well I'm not so sure that concludes anything. — ep3265
If a non-human observed something out of our comprehension, there's absolutely no way of telling and we would never even realize it. — ep3265
That’s a little defeatist, isn’t it? How do you think we developed a way to comprehend what other humans experience and observe? Do you think that’s conclusive? — Possibility
Even comprehending how a dog views 'reality' will just remain an educated guess. — ovdtogt
I guess some people can’t be helped... — Possibility
This statement is true if and only if it is true
Based on this definition, we can tell the truth conditions for all statements that involve existential quantifier, universal quantifier and all other logical operators including negation. We can extend this system to natural languages too.
The controversial matter is whether the definition involves truth correspondence theory or not. — Wittgenstein
Because you and I share the same machinery I have far less of a problem comprehending how you operate. Society is built on the fact that as humans we are capable of empathizing with other humans. — ovdtogt
On a more basic level, we also ‘operate’ the same way as dogs do in many respects. — Possibility
It is just that because their sense of smell and hearing is so vastly more acute than ours we will never understand it's 'world view' apart that it wants to eat, shit, sleep and fuck like we do. — ovdtogt
I am more concerned with the difference in it's perception of 'reality'. Our truths are more or less 'predetermined by the ability and dis-ability of our senses. — ovdtogt
Hmm, do you spend ANY time with dogs at all? I’m only asking because that is a particularly limited understanding of what a dog wants, and the distinction between dogs and humans. — Possibility
How a dog 'sees' the world with his nose is beyond our comprehension. — ovdtogt
Minds - or persons, or 'subjects of experiences' the terms can be used interchangeably (I certainly use them interchangeably) - are the only kinds of thing that can make assertions, or value anything, or command anything, or hope, or desire, or prescribe. — Bartricks
I have argued that Reason is a person, a mind, a subject of experiences and I am talking about her accordingly. — Bartricks
Now, if you assert something to be the case, you are claiming it is true. That is, you are representing it to be true. But no matter how sincerely one does that, it remains the case that what is actually true, and what we represent to be true, are not necessarily the same. There's a gap. So, truth is not plausibly constituted by my assertions — Bartricks
- and my evidence that it is not, is that Reason asserts it not to be. — Bartricks
and is therefore false. — Harry Hindu
Now let's go through the looking glass and take a peer at your bizzaro argument, shall we -
All assertions are made by language users.
Reason is not a language user.
Reason does not make assertions.
— creativesoul
Your second premise is just an assertion rather than a self-evident truth of reason. — Bartricks
That's the point. — Wittgenstein
That's an unusual usage. As defined here, "mind" ordinarily refers to a faculty or ability of a person, not that it is a person. Anyway since they're interchangeable for you, I can just read your use of "mind" as "person". — Andrew M
My argument is that you're reifying an abstract term (reason) as something substantial. — Andrew M
And your motivation, it seems, is that you want to model assertions as a kind of performative utterance — Andrew M
The evidence that it is not is that we can recall assertions that were later shown to be mistaken. Or point to two people making contrary assertions, only one of which can be correct. — Andrew M
Truth is simply a function of a meaningful assertion in some context. — Andrew M
You keep assuming that I don’t listen to reason at all. I’m not sure you realise that it’s possible to listen to reason AND to have a broader perspective of reality. — Possibility
Yeah... whatever dude. — creativesoul
1. Reason makes assertions
2. Minds and only minds can make assertions
3. Therefore Reason is a mind — Bartricks
Now, I have argued that Reason is a person - a mind, a thing - not just stated it. So, you need to defeat this argument before you're entitled to use the term 'reify'.
1. Reason makes assertions
2. Minds and only minds can make assertions
3. Therefore Reason is a mind
Otherwise all you're doing is describing my view and using a term to describe it that implies it is mistaken. But you're not showing it to be mistaken at all. So, do you dispute 1 or 2? — Bartricks
How is potential energy manifest? — Possibility
It makes no sense to say that reason makes assertions — Janus
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