This is implies that U is false and that, by immediate inference, E too is false. Immaterial (undetectable) things may exist. — TheMadFool
That being so, I find it almost impossible to imagine how one could hallucinate a concept? — TheMadFool
The notion of existence is predicated on detectability i.e. for something to exist it must be detectable. By detectable I refer to perception either through our senses (sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch) or through their extensions, instruments. — TheMadFool
It all depends on how you define existence. — Echarmion
They're only detectable, or rather, discernible, through reason. — Wayfarer
I don't define existence as such. — neonspectraltoast
The notion of existence is predicated on detectability i.e. for something to exist it must be detectable — TheMadFool
This is something that I've been thinking about. Is the mind exclusively a processor (of information) or does it also have a, well, auxiliary function as a sensory system — TheMadFool
You deny all abstract existence? Numbers, justice, beauty? — fishfry
Reason is neither. It is more than an 'information processor', as it is capable of judgement, which is not a function of computation; and something other than a sensory system. It's the very faculty you're using to puzzle about this problem, probably without being aware that you're using it. — Wayfarer
The existence I'm struggling with here is the kind theists claim when they say "god exists", an entity that is not just a concept in our heads but has "existence" external to us, among the rocks, trees, planets and stars. — TheMadFool
I see your problem. Basically you want ‘what exists’ to be locatable in time and space, or objectifiable as a ‘that’. But what this excludes is precisely what answers to the term ‘transcendent’. For which, see this essay, by a theist - a bishop, no less - that God doesn’t exist. — Wayfarer
As for your speil about being able to ‘sense patterns’ - utter nonsense — Wayfarer
I only ask for the believer (in god) to put his definition of "existence" on the table. What does a theist mean by "exists" in his trademark statement, "god exists". — TheMadFool
Suffice it to say that the statement, "I sense a pattern" is both semantically and syntactically unproblematic. — TheMadFool
I provided the reference. I know of more (such as this.) The basic point is, that what is eternal and simple, cannot come into or go out of existence, whereas 'everything that exists' does. This is not something unique to theistic religion, you find an exact parallel in Mahāyāna Buddhism. — Wayfarer
Reason can grasp meaning, and the scope of reason far exceeds what can be attributed to mere patterns. — Wayfarer
you surely won't deny that pattern recognition is part of the mind's act. — TheMadFool
"I sense a pattern" is both semantically and syntactically unproblematic. — TheMadFool
My physiology senses only real physical objects, of which I immediately become aware; my mind apprehends the presence of possible patterns between those objects, or between myself and those objects, merely as judgments of logical relations. — Mww
But what this excludes is precisely what answers to the term ‘transcendent’. For which, see this essay, by a theist - a bishop, no less - that God doesn’t exist. — Wayfarer
like Odysseus under the sheep, something is getting away that shouldn't. — tim wood
I certainly wouldn’t deny this assertion. Nevertheless......
"I sense a pattern" is both semantically and syntactically unproblematic.
— TheMadFool
.......while unproblematic as a proposition under those stringent conditions, forces the two assertions to contradict each other, insofar as perception, in and of itself, is not a function of mind but of a posteriori principles alone. My physiology senses only real physical objects, of which I immediately become aware; my mind apprehends the presence of possible patterns between those objects, or between myself and those objects, merely as judgements of logical relations. — Mww
I would allay your concern with the hypothesis that sensation, the direct and unambiguous product of perception, is that of which we are immediately aware. In metaphysical parlance, empirical sensation becomes appearance as representation, and is the matter of a synthesis, telling us what kind of sensation it is, in conjunction with intuition, which is its form, telling us particulars relative to its kind. That synthesis gives us phenomena, some as yet unknown something. The reason for the synthesis of appearance to intuition, is to prevent the confusion of, say, color with touch, pressure with scent, and so forth, in order to ensure the next synthesis....phenomena with understanding.....has the logically correct, that is, non-contradictory, material to work with. — Mww
If it's not too much trouble, what's your take on the issue of theistic existence? — TheMadFool
If humans are thought to exist in a certain way, then angels do not exist in that way.
In contrast to contemporary philosophers, most 17th century philosophers held that reality comes in degrees—that some things that exist are more or less real than other things that exist. At least part of what dictates a being’s reality, according to these philosophers, is the extent to which its existence is dependent on other things: the less dependent a thing is on other things for its existence, the more real it is.
my reckoning is that people have intuited, if not inferred through logical argument, that our minds, in a way, "sense" patterns. — TheMadFool
But it’s practically extinguished in modern thought, to the point that it can’t be understood, there’s not even an analogy or metaphor for it in our lexicon. — Wayfarer
Yours, and a veritable HOST of like-minded individuals. Which is fine, each must hold to himself. — Mww
This is a complete and utter tragedy. — TheMadFool
Any adjustments? — tim wood
perception: a signal
sensation: hot, burning
appearance: putting together burning with what burning is - being burned
phenomenon: understanding, or assigning, the meaning of the appearance.
Close enough? — tim wood
Wrong usage of the word "sense" or is there a grain of truth in it? — TheMadFool
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