Both. They aren't mutually exclusive. — Posty McPostface
My temptation is to say that only things have ontological existence. Facts are generated by minds. Facts are a product of language, and language is dependent on the evolution of social animals like us. — Marchesk
But, after all the world is the totality of facts, not things. Facts are not mind-independent though. On a hard reading, you can designate facts as having ontological significance superior to things. — Posty McPostface
It means that facts have a greater ontological significance than things. Atom facts that is. States of affairs are important too. — Posty McPostface
That sounds really difficult to square with a world made up of particles and forces. We can talk about atomic facts of .a table, such as it's color, solidity, constitution, etc, but it's the physical stuff which makes it what it is. — Marchesk
Atomic facts are those things and relations you talk about. Contrast this with sachlage and sachverhalten. — Posty McPostface
As far as I'm aware, Wittgenstein of the Tractatus was a nominalist. — Posty McPostface
Problem being that nominalism is a bit hard to square with saying the world is a totality of relations and properties. — Marchesk
Not really. Again, facts aren't mind independent. Which, gives me the suspicion that Wittgenstein still held onto Kantian transcendentalism in some sense of the Tractatus. — Posty McPostface
In that case, the totality of the world is the categories of my mind coming into contact with the various sense impressions. — Marchesk
So early Wittgenstein actually thought reality consisted of atomic facts and not things like apples, trees, people, etc? — Marchesk
What about your thoughts on Tractarian ontology? I can't shake the suspicion that Wittgenstein was some monist in the Tractatus. — Posty McPostface
There is a very definite undertone of metaphysics to what Wittgenstein is saying, and as such, it does have ontological implications. — Sam26
As far as him being a monist, I don't believe this to be the case. Why would you think so? — Sam26
Atomic facts are reflections of elementary propositions. Atomic facts can combine to form facts of any complexity, and as such, describe the world. So yes the whole of the world would be included. — Sam26
So if the picture is basically describes how to make an object, then the the picture must have existed before the object. So where did the picture come from? — Sir2u
I'm not sure, I suppose that one can have facts that are mind-dependent. I wouldn't assert that facts are mind-independent. — Posty McPostface
In who's mind? Would it not go back to the brain in the vat creating its surroundings if facts are mind-dependent. Or actual physical objects appearing as you obtain the facts about them. — Sir2u
Are you leading us to believe in idealism? — Posty McPostface
In my mind, Wittgenstein was not professing mind-independent facts. — Posty McPostface
So if the picture is basically describes how to make an object, then the the picture must have existed before the object. So where did the picture come from? — Sir2u
No, I'm not leading in any direction. But if one had to explain where the picture came from, creationism would be an easy answer I think. That sucks. — Sir2u
A picture describes how to make an object? What? Where did you get this from? What do you think objects are? — Sam26
So if the picture basically describes the make up of an object, then would it have existed before the object? Is it necessary for the object to exist before the picture is created?
If the first then facts are independent of the mind. If the second, it would seem that the world needs us to exist. — Sir2u
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