The burger, when not being perceived, is like a burger, only one that is not being perceived. — S
Matter is always either thought about or perceived when people speak about it. — Noah Te Stroete
In this sense, it is impossible to speak of something extra-mental. — Noah Te Stroete
Perhaps “....impossible to speak of something not first mental”, would be a more favorable thesis — Mww
What properties must a thing have to be "like" a burger?
The idealist will likely say that these properties are experiential in nature, i.e. to have a particular look, a particular smell, a particular taste, etc., and that it doesn't make sense to say that something can have a look, a smell, and a taste when not being perceived.
Presumably you disagree with the idealist's position that a burger's properties are experiential in nature? What properties, then, must a thing have to be "like" a burger (or more simply, to be a burger)? — Michael
That's what a burger is. It is an object with properties. It is composed of particles.
Nothing I've just described about the burger would magically change from when it is being perceived to when it isn't being perceived. That's not how the world works. — S
That's certainly the materialist's position. But the idealist disagrees with this. They are probably going to be instrumentalists rather than scientific realists when it comes to talk of particles. — Michael
I don't think it's right to say that there's empirical evidence for scientific realism. Realism and instrumentalism are two different ways to interpret scientific evidence. — Michael
Okay. And there's a plausible way and an implausible way to interpret scientific evidence. — S
History would suggest that instrumentalism would be the more reasonable approach. Or are you saying that we have good reasons to believe that we've finally figured things out for real? But then which theory has it correct? Are particles excitations of a quantum field, as quantum field theory says, or are they one-dimensional strings, as string theory says? Is gravity the curvature of space-time, as general relativity says, or is it a force mediated by gravitons, as quantum gravity says? — Michael
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