• frank
    16k
    Thought includes:

    reasoning, contemplation, musing, pondering, consideration, reflection, introspection, deliberation, study, rumination, cogitation, meditation, brooding, mulling over, reverie, brown study, concentration, debate, speculation;

    Are propositions or the propositional form an aspect of this? Is yes, how? As an oject of some action?

    If no, then how do you invision thought?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Sure, I'd say it is. Remember that propositions are the meanings of statements. So it's the meaning of something like, "My keys are on the dresser." We certainly think in those terms often.
  • frank
    16k
    A proposition has no location in time or space. Does that figure in your view?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    A proposition has no location in time or space. Does that figure in your view?frank

    I buy that there are propositions. I don't buy that there is anything with no location in time or space. On my view, meaning is mental, and mentality is a subset of brain function. So the location in time and space of propositions on my view is identical with the locations in time and space of particular brains.
  • frank
    16k

    So you're pondering proposition P.

    P is your brain state.

    I can't have your brain state because I don't have access to your brain.

    Does that mean we can't ponder the same proposition?
  • frank
    16k
    I don't buy that there is anything with no location in time or spaceTerrapin Station

    The universe has no location in time or space. Is that object an exception? Or is there no universe?
  • Mww
    4.9k


    Thought is the primary post-survival functionality of rational beings. It is the ground of all conscious activity, which, ironically enough, includes attempting to explain what it is to think. Such is the inevitable circularity intrinsic to the human cognitive system: thinking about thinking is just thinking with itself as its own object. Which goes very far indeed in explaining why nobody really knows what thinking actually is.

    Accordingly, I don’t envision thought at all, but rather envision a logical procedure, theoretical at best, the constituency of which IS the act of thinking, the purpose of which is to justify the internal correlations between observation and experience in a sensible, meaningful way on the one hand, and to test the limits of purely speculative reason on the other.

    Propositions are not used in internal construction of thoughts because language in and of itself is not used in the construction of cognitions generally; propositions, and by association, language, are used only in the communication of the objects of private thought, as a possible means to facilitate mutual understanding.

    Time is an absolutely necessary condition for thought, whether private or projected; we never have more than one thought at a time, and we never have time empty of thought while conscious, aware and otherwise properly cognizant, which makes explicit thoughts are always a succession in time.
  • frank
    16k
    Awesome response, thanks. But does your position allow commentary on consciousness as it relates to time? Would that not require a transcendent vantage point?
  • Mww
    4.9k


    I think of consciousness as the relative state of being conscious, just as redness is the relative state of being red, as fitness is the relative state of being fit. The state of being conscious, or all that of which one is conscious, is the manifold of representations necessarily all united in one faculty, which has the name consciousness. It follows that while the faculty itself has no need of time, the manifold of representations within the faculty, does, for all representations are derived from experience a posteriori or understanding a priori, both of which operate within the condition of time.

    I understand transcendent to mean that which lies outside possible experience. But while we can think of possibilities outside experience, those thoughts would be merely ideas or notions, thus have no object from which a representation could be derived, hence no member in the manifold in consciousness.

    So....no, no transcendent vantage point, at least within the context of the foregoing theoretical doctrine. When push comes to shove.......just another opinion.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    So you're pondering proposition P.

    P is your brain state.

    I can't have your brain state because I don't have access to your brain.

    Does that mean we can't ponder the same proposition?
    frank

    Correct, they're not going to be identical, but they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD.

    The universe has no location in time or space.frank

    Sure it does. It is all locations of time and space.
  • frank
    16k
    Correct, they're not going to be identical, but they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD.Terrapin Station

    I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion.
  • Deleted User
    0
    I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion.frank
    It's a good practical one. I use that conclusion all the time in interactions with others and it leads to expectations being met. This is of course fallible and depends on many factors - like how well I know them, how much time we had to communicate, how often do we seem to take the same ideas in the same ways as far as expected behavior and further communication - but I can even tweak things given my knowledge of others and myself and the context. IOW I have a sense of how close our senses of something will be or not. And sometimes....
    ...they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD.Terrapin Station
    in the ways I experience the results.
  • AJJ
    909
    The universe has no location in time or space.
    — frank

    Sure it does. It is all locations of time and space.
    Terrapin Station

    Where are space and time located?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    Space is location. It's the extension of matter/the extensional relations of matter.

    Space isnt something that exists "on its own," independent of matter, and it's not a container of any sort. Same with time.
  • AJJ
    909


    So in your view matter isn’t extended within space? Just extended?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion.frank

    It's ontology/metaphysics. Science doesn't really comment on it either way. I'm a nominalist on the nominalism vs realism (on universals/types) issue.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    So in your view matter isn’t extended within space? Just extended?AJJ

    You can say "within space." It's a manner of speaking about extensional relations. That's what space is.
  • AJJ
    909


    So where are “extensional relations” located?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    They are locations, and locations are always defined in terms of relative extensional relations.

    It would make no sense to say that locations have no location, right?
  • AJJ
    909
    It would make no sense to say that locations have no location, right?Terrapin Station

    Sure, that was my point and objection to your view view that there isn’t anything with no location in time or space.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    So if you had a universe of two locations, for example, it might be the case that each location is two meters to the right or alternately the left of whichever point we're using as the reference point.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Sure, that was my point and objection to your view view that there isn’t anything with no location in time or space.AJJ

    Your objection was that it would make no sense to say that locations have no location? Ohhhkay.
  • AJJ
    909


    I misread your post. But maybe that’s a fair question: Where is my location located?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Where is my location located?AJJ

    "Located" adds nothing there. "Where is my location" is the same thing. It makes no sense to say that's not a location.
  • AJJ
    909


    My location is a location, I understand that. But where is it?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    I have no idea beyond "somewhere on Earth," but presumably you know your address.
  • frank
    16k
    It's ontology/metaphysics. Science doesn't really comment on it either way. I'm a nominalist on the nominalism vs realism (on universals/types) issue.Terrapin Station

    I don't think nominalism leads one to believe that if two people contemplate the same proposition that their brain states are similar.
  • AJJ
    909


    Where is “somewhere on Earth” located? Somewhere in space. Space you say is “extensional relations”. Where are they located? You say they are themselves locations. But where are locations? They are things within space. What/where else are they?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    Again, as I wrote, "They are locations, and locations are always defined in terms of relative extensional relations."

    So, for example, the Earth is located between the orbits or Venus and Mars.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I don't think nominalism leads one to believe that if two people contemplate the same proposition that their brain states are similar.frank

    They can't be contemplating the same proposition. What I said is that they can be similar.
  • AJJ
    909
    Again, as I wrote, "They are locations, and locations are always defined in terms of relative extensional relations."

    So, for example, the Earth is located between the orbits or Venus and Mars.
    Terrapin Station

    It doesn’t matter how locations are defined. I’m asking, where are they? Where is “between the orbits of Venus and Mars” located? The answer, it seems to me, is “somewhere in space”. All locations are things within space.
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