So you embrace a the platonic principle that (at least some) abstractions have objective existence that is independent of the objects that exhibit them. On the other hand, and as you know, I see no reason to believe such things. Immanent universals are considerably more parsimonious.It accounts for everything known to exist in the universe, except possibly dark matter and dark energy.
— Relativist
And numbers. — Wayfarer
There are good reasons to believe JFK was killed by a single person, acting alone.Yours does entail contradiction, that's the point, just like my example. Please explain how you think the two differ — Metaphysician Undercover
In Armstrong's ontology:It’s ontological but not physical - an intellectual act which enables the recognition of abstractions. The property can only be recognised by a mind capable of counting. — Wayfarer
I was giving a simplified account to avoid having to describe quantum fields. I'll rephrase it:Nowadays atoms are conceptualised as excitations of fields, and the ontological status of fields is far from settled — Wayfarer
I made it perfectloy explicit:
There is something very obvious that it excludes, as I've already said time and again. And you don't notice or acknowledge what it is — Wayfarer
No, I'm not. There's nothing relative about truth; my point was simply that it's a mental concept, not some platonic object.Truth is not a property that objects have; rather it is a label we apply to some statements. Logic applies to statements. Meaning is a mental association, not a physical property. Intentions are behavioral.
— Relativist
Well your screen name is ‘Relativist’, and you're preaching relativism. — Wayfarer
You have an understanding of physicalism that is biased and false. I've explained the actual relationship between science and physicalism, and you choose to ignore what I said and repeat your false understanding.As for 'special pleading', it's physicalism that does this. It appeals to physics as the basis of its ontology, but when presented with the inconvenient fact that today's physics seems to undermine physicalism, it will say it is 'not bound by physics'. — Wayfarer
I saw no reason to state the obvious. You figured out exactly what I had in mind (your stated example), as I expected you would.To make the JFK example comparable, you'd have to chose one as the best explanation, as the one you believe, then also claim that there is good reason to believe the other. For example, the best explanation, and the one I believe in, is a single person acting alone, however there is good reason to believe in more than one person — Metaphysician Undercover
Acknowledging there are reasons why I might be wrong is being intellectually honest; that is not a contradiction.Once you chose one, as the one that you believe in, you cannot claim that there is good reason to believe the other, without contradicting your own belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
That might be appropriate for an extreme skeptic, who chooses only to believe things that can be proven to be logically necessary. IBE does not entail logical necessity. I believe Oswald acted alone, but I know I'm possibly wrong. If I merely said it was possible he acted alone, I would not be representing my view as accurrately.suggest you adjust your claim to "it is possible that physicalism is the best ontology". — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree there is no good reason to doubt that the standard model identifies the physical composition of everything that exists (setting aside the mystery of dark matter and dark energy)? — Relativist
I've explained the actual relationship between science and physicalism, and you choose to ignore what I said and repeat your false understanding. — Relativist
You've brought up a number of mental activities you considered "obvious" that are easily accounted for in physicalism, so your judgement of what is "obvious" is suspect. — Relativist
So you embrace a the platonic principle that (at least some) abstractions have objective existence — Relativist
I ran across the following state by (Christian, dualist) pholosopher Ed Feser: — Relativist
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