Ludwig V
You keep saying that. But I don't understand what it is that we are referring to. What's worse is that you are saying on one hand that this object must exist and that it doesn't.In both cases we are referring to something that does not exist. — RussellA
In a sense, both halves are true. The difficulty is that Meinong, IMO, doesn't explain anything, but simply assigns names (labels) to the problems. What we need is a way of seeing through the problems so that we can understand that they are illusions created by our misunderstanding of language. That's what the logical analysis is intended to do.We can talk about Sherlock Holmes who does not exist, and Meinong’s logic can deal with non-existent objects, such as round-squares — RussellA
Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that on the micro scale, such as a second, I do feel that I experience a duration of time, even though intellectually I believe that there can be only one moment in time. Very mysterious. — RussellA
The state of affairs is an apple falling with an acceleration of 9.8m/s². — Banno
Put simply, states of affairs can be dynamic. — Banno
Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
If you like, we can include an error: the apple accelerates at 9.8±0.1m/s². — Banno
Banno
Banno
You didn't explain anything.It's still incorrect, for the reasons explained. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
You used a non sequitur, since from “it does not capture all dynamics” it does not follow that it is captures none. — Banno
You missed the point entirely: the example was precisely to show that a state of affairs can be temporally extended and dynamic. — Banno
In short, you mistook modelling for misdescription, and abstraction for error. — Banno
Outlander
I readily admit that states of affairs capture some of reality, but there is a very significant and real portion which cannot be described this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ludwig V
If you reject the sound logic, and simply refuse to accept that there is any part of empirical reality which cannot be describe as states of affairs, then you are in denial. — Metaphysician Undercover
It all depends on how you define "state of affairs". "Description" is simply a name for specific kinds of language, mostly those that are true or false. "State of affairs" is simply a name for what the description is a description of. It has very little content, like the word "thing".When we reach the limits of what "states of affairs" can do for us, and there is still more reality to describe, we must devise a new way to speak about it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
You are neglecting the point I was making. — Metaphysician Undercover
That, now, despite your previously using Zeno's argument, in which they are not temporally extended... Make up your mind.I've always agreed that states of affairs are temporally extended. — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed, since the state of affairs is how things are, not a model of how things are. You even misunderstand that.The point is that modeling the observed empirical world as states of affairs and nothing else is an error. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
So how do you know it even exists, pardon my juvenile abutment. — Outlander
If you can refer to something, it can be described. If you have proof of something, or reasonable belief of said something, it can be referred to. Therefore, it can be described. — Outlander
"State of affairs" is simply a name for what the description is a description of. It has very little content, like the word "thing". — Ludwig V
When we have invented new kinds of description, "state of affairs" is extended to include those new kinds of description. — Ludwig V
In other words "state of affairs" is just a correlative to "description", and is no more limited than "description". — Ludwig V
And when you contradict yourself in the one paragraph - as were you say first that "the observed world cannot be described by states of affairs" then that "when we reach the current limitations of our language, and there is still reality which we cannot describe, then we must devise new ways of speaking"... and thereby say what was previously unsayable, presumably. — Banno
Indeed, since the state of affairs is how things are, not a model of how things are. — Banno
Banno
The state of affairs is a description — Metaphysician Undercover
You can't see it. That's a problem for you. Fine.Where's the contradiction? — Metaphysician Undercover
Ludwig V
I thought so. Can you give me a reason for restricting the term in that way?Right, so what I am talking about is something which cannot be placed in that category. The name "state of affairs" cannot be used to refer to this. — Metaphysician Undercover
RussellA
Quantification is not reference. So “there is no apple on the table” is ~∃x(Ax ^ Tx). But "There is no apple in the set” is ambiguous between ~∃x(Ax ^ Tx) and ∃(x)(~A(x) ^ T(x)) This last asserts that there are no apples at all. it's as if we read "There is no apple in the set” as saying that there is a non-existent apple on the table. — Banno
According to Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, the totality of states of affairs exhausts the space of possibilities; the totality of states of affairs that obtain are the (actual) world.
In philosophy, a state of affairs (German: Sachverhalt),[1] also known as a situation, is a way the actual world must be in order to make some given proposition about the actual world true; in other words, a state of affairs is a truth-maker, whereas a proposition is a truth-bearer
frank
Seems to me the best way to proceed is by differentiating Combinatorialism and Abstractionism, and at the core the difference is that while Abstractionism sets up possible worlds in terms of states of affairs, Combinatorialism sets it up by combinations of individuals, relations and universals. Trouble is that Combinatorialists go on to talk about states of affairs. But if we are to make sense of the distinction those states of affairs for Combinatorialists consist in combinations of individuals and relations, but for Abstractionists they are fundamental. — Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
The state of affairs is that the apple is on the table. It is, for the purposes of the Abstractionist, an abstract object. It is not a description. — Banno
Can you give me a reason for restricting the term in that way? — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
So it does depend on the definition of "state of affairs". Aristotle's argument is indeed a good reason for changing that definition, to allow that states of affairs can comprise change. Problem solved!The reason is the argument presented by Aristotle. Suppose at some time we have state of affairs A, and at a later time state of affairs B. Since these two are different we can conclude that change has occurred in the time between A and B. As philosophers we desire to know and understand this change. We might explain the change with a third, distinct state of affairs, C, which occurred between A and B, but then we have a change which occurred between A and C, and between C and B. We might posit two more states of affairs, D and E, to account for these changes, but then we have changes between A and D, D and C, C and E, and E and B, requiring more states of affairs. And so on. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I knew that was why Aristotle constructed his system. But I don't think it would be helpful to adopt it now that we have other ways of explaining it.This is the principal reason for Aristotle's duality of matter and form in his physics. When one state of affairs changes to another, the form or formula changes, but matter provides for the underlying continuity between the two. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
So it does depend on the definition of "state of affairs". Aristotle's argument is indeed a good reason for changing that definition, to allow that states of affairs can comprise change. Problem solved! — Ludwig V
Yes, I knew that was why Aristotle constructed his system. But I don't think it would be helpful to adopt it now that we have other ways of explaining it. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
That's the argument. What's your solution? To posit that all change takes place instantaneously between states of affairs? That's absurd. It is clear that most changes take place continuously over a period of time. Look around you.We might posit two more states of affairs, D and E, to account for these changes, but then we have changes between A and D, D and C, C and E, and E and B, requiring more states of affairs. And so on. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you know that reality is different from my version? Because of that argument? It is not a description of reality, but a reductio ad absurdum of a certain way of thinking about reality.And it's not that simple. If we redefine "state of affairs" as you suggest, such that 'state of affairs" covers all of reality, then all you have done is produced a false description of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly. So there is no need to insist that all change occurs between states of affairs. I don't agree with his metaphysics, but it does solve the problem he was facing.This is the principal reason for Aristotle's duality of matter and form in his physics. When one state of affairs changes to another, the form or formula changes, but matter provides for the underlying continuity between the two. — Metaphysician Undercover
I like to define words so that they do not produce absurdities.What other ways? Do you mean to define words so that they reflect the way that you want reality to be, rather than the way that it is? That's not very good ontology. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
That's the argument. What's your solution? To posit that all change takes place instantaneously between states of affairs? That's absurd. — Ludwig V
Exactly. So there is no need to insist that all change occurs between states of affairs. — Ludwig V
I like to define words so that they do not produce absurdities. — Ludwig V
Banno
Banno
So it does depend on the definition of "state of affairs". Aristotle's argument is indeed a good reason for changing that definition, to allow that states of affairs can comprise change. Problem solved! — Ludwig V
Banno
I am slowly working through your posts. — RussellA
Yep. There is something quite odd about such ghost-apples.But I cannot understand that if in a possible world there is no apple, there still is the apple’s haecceity — RussellA
Rather, of all the possible states of affairs, the ways things might be, only some are actual. So the picture is of the actual state of affairs being a subset of all the possible states of affairs.This suggests that a state of affairs is part of the actual world. — RussellA
I don't agree with that. Or rather, it's bringing in a sort of phenomenological or temporal view that only serves to restrict what is true unnecessarily. I'll go along instead with the view that things existed in the past and will continue to do so into the future, or if you prefer, with the view that there are truths about the past and the future.But the actual world can only exist at one moment in time. — RussellA
RussellA
And it seems to me that in trying to make sense of both logic and mind, you mix these two. — Banno
frank
For Wittgenstein, States of Affairs (SOA) are the fundamental building blocks of reality in the world, and are about how objects can be arranged. — RussellA
States of Affairs exist in a mind-independent world. — RussellA
that is the case, then the enquiry is not about the State of Affairs in the world (Caesar was a General) but more about the State of Affairs in the mind “Caesar was a General”. — RussellA
Metaphysician Undercover
Yep. States of affairs include change. — Banno
Meta has a conceptual difficulty with limits and infinitesimals, and sometimes pictures states of affairs as descriptions at an instant, disallowing change within states of affairs. Sometimes, because his view changes from post to post. Or at least it appears to - there may be some obtuse way in which he can make it coherent, but so far as I can make out, it remains unexpressed. — Banno
Ultimately, States of Affairs cannot be about what exists in a mind-independent world, but must be about our concepts of what exists in a mind-independent world .
If that is the case, then the enquiry is not about the State of Affairs in the world (Caesar was a General) but more about the State of Affairs in the mind “Caesar was a General”. — RussellA
frank
Metaphysician Undercover
RussellA
I would say leave out the word "reality." — frank
Wittgenstein (in the Tractatus) is saying that the boundaries of what we call the world are precisely the same as the boundaries of thought. — frank
When we talk or think about the world, we don't usually think of it as a collection of objects, but rather as a complex of relationships and events. We'll call these complexes states of affairs. They're closely kin to propositions. — frank
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