does that not make it meaningful? Perhaps you should be looking to find the meaning in physics, rather than meekly accepting its self-presentation as meaningless.Only sentients can experience physics, and that experience is always referenced to sentient perishability, and that, coupled with irreversible commitments selected going forward into a time-limited future makes sentience-mediated reality meaning-bearing, whereas the existence of physics is not meaning-bearing. — ucarr
ucarr
The problem here is that the same things are real when seen in one way, but unreal when seen in a different way. Your system seems to oscillate between seeing existence and reality as consisting of different objects and seeing them as the same objects seen from different perspectives. A forged painting is not a real Rembrandt, but it is a real painting. — Ludwig V
The problem here is that the same things are real when seen in one way, but unreal when seen in a different way. Your system seems to oscillate between seeing existence and reality as consisting of different objects and seeing them as the same objects seen from different perspectives. A forged painting is not a real Rembrandt, but it is a real painting. — Ludwig V
...it is true of many things that they are real and exist whether or not they are talked about. — Ludwig V
Your quoted comments are all rendered through the lens of your internal-model-making mind. — ucarr
That doesn't mean that they are false. — Ludwig V
Everything that exists in existence also exists in reality, but not the reverse. That's why reality is a larger category of existence, but a smaller category of instantiation. — ucarr
Are you really saying that not everything that exists in reality also exists in existence, i.e. that some things exist in reality, but do not exist in existence? That looks like a self-contradiction to me. — Ludwig V
If sentients can experience physics, does that not make physics part of sentience-mediated reality? If physics is part of sentience-mediate reality, does that not make it meaningful? Perhaps you should be looking to find the meaning in physics, rather than meekly accepting its self-presentation as meaningless. — Ludwig V
Wayfarer
when I use the word "existence," I mean all of the types of things that exist. Existence houses the total ontology. Sentient-based reality, nested within existence, houses a sub-set of ontology experienced; i e., irreversible selection going forward, intentions and, most importantly, meaning indexed to life/death. — ucarr
sentience-based reality is contingent upon existence. Existence is the ground from which sentience-based reality emerges. — ucarr
One of the difficulties of metaphysics in general is the fact that examinations of ontology require the examiner to internally model ontology, and it’s fundamentals. The problem is a problem of perspective because the examiner must try to access mind-independent reality within the presence of his own sentience, which is pervasively representational rather than fundamentally ontological. — ucarr
ucarr
I think this distinction is erroneous, that we cannot see the Universe as if from outside any perspective or as if there were no sentient beings in it. The comparison you're making between existence and reality also demands a perspective - and perspective is something that only an observer can bring to the picture. We can't step outside appearance in the way you are proposing. This is the characteristic error of modernity. We are and must be part of the picture, we can't attain a perspective of ultimate objectivity or separateness. — Wayfarer
ucarr
Ludwig V
I have only two mild disagreements with this.I think this distinction is erroneous, that we cannot see the Universe as if from outside any perspective or as if there were no sentient beings in it. The comparison you're making between existence and reality also demands a perspective - and perspective is something that only an observer can bring to the picture. We can't step outside appearance in the way you are proposing. This is the characteristic error of modernity. We are and must be part of the picture, we can't attain a perspective of ultimate objectivity or separateness. — Wayfarer
I think I understand what you are getting at. But I can't discern whether you are saying that the things that we experience as meaningful in the way you describe are the same as, or different from, the things that exist independently of such meaning. The snow falls, and exists. I experience the snow falling and feel cold and miserable. Is the first snow (existence) the same stuff as the snow I experience?(meaningful, therefore real). I think it is, but sometimes you seem to be saying it isn't.Sentient-based reality, nested within existence, houses a sub-set of ontology experienced; i e., irreversible selection going forward, intentions and, most importantly, meaning indexed to life/death. — ucarr
I'm not clear whether you are saying that my mind has any access to what exists, as distinct from what is real. I want to be able say that, given that my car exists, it is also real, and may be a good or bad car. It seems to me to be obvious that the car that figures in all those statements is the same car. But I can't see whether you agree or disagree with that.I'm saying they're (sc. real, exist, good, bad) part of a reality attached to how your mind (and my mind) represent the world via internal-model-building. — ucarr
That's right. Presumably, you are saying that fact is represented in my internal model. I don't see how any model could ever represent that.The focal point here shows that what's not present in mind independent existence is meaning based upon memory of an irreversible past and an unstoppable progression forward towards death. — ucarr
Thank you so much for that clarification. Now I understand better what's going on. The label "sentient-based reality" seems harmless enough to me, though I would prefer "lived world/reality" or "phenomenal world/reality. But it does seem to me that it does not mean the same as "reality" in the philosophical use of the term (though I doubt that use of it is really coherent).Sentient-based reality is perhaps an unfamiliar label, but it's applied herein to a structure of neuroscience well known: internal modeling of the world within the mind. — ucarr
Wayfarer
. I would put it more strongly and say that the very idea of seeing without any perspective is meaningless. But I don't see that we cannot see the world as if there were no sentient beings in it. We can make reasonable adjustments based on our ability to distinguish facts from values and what we know of what the world was like before the first sentient life appeared. The status of mathematics in such a scenario is a not clear to me. — Ludwig V
ucarr
The snow falls, and exists. I experience the snow falling and feel cold and miserable. Is the first snow (existence) the same stuff as the snow I experience?(meaningful, therefore real). I think it is, but sometimes you seem to be saying it isn't. — Ludwig V
I'm not clear whether you are saying that my mind has any access to what exists, as distinct from what is real. I want to be able say that, given that my car exists, it is also real, and may be a good or bad car. — Ludwig V
The focal point here shows that what's not present in mind independent existence is meaning based upon memory of an irreversible past and an unstoppable progression forward towards death. — ucarr
That's right. Presumably, you are saying that fact is represented in my internal model. I don't see how any model could ever represent that. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
Well, that's clearly a hopeless project. Like putting a blindfold on someone and then asking them to describe the landscape. It's the word "truly" that does it - presenting a doubt as a possibility and then ruling it out.But the status of the 'as if' is what is at issue. I maintain that scientific naturalism wants to 'absolutize' it, as if it enables us to see the universe as it truly would be, without an observer. — Wayfarer
We have evidence which, admittedly, does not tell us everything, but does tell us something and is open to criticism. If that's not enough, then what you say amounts to refusing to play the game without offering another one.(Because even to see the universe as if there were no observers in it, doesn’t see it as it really would be with no observer.) — Wayfarer
"Ontological primacy" is a bit of a mystery to me. I would only claim, what I think you agree with, that the historical story is that our planet was once without life and now is. I freely admit that our knowledge of the world depends absolutely on our existence. But I don't think that's a particularly startling claim and it is not incompatible with the historical account. What else is left to say?Then it points to that as having ontological primacy and claims that humans are a product of that. — Wayfarer
Yes. The only thing that is different is that there are no human beings to think of it in different ways. Which is a difference in the context the snow falls, not a difference in the snow.The snow we experience is (presumably) the same snow that might fall on a planet without life. — ucarr
"Real", for you, means meaningful, which I assume means meaningful to people in general. I can, more or less, distinguish between what the car is qua mind-independent object. But I don't see a radical difference between thinking of it as a crucial part of my way of life, as a financial drain, as a pollution of the atmosphere, as a badge of my social and cultural standing and thinking of it as a mind-independent object. It's just one of the many ways I think about the car. So I'm puzzled about why you want to distinguish between that perspective and all the others. What's so special about it?I think you mind has access to mind-independent things that exist, such as your car. It's also real, as distinguished from merely extant, as it would be on a lifeless planet. — ucarr
One of the ways of identifying what it is for the car to be a mind-independent object is that the mind-independence is the same what other different perspectives I might have of it. So I think of car differently before and after. But it's the same car. Whatever perspective I may apply to it, its mind-independence does not change - and, paradoxically, that is how I think about it.Your memory tracks a radical meaning change from before and after the emergency. — ucarr
ucarr
"Real", for you, means meaningful, which I assume means meaningful to people in general. I can, more or less, distinguish between what the car is qua mind-independent object. But I don't see a radical difference between thinking of it as a crucial part of my way of life, as a financial drain, as a pollution of the atmosphere, as a badge of my social and cultural standing and thinking of it as a mind-independent object. It's just one of the many ways I think about the car. So I'm puzzled about why you want to distinguish between that perspective and all the others. What's so special about it? — Ludwig V
Relativist
What you label "reality" is what I would label a "world view". We each have a unique world view - different understandings of physics, including gaps in knowledge, misunderstandings, and differences in personal experience. Do you acknowledge these same differences with your (unique) use of the term, "reality"?I'm saying reality is an interpretation of physics by living organisms. The label for the interpretation is reality. — ucarr
ucarr
We each have a unique world view - different understandings of physics, including gaps in knowledge, misunderstandings, and differences in personal experience. Do you acknowledge these same differences with your (unique) use of the term, "reality"? — Relativist
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