This is science. Where's the fallibility? — tim wood
It is a sign that you understand neither your topic nor your language, and like any good eighth grader are parroting. — tim wood
But that just confirms my claims that the measurement of time is perspective dependent, i.e. dependent on a particular now.. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you appear to deny the existence of the thing described, which existence is usually called physical existence, and the fact of that usually called reality. — tim wood
You claimed that physical existence is dependent on a "particular now"; now you've changed the subject to "measurement of time". — Janus
Had you said that theories are essentially contingent, which I gather is what Popper wrote, or the results, or predictions of results, of experiments, while accurate to some degree, even a very high degree, had about them a plus/minus or margin of error and were thereby not exact and absolutely right, I would not have presumed to question, because that's close enough to my own understanding. But you said none of that. — tim wood
Well, I guess it doesn't make sense to say that observation or experiment are infallible, does it? Then how much less infallible would theories to explain what is observed be? — Janus
"Physical existence" is a description. — Metaphysician Undercover
You still don't get it, You do not distinguish between the activity qua activity and the result/product of that activity. — tim wood
Yes I guess "physical existence", may be thought of as a description, or a term of designation, but physical existence is not a description. Are you familiar with the distinction between use and mention? — Janus
You can see that it is clearly defined as "the way things are", which does not indicate a thing, but a description.Simply try to imagine the universe without a temporal perspective. The way things are, what we call "physical existence", is completely dependent on one's temporal perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
. According to Special Relativity Theory, physical (spatio-temporal) existence has no general "now", so forget about a "now" being required for physical existence; it is is not even possible! — Janus
I am interested in how one can even begin the process of legitimate metaphysics? — Shawn
I'm not sure I understand you. Suppose Alice sees a bird fly by and land on a branch. She perceived the bird flying and then perceived it landing. The difference in those two cases is with the thing perceived (the bird) not the perceiver (Alice).
So that is an example where how the world is perceived and understood depends at least in part on the thing being perceived.
— Andrew M
Eh? All I get from this is that there is a bird and the bird is not Alice. If you mean only that there must be something (usually) that is perceived that is itself not the perceiver, ok. But the perception itself as a perception - which is what I'm thinking we're talking about, depends on the perceiver. Whatever it is that Alice perceives is the product of her mind.
One way to make it clearer about the bird - although less clear about the phenomenon itself - is to remind yourself that "sees the bird" is simply language of convenience, and that of the bird itself or the branch or anything else, Alice actually is seeing zero.
What Alice is working with is her own mind's production. Inputs? Sure. And as a purely practical matter we all agree she "sees" the bird, and that there is a bird and a branch. - Here, another way. That which is in Alice's perception, is that the bird and the branch? Of course not. — tim wood
In ordinary use, perceptual terms are usually understood to refer to independent things like birds and branches, not the products of minds. So I disagree that "sees the bird" is simply language of convenience and that "Alice actually is seeing zero".
This may just be a terminological disagreement or a more substantive disagreement about sense data but, either way, I don't see any reason not to take ordinary use seriously there. — Andrew M
My point is that how the world is perceived and understood depends not just on the characteristics of the thing being perceived but also on the characteristics of the perceiver. — Andrew M
As a practical matter, absolutely. But I infer you understand perfectly well the objection and thereby can make the distinction between how it is and how it seems on those occasions that require it. — tim wood
That is the entire production of the mind. One kind of evidence is that perception can be wrong. I think that's uncle Jake; oops, it's actually aunt Betty. — tim wood
As I think Janus was getting at, science is about the "elimination of error" (Popper). Metaphysics is about intuitive apprehension that transcends the limits of current science. The two work together. — Pantagruel
Give it a bit of thought. What, exactly, do you receive that your mind makes sense of? Aunt Betty or Uncle Jake? Certainly not! What you receive - is incident on you - is waves of some or another kind. If you think that what you see is the tree or a person or anything else, please give an exact account - or as best you can - as to how that happens, how it works. — tim wood
Against all of this is what I called the language of convenience, which certainly gets the world's work done, and no complaints. You an even call it language based on perception. But on rare occasions it's best to acknowledge and attempt to understand that perception and underlying reality are not the same thing. — tim wood
One big difference between the logical force of a task verb and that of a corresponding achievement verb is that in applying an achievement verb we are asserting that some state of affairs obtains over and above that which consists in the performance, if any, of the subservient task activity.
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Merely saying ‘I see a hawk’ does not entail that there is a hawk there, though saying truly ‘I see a hawk’ does entail this. — Gilbert Ryle - The Concept of Mind, p131-p135
And thus it is completely clear that whatever "see" means informally or practically, the expression, "I see Aunt Betty," in some senses is completely misleading in the sense that Aunt Betty is never, ever, seen.That interaction is a physical process involving light reflecting from Aunt Betty to your eyes and subsequent brain processing. — Andrew M
not any particular thing or type of thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
That interaction is a physical process involving light reflecting from Aunt Betty to your eyes and subsequent brain processing.
— Andrew M
And thus it is completely clear that whatever "see" means informally or practically, the expression, "I see Aunt Betty," in some senses is completely misleading in the sense that Aunt Betty is never, ever, seen. — tim wood
Interesting on task and achievement parts of speech. We're not about that book, idea, or author; feel free to ignore this question. How does Ryle tell the difference between task and achievement words in use? That is, it would seem he has access to other criteria - that are already available. What is his purpose then in making the distinction? — tim wood
No, rather it's everything and every type of thing. And to get back to the point; everything and every type of thing does not require a privileged "now" for it to exist. — Janus
As Kant pointed out it is only perception that requires time in the sense of a present moment. — Janus
there is no such thing as a priori concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
In conventional use, the term "see" abstracts over the physical process, the details of which are a scientific matter. — Andrew M
The "Hard Problem" is hard for those who think in terms of Materialism. But, if you think that Information is more fundamental than Matter, "aha" the problem vanishes. :smile:Apparently that 'aha' moment has happened for David Chalmers, but never for Daniel Dennett, who are the two main protagonists in the debate. — Wayfarer
When can one define metaphysics? Is it possible to define metaphysics when possible?
I am interested in how one can even begin the process of legitimate metaphysics? — Shawn
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