I see no reason to think that universals exist independently of the minds thinking them. They have a foundation in reality, in the potential of each instance to evoke the same concept, i.e in the intelligibility of their instances. But, being potential is not being actual. — Dfpolis
My view is that the mind is inextricably involved in every judgement about every matter, even those things that are so-called ‘mind-independent’. — Wayfarer
Matter and form are just the useful conceptions that divide reality for us. Being is a whole. So we are speaking of taking a dialectical opposition to its limits so as to have a causal tale that makes a generalised sense. It sustains a mode of metaphysical analysis that works better than any other general scheme. — apokrisis
For me, matter and form both have to be active in the sense that both have to themselves develop. And both have to be causes - a reason for concrete change. Yet still, those other contrasts, like active vs passive, will start to apply somewhere along the line. We wouldn’t hold on to these other dichotomies of existence if they didn’t have strong explanatory value. — apokrisis
So you are wrong to say all this metaphysical talk is purely conceptual. It is an attempt to dissect reality in terms of its actual logical oppositions. But also, it is definitely an exercise in modeling. So it is conceptual. But what seems missing in your replies is an understanding that what is central to the conception is the dialectical logic - the logic of symmetry breaking - that is at the heart of a hylomorphic analysis of nature. — apokrisis
And I agree. That is the very point I make. Metaphysics only makes sense once all the conceiving is understood in terms of how the logic of symmetry breaking or dichotomisation would work. It is the mechanism by which primal divisions arise that is the key take home here. Categories are limits - the complementary limits of some deeper process of dichotomisation. — apokrisis
My approach starts by granting the reality of finality in nature. And goals are constraints. Once a purpose has been adequately served, anything more doesn’t make an intelligible difference. — apokrisis
So regardless of what you say, this way of conceiving of existence is already basic to the metaphysics of science. It just makes obvious sense. — apokrisis
And so the crucial question becomes how do you measure intentionality in your scheme? — apokrisis
Information and entropy complement each other nicely as measurements in the two theatres of operation as physics and biology are coming to understand them. If you have some personal idea here, then you will need to say something about what would count as a measurement of your explanatory construct. — apokrisis
This has nothing to do with logical order, it relates what is. It just entails that the same property can be instantiated in multiple particulars. Look back at my example. "-1" electric charge is a property that exists in every instance of electron. Four-ness exists in every state of affairs that consists of 4 particulars. These are universals.[physicalism and universals]seem like incompatible positions. Physics has nothing to say about the logical order and universals belong to the logical order.
It seems to me, then, that you’re actually rejecting Aquinas’ hylomorphic dualism. — Wayfarer
I don’t think your analysis can account for ‘the unreasonable efficacy [or predictive power] of mathematics’. — Wayfarer
I see the metaphysics of it like this: that the types or forms of things correspond to their original ‘ideas’ in the divine intellect. — Wayfarer
The rational soul [unlike the sensory faculties] is able to grasp those forms or ideas by identifying their kind, type, etc; this is the role of the ‘active intellect’. — Wayfarer
Aristotle’s comments on the ‘nous poetikos’ are regarded as controversial, difficult and obscure and have generated centuries of analysis. — Wayfarer
a passage in Augustine on ‘intelligible objects’ that has always been a source of interest to me. — Wayfarer
So - I am drawn to a form of dualism, but emphatically not the Cartesian form. — Wayfarer
Actually there isn't really any foundation in reality for your concept of "laws of nature". — Metaphysician Undercover
We have descriptive "laws" such as the laws of physics which are really just inductive conclusions. — Metaphysician Undercover
But just because the inductive conclusions are called "laws" it doesn't really follow that whatever it is in nature that is causing matter to act in consistent ways,.is anything like a "law", it's more like a cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whatever it is which acts on matter, causing it to behave in the way that it does, can't really be anything like any laws that we know of. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree with me that the matter in motion is just a reflection of the real activity which is the laws in action? — Metaphysician Undercover
I wonder why one feels compelled to use a loaded term like "intentionality" for the tendencies of nature to form certain patterns or forms? — prothero
the laws of nature are not same as the laws of physics, but they are dynamically related and so laws in an analogical sense. — Dfpolis
I do think I understand your position. I've read Hegel, etc., too. — gurugeorge
The only "subjective object" around is the person knowing, willing, etc., — gurugeorge
that is just the objective human animal accessible to all, and its qualities can be understood scientifically (e.g. its/our means of knowing, its/our capacity for knowledge, etc. — gurugeorge
its qualities can be understood scientifically (e.g. its/our means of knowing, its/our capacity for knowledge, etc. — gurugeorge
On the other hand, if you mean something like "the knowing subject caught in the act of present knowing," then that's a misunderstanding of what knowledge is.. — gurugeorge
It's actually not a momentary subjective relation in that sense (the momentary, present relation between a notional abstract subject and the abstracted contents of that subject's knowing). — gurugeorge
Surely the laws of physics are laws of nature? — Pattern-chaser
Other, qualitative aspects of cognition are then relegated to the subjective [and implicitly secondary] domain. That is the main characteristic of scientific naturalism, is it not? That what is real is measurable? — Wayfarer
Hence the conundrum posed by the ‘observer problem’ in quantum physics. — Wayfarer
I'm curious how you would describe a concrete scenario prior to sentient life emerging on Earth with respect to universals. — Andrew M
For example, consider a molecule of water consisting of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Among the universals here are the kinds water, molecule and atom, the numbers one and two, and the relations between the atoms. — Andrew M
there's the second question of whether the relations between the atoms, their structure and their quantity would also have been real prior to sentient life on Earth (i..e, that a water molecule really has two hydrogen atoms independent of mind). — Andrew M
"-1" electric charge is a property that exists in every instance of electron. Four-ness exists in every state of affairs that consists of 4 particulars. These are universals. — Relativist
there are no actual universals until some mind encounter their instances. — Dfpolis
So there cannot be dialectical opposition between matter and form because that would put matter into the category of form. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm providing you a taste of a physicalist metaphysics. You have at least twice referred to my description as statements of faith, when all I've endeavored to do is to show there to be alternate metaphysical accounts. Your reaction here is pretty revealing about whose position is a product of faith."-1" electric charge is a property that exists in every instance of electron. Four-ness exists in every state of affairs that consists of 4 particulars. These are universals.
— Relativist
No, they are a bunch of particulars with the same intelligibility -- the same power of evoke concepts.
Until a concept is actually evoked, there is no actual universal.
We can only measure quantities and intentionality is not a quantity. — Dfpolis
Merely intelligible information is not intentional. It's defining characteristic is not being about some intended target, but being an aspect of physical reality. Bits encoded in my computer's memory are electronic states with no intrinsic meaning. — Dfpolis
Real numbers [and the like] don’t begin to exist by virtue of there being someone around who learns how to count. The mind evolves to the point where it is able to count, that is all. The same goes for ideas and universals, generally. They are the constituents of the ability to reason but they’re not the products of reason. — Wayfarer
I think the basic ground of contention between Plato and Aristotle revolves around the manner in which it can be said that universals exist. — Wayfarer
This seems the old debate between “nominalism” and universals, forms or eternal objects which seems to have been ongoing for at least the last 2000 years.When we think of any number, we're actually grasping what the tradition called an 'intelligible object', although again that is an imperfect expression, as numbers aren't actually 'objects' in any sense but by analogy — Wayfarer
Pierce, semiosis and signs also seems to be a rejection of nominalism. — prothero
Pierce, semiosis and signs also seems to be a rejection of nominalism. — prothero
Peirce understood nominalism in the broad anti-realist sense usually attributed to William of Ockham, as the view that reality consists exclusively of concrete particulars and that universality and generality have to do only with names and their significations. This view relegates properties, abstract entities, kinds, relations, laws of nature, and so on, to a conceptual existence at most. Peirce believed nominalism (including what he referred to as "the daughters of nominalism": sensationalism, phenomenalism, individualism, and materialism) to be seriously flawed and a great threat to the advancement of science and civilization. His alternative was a nuanced realism that distinguished reality from existence and that could admit general and abstract entities as reals without attributing to them direct (efficient) causal powers.
The religiously-inclined seem more likely to postulate a preexisting realm of ideal, permanent, eternal forms, universal laws which are created by or exist in the mind of “God”. — prothero
Like Macbeth, Western man made an evil decision, which has become the efficient and final cause of other evil decisions. Have we forgotten our encounter with the witches on the heath? It occurred in the late fourteenth century, and what the witches said to the protagonist of this drama was that man could realize himself more fully if he would only abandon his belief in the existence of transcendentals. The powers of darkness were working subtly, as always, and they couched this proposition in the seemingly innocent form of an attack upon universals. The defeat of logical realism in the great medieval debate was the crucial event in the history of Western culture; from this flowed those acts which issue now in modern decadence.
From this review. Note 'the distinction between reality and existence' - you won't find that in many places. — Wayfarer
My view is that the mind is inextricably involved in every judgement about every matter, even those things that are so-called ‘mind-independent’. — Wayfarer
Analogous to: there is no actual electron until some measurement is taken. This is not coincidenta — Wayfarer
Real numbers [and the like] don’t begin to exist by virtue of there being someone around who learns how to count. The mind evolves to the point where it is able to count, that is all. — Wayfarer
The same goes for ideas and universals, generally. They are the constituents of the ability to reason but they’re not the products of reason. Otherwise they would be merely subjective or socially constructed. — Wayfarer
The way I try and express it, is to say that numbers are 'real but not existent', — Wayfarer
numbers (and here, 'number' is a symbol for universals generally) don't come into and go out of existence. — Wayfarer
But they're real, in the sense that the laws of mathematics are the same for all who think. — Wayfarer
Intelligible objects must be higher than reason, because they judge reason. — Wayfarer
It makes no sense, however, to ask whether these normative intelligible objects are as they should be: they simply are, and are normative for other things'. — Wayfarer
Joseph Owens — Wayfarer
This would come as a surprise to most scientists. We do not see ourselves as engaged in fiction writing, but in describing reality and especially how specific phenomena reveal and fit into the order of nature. — Dfpolis
This contradicts the previous sentence. How can you say there is no basis in reality for the concept of laws and then say that we arrive at the concept by induction from an evidentiary basis (a foundation in reality). — Dfpolis
Since you agree that something acts to produce the observed behavior of matter, it is pointless to argue about naming conventions. — Dfpolis
It seems to me a particularly good way of viewing it. — prothero
My view is that the mind is inextricably involved in every judgement about every matter, even those things that are so-called ‘mind-independent’.
— Wayfarer
Of course, for judgements are acts of mind. That does not mean that existence depends on our judgement of existence, a la Berkeley's esse est percipi. — Dfpolis
All that is objective, extended, active—that is to say, all that is material—is regarded by materialism as affording so solid a basis for its explanation, that a reduction of everything to this can leave nothing to be desired (especially if in ultimate analysis this reduction should resolve itself into action and reaction). But we have shown that all this is given indirectly and in the highest degree determined, and is therefore merely a relatively present object, for it has passed through the machinery and manufacture of the brain, and has thus come under the forms of space, time and causality, by means of which it is first presented to us as extended in space and ever active in time. From such an indirectly given object, materialism [we might as well say 'scientific realism'] seeks to explain what is immediately given, 'the idea' (in which alone the object that materialism starts with exists).
If the electron did not exist, it would not be measurable. — Dfpolis
. Either way, *2* does play no role in us knowing there are two hydrogen atoms in a water molecule. — Dfpolis
Your "intelligible objects" must have minds or they could not judge, could not be aware of the truth of a proposition. — Dfpolis
Augustine managed, with the aid of Platonist direction, ...to see that certain things that clearly exist, namely, the objects of the intelligible realm, cannot be corporeal. When he cries out in the midst of his vision of the divine nature, "Is truth nothing just because it is not diffused through space, either finite or infinite?" he is acknowledging the discovery of intelligible truth that first frees him to comprehend incorporeal reality.
But you have to know what 2 denotes - in other words, you have to be able to count - before you can make any deductions about the composition of water molecules. It's the fact that 2 = 2 and always has an invariant meaning that makes it a universal. Furthermore, that formula H2O thoroughly specifies the chemical compound called 'water' - the symbols specify something exactly. — Wayfarer
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