Whether it exists, or the mode in which it exists, is exactly what is at issue. As you no doubt know, this question is at the heart of the so-called 'Copenhagen interpretation' which says there's not an electron lurking within the probability wave until we measure it; the probability wave is all there is, until the measurement is made. That is why Bohr remarked something along the lines that the particle doesn't exist until it is measured; which is why the ontology of the 'probability wave' is still such a vexed issue. — Wayfarer
The symbol "2" (or "II" or "two") denotes the number 2. — Wayfarer
Your logic is a little out of whack. If you are framing matter as the indefinite - in opposition to the definite - then that is just putting matter in the category of the metaphysically dichotomous. — apokrisis
Dichotomies might be regarded as an intelligible form, but the whole point is that they are the intelligible form that subsumes differentiated categories, such as form and matter, into a higher level method of logical categorisation. Dichotomies talk about form and matter as being the limits of a common process of division.
So you are making the reductionist mistake of trying to reduce dynamical processes of opposition to mere standalone categories. And yet you know the logical definition of a dichotomy to be "mutually exclusive/jointly exhaustive". The coherent relationship - the asymmetry, or broken symmetry - is what it is all about. — apokrisis
Not quite. Necessarily, before anything can be measured, it has to be measurable. If the electron did not exist, it would not be measurable.
Let me suggest that existence is convertible with the capacity to act in some way. For anything to be measurable, it has to respond to our efforts to observe it. Imagine "something" that did not interact with anything in any way. it would be impossible to observe, let alone measure. If if had no interactions, it could not evoke the concept <being>, and so would not be an instance of being. — Dfpolis
Not on the view I am defending. Rather than being baseless subjective or social constructs. ideas are the actualization of objective features of reality, i.e. the intelligibility of the known object. — Dfpolis
We can only measure quantities and intentionality is not a quantity. — Dfpolis
Then there ain't anything to meaningful to talk about. — apokrisis
Concepts have to be cashed out in their appropriate percepts. And it is clear that you are doing the usual dualistic thing of wanting to claim that intentionality needs to be measured in terms of it being a qualia - a feel, an affect, something mental, something ineffably subjective and hence beyond simple objective measurement. — apokrisis
For a start, it changes the subject at a basic level. — apokrisis
We could say that there is that general quality of first person perspective which makes awareness intrinsically a matter of "aboutness". But that now leaves out the goal-centric nature of an embodied mind. — apokrisis
So intentionality ought to be measurable in terms of its objective satisfactions. — apokrisis
The aboutness is also always about something that matters — apokrisis
So intentionality ought to be measurable in terms of its objective satisfactions. It is not a free-floating subjectivity. — apokrisis
It can ask the question of what the Cosmos appears to be trying to achieve in general. — apokrisis
material energy and formal variety are not only both conserved quantities in nature, they are essentially exchangable — apokrisis
Nature - considered as a memory, a record of syntactical markings - is now understood as being composed of atoms of form. — apokrisis
We thus can move on from information as uninformed syntactical possibility — apokrisis
No I don't think there's any surprise here. I know some physicists, and they recognize that the laws of physics are descriptive principles based in inductive reason, and not representative of some "laws of nature" which are operating to cause matter to behave the way that it does. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no basis in reality to assume that there are corresponding active laws of nature causing the occurrence of what is described. — Metaphysician Undercover
let's say that there is a descriptive law which says that if the sky is clear, it is blue. — Metaphysician Undercover
the reason why the sky is blue is not that there is a law acting to make it that way. — Metaphysician Undercover
The activity here, which produces "the observed behaviour of matter" is the activity of observation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hallucinatory things may be measured. — Metaphysician Undercover
So just because one provides a measurement of something, this does not mean that the measured thing is real. — Metaphysician Undercover
Imagine that I find Bigfoot's print in my backyard and I take a measurement of that footprint. So I have a measurement of Bigfoot's footprint, but the marking I measured wasn't really a footprint from Bigfoot, it was caused by something else. — Metaphysician Undercover
A faulty description of the thing measured means that the measurement is of a non-existent thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are completely ignoring the creative, imaginative, aspect of ideas. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ideas are an act of the subject, not an act of the "objective features of reality". — Metaphysician Undercover
"Measurement" is an act carried out by the measurer. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Measurement" is an act carried out by the measurer. The thing being measured need not be active at all, in order for it to be measured. — Metaphysician Undercover
you describe it as an act of the thing being measured rather than an act of the measurer — Metaphysician Undercover
I prefer Kant's 'transcendental idealism' — Wayfarer
But what scientific realists advocate is actually what Kant would describe as 'transcendental realism', i.e. the implicit acceptance that the world would appear just as it is, were there no observer. — Wayfarer
But the entire vast universe described by science, is still organised around an implicit perspective - in our case, the human perspective, which imposes a scale and an order on what would otherwise be formless and meaningless chaos. — Wayfarer
for it has passed through the machinery and manufacture of the brain, and has thus come under the forms of space, time and causality, by means of which it is first presented to us as extended in space and ever active in time.
Whether it exists, or the mode in which it exists, is exactly what is at issue. As you no doubt know, this question is at the heart of the so-called 'Copenhagen interpretation' which says there's not an electron lurking within the probability wave until we measure it; the probability wave is all there is, until the measurement is made. — Wayfarer
But you have to know what 2 denotes - in other words, you have to be able to count - before you can make any deductions about the composition of water molecules. — Wayfarer
It's the fact that 2 = 2 and always has an invariant meaning that makes it a universal. — Wayfarer
'thought is an inherently universalising activity - were materialism true, then you literally could not think'. — Wayfarer
What would be a general description of the number 2 which would apply to all instances of mental representation associated with the symbols "2", "II", "two", etc.? — Galuchat
you need to show that its foundations are deeper than Kant's unwillingness to accept Hume's counter-cultural observations. — Dfpolis
And, you can offer no a posteriori reason because your methodological dogmatism prevents you form considering, let alone judging, the data of self-awareness. — Dfpolis
Our intentions occur in, and are part of, the natural world. — Dfpolis
I have said intentionality is not a quantity and therefore not measurable. — Dfpolis
I have pointed out that the act of seeing an apple, for example, not only gives us data about the apple (as objective object), but also about ourselves (subjective object) -- for example that we can see, be aware, direct our attention, etc. None of this involves "feels." So please spare me the typical physicalist pap. — Dfpolis
As I pointed out above, you have made no case reducing "meaningfulness" to measurability. — Dfpolis
If according to your philosophy, all knowledge is gained by experience, then dogs, horses and cows ought to be able to speak and count — Wayfarer
However, when one goes on to say the laws of physics are "not representative of some 'laws of nature' which are operating to cause matter to behave the way that it does" one is making a claim inadequate to the actual practice of physics. — Dfpolis
For example, we explain the time-development of the cosmos in terms of the laws of nature. This makes no sense if the only "laws" are descriptions formulated by modern thinkers. Why? Because such laws did not exist during the epochs of the universe they are supposed to have effected. It is also difficult to see how human descriptions could effect purely physical process, even at the present time. — Dfpolis
So, your claim is that physics is a species of fiction writing. — Dfpolis
the footprint (which is what you are measuring) is quite real. — Dfpolis
This is nonsense. A man robs a store. On the way out, he passes height marks by the door and is measured to be 6'2" tall. A witness says he has blue eyes, but really he has brown eyes. By your logic, the robber does not exist. — Dfpolis
Please explain how this would work in a concrete case. — Dfpolis
I have always said that concepts require the operation of awareness, Aristotle's Agent Intellect (nous poetikos). — Dfpolis
Intellect is a cognitive faculty essentially different from sense and of a supra-organic order; that is, it is not exerted by, or intrinsically dependent on, a bodily organ, as sensation is. This proposition is proved by psychological analysis and study of the chief functions of intellect. These are conception, judgment, reasoning, reflection, and self-consciousness. All these activities involve elements essentially different from sensuous consciousness. In conception the mind forms universal ideas. These are different in kind from sensations and sensuous images. These latter are concrete and individual, truly representative of only one object, whilst the universal idea will apply with equal truth to any object of the class. The universal idea possesses a fixity and invariableness of nature, whilst the sensuous image changes from moment to moment. Thus the concept or universal idea of "gold", or "triangle", will with equal justice stand for any specimen, but the image represents truly only one individual.
Since the notion of "agent intellect" is very abstract, it is good to ask how this concept relates to experience. What mental act makes neurally encoded information actually known? Clearly, we come to know when we become aware of them. So, the agent intellect is simply our awareness -- and abstraction is focusing our attention, our awareness, on some aspects of experience to the exclusion of others. — Dfpolis
The nature of the active intellect was the subject of intense discussion in medieval philosophy, as various Muslim, Jewish and Christian thinkers sought to reconcile their commitment to Aristotle's account of the body and soul to their own theological commitments. At stake in particular was in what way Aristotle's account of an incorporeal soul might contribute to understanding of the nature of eternal life.
Knowledge (epistēmē), in its being-at-work, is the same as the thing it knows, and while knowledge in potency comes first in time in any one knower, in the whole of things it does not take precedence even in time.
This does not mean that at one time it thinks but at another time it does not think, but when separated it is just exactly what it is, and this alone is deathless and everlasting.
Yep. The idea certainly would be.
That is why I would accept a restriction on knowing the noumenal. But indeed I go further. I am saying the umwelt is a kind of double fiction. It contains both the self and the world as its double aspect. — apokrisis
The world itself is understood in this Janus two-faced fashion. — apokrisis
But then, it becomes something when physics itself starts to embrace that semiotic twist and begin to measure the world in terms of atoms of form rather than atoms of matter. Information or entropy? These are now just two sides of the same coin - the one basic Planckian unit of reality measurement. — apokrisis
It fixes physicalism by giving back some of the essential stuff that went missing - like intentionality or formal/final cause. — apokrisis
It would seem better then to say that the idea of the physical world is really a reduction of the noumenal to a habit of meaning. — Janus
I would further modify what you say and call self and world fictive rather than fictional, since they have their roots in reality, but are not real in the sense we might think when we hypostatize them — Janus
Should I be offended? — Janus
So, it would seem that, for you, intentionality in it's inorganic guise is entropy, and in its organic guise is negentropy, and the same may be said for formal/final causation? — Janus
That we can project the law of gravity to a time when human beings did not exist, doesn't prove that the law of gravity represents a natural law of gravity, rather than it being a description of how mass behaves when influenced by something called gravity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Was there a difference? — apokrisis
Again, is there a difference that matters? If fictional is specific to the literary, then fictive is perhaps more suitably general in being a product of the imagination. But it seems like hair splitting. — apokrisis
Intentionality would be the negentropy - organic or inorganic. Even energy has stuff it is itching to do. — apokrisis
Well, yes, because then we would not be reducing the noumenal to the physical world. — Janus
But I don't see the world and the self as products of the imagination, but rather as products of nature. — Janus
I don't see a significant difference between this and Whitehead's notion of prehension, and the pan-experientialism which has grown out of it. (But let's not become embroiled in that argument again; I only mention it in response to your referring to his purported "pan-psychism" again a few posts ago). — Janus
Not getting it. — apokrisis
The problem with "knowledge" as a goal is that it lacks an obvious intentional point. — apokrisis
I'm happy to debate the difference any time. — apokrisis
The idea of the action of gravity is indispensable to the scientific understanding of the evolution of the Universe, so, that gravity was universal prior to the advent of human life is entailed by that understanding. How would idea of the universal action of gravity at all times and places differ from the idea of a universal natural law of gravity; a law which is real in more than a merely nominalistic fashion? — Janus
What would be a general description of the number 2 which would apply to all instances of mental representation associated with the symbols "2", "II", "two", etc.? — Galuchat
I think actually defining what number is is a very difficult thing to do. If you look at the Wikipedia entry on philosophy of mathematics you will find it is very long, detailed, and with hundreds of references. — Wayfarer
How would idea of the universal action of gravity at all times and places differ from the idea of a universal natural law of gravity; a law which is real in more than a merely nominalistic fashion? — Janus
And, you can offer no a posteriori reason because your methodological dogmatism prevents you form considering, let alone judging, the data of self-awareness. — Dfpolis
The reason would be that I have studied the relevant neuroscience and psychology. Self-awareness is a cultural meta-skill, a gift of language. And so all its "data" is socially constructed. That is the place I would start on that subject. — apokrisis
The natural world for us is an umwelt - a system of meaningful sign. — apokrisis
But still, the mind is the product of forming that model of the world. — apokrisis
We experience our own umwelt - .... — apokrisis
... - our experience of a world with "us" in it. — apokrisis
There is an irreducible complexity here. A triadic Peircean story. — apokrisis
And that is why I stress the necessity of being able to cash out any concept in acts of measurement — apokrisis
Look, I see an elephant. It is grey. It is angry.
A chaos of physical possibility has just been reduced to a collection of signs that have meaning for me. — apokrisis
The satisfaction of theories are always negotiable. — apokrisis
And qualities are only intelligible to the degree they can be particularised or quantified. — apokrisis
You can't actually have a clear conception of something - like intentionality - unless you can point to its specific located examples. — apokrisis
Induction from the particular to the general and then deduction from the general back to the particular again. — apokrisis
If "intentionality" is an intelligible construct, you will be able to present the specific instances which support the general case - the acts of measurement which make sense of the claims of the theory. — apokrisis
our subjective self is what emerges along with the objective world as the result of there being that modelling relation — apokrisis
an organismic level of semiosis — apokrisis
This is where the dualism normally starts - the mind becoming something actually separate from the view it is taking. — apokrisis
Our percepts are already only a self-interested system of signs. — apokrisis
If you actually do take an ecological and embodied view as you say, then you ought to find it natural that intentionality can be quantified. — apokrisis
if one is doing abstract or theorectical math one always thinks in terms of the "abstract" number or you will fail the class (you won't be dead, you just won't pass). — prothero
I think from my cursory reading of the texts that Aristotle's 'Agent Intellect' amounts to something considerably more than 'awareness'. Again, animals have awareness and are the subjects of experience, but humans are distinguished by rational intelligence (and I hope the definition of the human as a 'rational animal' is not controversial.) — Wayfarer
what is it that makes objects intelligible. — Wayfarer
But then, that is rather like Brennan's account that you previously criticized. So here: — Wayfarer
At stake in particular was in what way Aristotle's account of an incorporeal soul might contribute to understanding of the nature of eternal life.
Knowledge (epistēmē), in its being-at-work, is the same as the thing it knows -- Aristotle
Whereas at this point, I'm at a loss here to see how your account differs from today's mainstream orthodoxy of evolutionary psychology. — Wayfarer
Something like pattern recognition, that the organism has evolved all the better to cope with the exigencies of survival? — Wayfarer
If after deliberative cogitation, you have no description for an abstract universal called "number", it would be reasonable to conclude that you've never actually used such a concept in mental modelling, much less in controlled or automatic problem-solving and decision-making. — Galuchat
Can there be numbers or systems of measurement apart from particulars? — Galuchat
Gödel was a mathematical realist, a Platonist. He believed that what makes mathematics true is that it's descriptive—not of empirical reality, of course, but of an abstract reality. Mathematical intuition is something analogous to a kind of sense perception. In his essay "What Is Cantor's Continuum Hypothesis?", Gödel wrote that we're not seeing things that just happen to be true, we're seeing things that must be true. The world of abstract entities is a necessary world—that's why we can deduce our descriptions of it through pure reason.
First, I do not see awareness as belonging to the physical order. — Dfpolis
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