J
javra
Consider the ant. Are there thoughts and experiences it cannot, in principle, have? Yes. And the badger? Yes. And the chimp? Yes. So why would this chain stop with humans? What makes us think we have access to all thinkable or sayable thoughts? — J
somewhat off the track here. I’ll try again. If an alien says something that is utterly incomprehensible, what grounds could you have to think it had said something rather than just grunted? — Banno
I like sushi
Outlander
Because reality is what there is.
To posit something "beyond reality" is to posit more of what there is. It is to extend reality. — Banno
"Beyond reality" is not a region; it is a grammatical error. — Banno
Banno
...and this and the rest is comprehensible - since you are here comprehending it.Assuming the alien got here by traveling faster than the speed of light... — javra
What?Are we to understand you reject the Big Bang hypothesis, then? — Outlander
Outlander
Why would you suppose that? Do you think the big bang is beyond comprehension? — Banno
Banno
J
Because we can only experience what we experience. We can discover only what is availble to us via experience-- because that is all there is for us.
We cannot even speculate about what we cannot ever comprehend. — I like sushi
I like sushi
We cannot even speculate about what we cannot ever comprehend; therefore, there is nothing we cannot speculate about or comprehend. — J
J
I think you made a mistake there. — I like sushi
javra
...and this and the rest is comprehensible - since you are here comprehending it. — Banno
Banno
Why should we think that humans represent some sort of pinnacle of what can be thought or said? — J
J
what you mentioned about it only being an extension of reality, rather than it being outside of reality, I find very valid. — javra
Indeed - notice that my objection is to the way the issue is phrased. As "there is stuff beyond our reality" when it should be "there is stuff that is true but unknown" — Banno
Banno
Wayfarer
javra
Yes, I think we're all in accord that the culprit here is the word "reality," no surprise. "Stuff we can know as humans" and "all the stuff that can be known" are fine with me instead, as long as the two aren't supposed to mean the same thing. — J
javra
An analogy. Any integer can be named in a finite number of words. Yet a list of all the integers is not finite. Analogicaly, perhaps anything true can be said, but not everything that is true.
(All sorts of implications here, making it an interesting area of logic. Like that we can write down the set of all the integers in a finite set of words - I just did; but by stepping outside the rules for writing down the integers and using sets instead.)
Again, the payoff is that there is always more to be said. — Banno
javra
Existence (or Actuality) refers to the primitive dyadic fact of an object reacting against or related to something else. It corresponds to Peirce's category of Secondness (Action/Fact/Brute Force). — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
Mathematical platonism has considerable philosophical significance. If the view is true, it will put great pressure on the physicalist idea that reality is exhausted by the physical. For platonism entails that reality extends far beyond the physical world and includes objects that aren’t part of the causal and spatiotemporal order studied by the physical sciences. Mathematical platonism, if true, will also put great pressure on many naturalistic theories of knowledge. For there is little doubt that we possess mathematical knowledge. The truth of mathematical platonism would therefore establish that we have knowledge of abstract (and thus causally inefficacious) objects. This would be an important discovery, which many naturalistic theories of knowledge would struggle to accommodate.
...scholars—especially those working in other branches of science—view Platonism with skepticism. Scientists tend to be empiricists; they imagine the universe to be made up of things we can touch and taste and so on; things we can learn about through observation and experiment. The idea of something existing “outside of space and time” makes empiricists nervous: It sounds embarrassingly like the way religious believers talk about God, and God was banished from respectable scientific discourse a long time ago.
Platonism, as mathematician Brian Davies has put it, “has more in common with mystical religions than it does with modern science.” The fear is that if mathematicians give Plato an inch, he’ll take a mile. If the truth of mathematical statements can be confirmed just by thinking about them, then why not ethical problems, or even religious questions? Why bother with empiricism at all?
javra
Ludwig V
Yes. But the challenge is to explain exactly what the word "reality" is guilty of - or, better, what we are guilty of when we misuse the word "reality", if it is possible to misuse something that we have created. (I mean the word. not the reality.)Yes, I think we're all in accord that the culprit here is the word "reality," no surprise. — J
Yes. It is often possible to do something impossible by changing the rules. I'm not sure that proves anything - except that we wrote the rules in the first place. So we can change the rules or invent new ones any time we want to. Even mathematicians have been known to indulge in that - especially where infinity is concerned. But I don't think that really undermines the point you originally made.we can write down the set of all the integers in a finite set of words - I just did; but by stepping outside the rules for writing down the integers and using sets instead. — Banno
That's all very neat and tidy. But I don't think it reflects the complexity of the relationship between reality and existence. On the contrary, it looks like reading in a real distinction - between laws and generalities on one hand and the particular and individual on the other - into the difference between real things and things that exist. I think it is perfectly reasonable to say that there is a natural law about conservation of energy. If that's true, the law exists. Superman is a well-known comic-book character, but everyone knows that he is a fictional character and so not a real person.For Peirce, something can be real without existing (e.g., a universal law or a potential quality), but anything that exists is also real. The existing things are just the particular instances where the real generalities (laws and habits) are manifested in brute, immediate interaction. — Wayfarer
Perhaps so. But each umwelt is a part of the same reality in general, isn't it?This since no one individual umwelt can of itself be omniscient as regards all aspects of reality in general. — javra
Fair enough. Our languages, natural and artificial, are not closed. There is plenty of room for new concepts. I don't see a problem.These thoughts we, at the very least at present, have no access to and cannot express in words that we ourselves have at our disposal. — javra
Well, you are welcome to define a new use for "exists", but if it means that we, - you and I - do not exist, I think you might find it rather difficult to sell.We as conscious observes, though an aspect of reality at large (for we as conscious observers are indeed actual, hence real), however do not exist, not in this formal means of understanding the term, for we don’t stand out to ourselves, not even conceptually via the concepts that do exist for us. — javra
I agree that there is a neglected distinction between "real" and "existent". But I don't think Peirce remotely captures it.I find them useful precisely because he maintains a distinction between the real and the existent—a distinction I think is crucial, but which has largely dropped out of contemporary philosophical discourse. — Wayfarer
I agree with that. The problem with platonism is not so much about the reality of abstract numbers and shapes but the denial of the reality of physical objects. Both exist and are real; but they are different knds of object, that's all.In addition to 'res potentia', we also have to consider the reality of abstractions, such as the natural numbers. Here my sympathies lie with Platonism, although much of the debate around 'platonism in philosophy of math' is abstruse. — Wayfarer
javra
This since no one individual umwelt can of itself be omniscient as regards all aspects of reality in general. — javra
Perhaps so. But each umwelt is a part of the same reality in general, isn't it? — Ludwig V
These thoughts we, at the very least at present, have no access to and cannot express in words that we ourselves have at our disposal. — javra
Fair enough. Our languages, natural and artificial, are not closed. There is plenty of room for new concepts. I don't see a problem. — Ludwig V
BTW - isn't the existing theory of quantum physics an example of what you are talking about? Something that is both a wave and a particle? — Ludwig V
We as conscious observes, though an aspect of reality at large (for we as conscious observers are indeed actual, hence real), however do not exist, not in this formal means of understanding the term, for we don’t stand out to ourselves, not even conceptually via the concepts that do exist for us. — javra
Well, you are welcome to define a new use for "exists", but if it means that we, - you and I - do not exist, I think you might find it rather difficult to sell. — Ludwig V
J
"Reality" is an example of the common philosophical mistake of over-generalizing, or perhaps better, of decontextualizing a perfectly useful word, which then becomes virtually useless. What counts as "real" and "unreal" depends on the context, which is specified when you complete a sentence and specify what the context is. The idea that you can lump everything real into one group and everything unreal into another group is just wrong. Things are often unreal under one description and perfectly real under another. Similarly, what existence depends on what kind of thing you are thinking of. Superman exists - as a character in comic books, but not as someone you might meet at a bus stop. — Ludwig V
Outlander
The big bang is as an explanation for, and from, what we see around us; the very opposite of what you are suggesting. — Banno
Banno
There's no such time. Time came into existence along with the universe; the Big Bang is not an event in time but a boundary of time....go back in time to a few moments before the Big Bang — Outlander
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