It is just so funny how you repeat the standard comforting formula of words as if they could make sense.
There is "me" who sees "my mind", and even sees the "me" seeing its "mind". And what is this mind seeing. Why, its "the world". Or no. In fact its sees the one reality. Or is that "the one reality", given that reality is whatever any mind happens to make of it? I mean "it". — apokrisis
There were no actual universals prior to subjects thinking them. — Dfpolis
Isn't that conceptualism about universals rather than moderate realism? — Andrew M
For a moderate realist the universal is immanent in the particulars, not the mind. — Andrew M
he one fine point here, made by Aristotle in his definition of "quantity" in Metaphysics Delta, is that there are no actual numbers independent of counting and measuring operations. — Dfpolis
I can't find this - could you quote the specific text you're thinking of there? — Andrew M
In other words, they are seeking to describe what is. — Dfpolis
I don't see your point. You appear to have misunderstood me. — Metaphysician Undercover
physicists expect things to continue to be, in the future, the way that they have been in the past, just like we expect the sun to shine in the day, and it to be dark at night. This has nothing to do with whether or not they believe that there are laws acting to ensure that this will continue, that's just your ontological assumption — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that there must be reasons why we expect that things will continue to be, into the future, as they have been in the past, but I disagree that the reason why we expect this is because we believe that there are laws of nature acting to ensure this. — Metaphysician Undercover
We have experienced in the past, that things continue to be, into the future, as they have been in the past, except when something acts to change this, so we conclude by means of inductive reasoning, that that this will continue. — Metaphysician Undercover
We do not expect that things will continue to be as they have been because laws of nature are acting to ensure this, and this is evident from the fact that we allow that things change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Newton's laws refer to the activities of "forces", they do not refer to the activities of "laws". — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would anyone think that the cause of uniform activity is magic? — Metaphysician Undercover
If the conditions of existence are the same here as they are over there, then there ought to be a uniformity of activity between these two places. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is you who is suggesting that gravity is not real, not I. — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, they are seeking to describe what is. — Dfpolis
I don't see your point. You appear to have misunderstood me. — Metaphysician Undercover
physicists expect things to continue to be, in the future, the way that they have been in the past, just like we expect the sun to shine in the day, and it to be dark at night. This has nothing to do with whether or not they believe that there are laws acting to ensure that this will continue, that's just your ontological assumption — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that there must be reasons why we expect that things will continue to be, into the future, as they have been in the past, but I disagree that the reason why we expect this is because we believe that there are laws of nature acting to ensure this. — Metaphysician Undercover
We have experienced in the past, that things continue to be, into the future, as they have been in the past, except when something acts to change this, so we conclude by means of inductive reasoning, that that this will continue. — Metaphysician Undercover
We do not expect that things will continue to be as they have been because laws of nature are acting to ensure this, and this is evident from the fact that we allow that things change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Newton's laws refer to the activities of "forces", they do not refer to the activities of "laws". — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would anyone think that the cause of uniform activity is magic? — Metaphysician Undercover
If the conditions of existence are the same here as they are over there, then there ought to be a uniformity of activity between these two places. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is you who is suggesting that gravity is not real, not I. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not sure why agreement is unfortunate. — Dfpolis
I don't think i'd call mind an "attribute," but i know I wouldn't call it a "substance." I'd prefer to call it a "power" or "combination of powers." It may be nitpicking, but I also wouldn't say "phenomena" cause things. I'd say "actions" cause things. Still, I see the point you're making. — Dfpolis
The Fundamental Abstraction doesn't partition the world into the mental and the extended, but into subjective experience and objective physicality. Of course, our experience of being a subject is an experience of having a mind, but having a mind is more than being a subject. In the same way, being objectively physical is more than being extended, and even more than being a physical state. It also includes observable orderly behavior, which is the foundation in reality for our concept <laws of nature>. I have been arguing that the laws of nature are intentional in a well-defined sense that puts them in the same genus as our committed intentions (aka acts of will).
May we not wonder, then, if our conceptual space is failing us? We have <idea> and <neural representation> concepts, but our <knowing> concept is not sufficiently robust to reflect the dynamics connecting these abstractions. Similarly, we have <interest> and <neural activation> concepts, but our <attending> concept misses the dynamics linking them. — Dfpolis
If you are describing "what is," your description is based on reality. I am calling that reality, the one being described, a "law of nature." — Dfpolis
This is not an argument about reality, but about what to call the aspect of reality effecting the continuing order. I am quire flexible on naming conventions. What name do you suggest/like? — Dfpolis
It would be best to research your sources before making claims. Let's read a bit of Newton's Principia. In the preface, he tells us "I had begun to consider the inequalities of the lunar motions, and had entered upon some other things relating to the laws and measures of gravity, ... and the figures that would be described by bodies attracted according to given laws..." [italics mine]. — Dfpolis
Please! Where have I said any such thing? To say that there is a law of gravity is not to say gravity is unreal, but that gravity acts in a consistent way over space and time -- something essential to the practice of astrophysics. — Dfpolis
the most basic quality of physicality, phenomenologically speaking, is extension. — Janus
I would say that it is that but also much more than that, just as having a mind is much more than just being a subject. — Janus
At least, that is the way I am beginning to see it based on my reasonably fair familiarity with German Idealism and my admittedly scanty acquaintance with Scholastic thought. You seem to be making a similar point. — Janus
I find this passage intriguing, but I fear I am not familiar enough with the background against which you are making your suggestions to make any intelligent comment. — Janus
The point is that the very idea of there being operations of symbolic signs, which rely entirely upon convention, entails that there is a shared world of experience; "our world", in other words. Without that the advent of symbolic signs would be impossible. — Janus
Do you have an actual argument? Can you point to an error of fact or reason here? Or does your entire critique rest on the claim that my position is "so funny," You are entitled to your sense of humor, I to my facts and analysis. — Dfpolis
Exactly right. But that is the analytic view of how to understand experience. — apokrisis
So, I'm saying that the shared experience of a common world is fundamental, — Janus
On the basis of this I reject the idea that the self and the world are socially constructed fictions, — Janus
There must also be something fundamental to human experience which is wordless and cannot be captured in terms of signs at all. — Janus
Are you wanting to ask a kind of "chicken and egg" question? Do signs constitute experience in a kind of 'atomic' sense? Or does the holistic sign relation constitute experience? If anything I would have to say the latter, and that the evolution of the sign relation just is the evolution of experience. neither is prior to the other, in fact they are coterminous; the sign relation just is experience; although looked in the abstract as distinctly different things, they are each impossible without the other. — Janus
Although as said above I don't think this entails that everything about our experience can be adequately captured by any form of language, the closest would be its evocation by the arts. — Janus
We know, as a contingent fact, that matter exhibits an orderly dynamics, which by analogy with human ordinances, we call "obeying laws." This does not imply either awareness or choice on the part of matter. Asking how the laws work is like asking what dynamics links the dynamic of a system to the system it is the dynamics of. That kind of question misunderstands what "dynamics" means. — Dfpolis
(1) In becoming aware of neurally encoded intelligibility, we have no idea at all of the neural matrix which encodes it. — Dfpolis
You misunderstand me: I am saying that according to ordinary usage "the law of gravity" applies to both the human formulation, and to the natural force. In the latter one of its senses, 'the law of gravity' is synonymous with simply 'gravity', in other words; but the addition of "the law of" signifies that gravity is a universally acting force; in other words it is understood to be "law-like" or "lawful". — Janus
It's gravity. And it is not governed by any law. — Pattern-chaser
If gravity is indeed omnipresent, then it simply is a law. — Janus
OK, so my point is, that if the thing being described is reality, then why not call that thing being described "reality" rather than "laws of reality"? And if the thing being described is nature, then why not call that thing "nature", rather than "laws of nature". — Metaphysician Undercover
To say that the thing being described is "laws of nature", rather than "nature", just because the descriptions are formulated as "laws", makes no sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
Matter behaves in particular ways which are regular, orderly, and which we describe with laws, the laws of physics. I think we both agree on this. Where I disagree is when you jump to the conclusion that there are another type of "laws", "laws of nature", which are inherent within matter acting within matter, causing it to act in these regular, and orderly ways. I've been asking you to support this conclusion, or assumption, whatever you want to call it, but you've been beating around the bush. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's the reason why I do not agree with you. If there are such laws inherent within, and acting within, matter, then free will is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I find nothing to disagree with here, unfortunately. — Janus
If instead, you want to continue with your position that there are real "laws of nature" acting in the universe, then you ought to place them outside of matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
(2) Somehow we distinguish the object modifying our senses from the modification of our senses by the object -- even though both are encoded in a single neural representation. — Dfpolis
In talking about the logical order, I'm discussing information. Information is the reduction of (logical) possibility and results from the actualization of intelligibility. Both physical and intentional states have an intelligibility that is prior to our knowledge of them. — Dfpolis
While information properly speaking belongs to the logical order, a state's intelligibility, as a source of information, may be called "information" by an analogy of attribution -- just as we say food is "heathy" not because it's alive and well, but because it contributes to health. — Dfpolis
So, I'm using "logical" to refer to the information (intelligibility) specifying a state, whether that state be physical or intentional. "Logical Propagators" in nature, then, transform the intelligibility of one state into that of another. — Dfpolis
The underlying analogy is that as civil laws order social behavior, so laws of nature order natural behavior — Dfpolis
When you say that "Matter behaves in particular ways which are regular," you are admitting the existence of laws of nature -- unless you go on to say that the observed regularity is purely fortuitous. — Dfpolis
Laws causing the regularity of nature is identical with the regularity of nature being caused by laws. — Dfpolis
(2) Somehow we distinguish the object modifying our senses from the modification of our senses by the object -- even though both are encoded in a single neural representation. — Dfpolis
I would say that phenomena (physical actualities) are perceived, not encoded in neural representations.
Perception being the experience caused by sensation (sense function). — Galuchat
... to ensure body survival as effectively as possible, nature, I suggest, stumbled on a highly effective solution: representing the outside world in terms of the modifications it causes in the body proper, that is representing the environment by modifying the primordial representations of the body proper whenever an interaction between organism and environment takes place. — Damasio, Descartes‘ Error, p. 230.
I find the framework of communication it presents to be useful. — Galuchat
1) Information becomes: communicated data (form), and
2) A process of physical communication provides a connection between phenomena and awareness. — Galuchat
7) Received and decoded by the brain (Sensory Processing), — Galuchat
I have no idea what a neural representation is. — Galuchat
For my cognitive psychology project, I have found it very useful to maintain a physical/mental distinction in conceptual analysis — Galuchat
It just is, and it does what it does without the need for any sort of support or guidance. No laws. No luck. Just reality, being real — Pattern-chaser
Laws causing the regularity of nature is identical with the regularity of nature being caused by laws. — Dfpolis
No it isn't — Pattern-chaser
cause and effect; they aren't interchangeable, as you seem to think they are. — Pattern-chaser
There is survival value to perceiving the world as it actually is (or at least a functionally accurate representation of it), since we have to interact with it to survive. What am I missing?Yet, when we see an apple, we become aware of the apple and not of our retinal state. How is this possible?
As I pointed out this distinction has no survival value, and so it is how to see how it could be selected by evolution.
There is survival value to perceiving the world as it actually is (or at least a functionally accurate representation of it), since we have to interact with it to survive. What am I missing — Relativist
The underlying analogy is that as civil laws order social behavior, so laws of nature order natural behavior (an analogy of proportionality). — Dfpolis
So, to respond to your objection, if the universal laws of nature, as described by physics, fully determined the actions of knowing subjects, then yes, free will would be of no avail. But, we have no reason to think that the laws, as described by physics, apply to more than the abstract world physicists have chosen to study. Specifically, we have no reason to think that these laws fully determine the actions of subjects, given that natural science has chosen, ab initio, to exclude subjects as such from its consideration. — Dfpolis
I wish you'd said this earlier. When I started this discussion, I pointed out that the Fundamental Abstraction of natural science prescinds from the consideration of the knowing subject. The knowing subject is also the willing subject. So, when I am discussing the laws of physics and the laws of nature they describe, I'm not discussing reality in all of its complexity, but only the aspects of reality delimited by the Fundamental Abstraction -- which does not have the data to justify conclusions on knowing and willing -- on subjective awareness and freedom.
To forget the self-imposed limitations of natural science is to commit Whitehead's fallacy of misplaced concreteness. We cannot assume that a science adequate to the physical world in abstraction from the knowing and willing subject is adequate to dealing with subjects knowing and willing. I began turning my attention to this yesterday in an exchange with Janus beginning with: — Dfpolis
As I discussed in more detail with Janus (and in even greater detail in my book), since both the laws of nature and human commitments are intentional (species of logical propagator), it is reasonable to ask whether human intentions might not perturb (modify) the "universal" laws of nature. Experiments provide us with statistical certitude that human intentions do perturb the so-called universal laws. So, we have every reason to believe that human actions are not fully determined by the "universal" laws of nature. — Dfpolis
Clearly, the laws of mature must act immanently to order natural processes. — Dfpolis
A law is created by humans. — Pattern-chaser
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