That would only settle the truthfulness of statements about the properties of Holmes within the stories. — Herg
MindForged says that Holmes is more famous than any other detective, meaning that he's more famous than any real detective. This seems prima facie to be true, and yet if there is no such object as Holmes, as I claim, then it looks as if it can't be true, because if there is no object, then there can be no properties of the object such as being famous. — Herg
how can more people have heard of Holmes than of any other detective if there's no such object as Holmes? — Herg
That's all you need for Holmes to have become the most famous detective in the world. You don't need nonexistent objects. — Herg
(a) Within the stories and (b) re how people think about him, catalyzed by the stories, for example. — Terrapin Station
Part of the problem, I think, comes from supposing that there is identity between your Holmes and mine. Since there is no Holmes, there can't be; but it's very easy to write about Holmes as if he is a single object possessing self-identity, as you just did when you said, 'how people think about him'. There's actually no 'him'; there's just a bundle of concepts in my mind to which I attach the name 'Holmes', and a bundle of concepts in your mind to which you attach the name 'Holmes', and a mechanism (Conan Doyle's stories) that ensures that our bundles are similar enough to fool us into thinking there's a single, self-identical object. — Herg
I don't think you and I have any significant areas of disagreement on this issue. — Herg
I'd say there actually IS a him; it's actually just a bundle of concepts in your mind. That doesn't imply that "there isn't actually a him," unless one insists on reading language in a completely untenable way. That theory of language is WRONG. Language doesn't actually work so that we can only refer to real-world objects. (And so that we subsequently have to posit nonexistent real world objects). — Terrapin Station
The reason that people present fictional things is almost never "to explain how we can speak truthfully about such things." — Terrapin Station
I assume that MindForged means that the chief reason philosophers propose non-existent objects is to explain how we can speak truthfully about such things; it's clearly not why novelists present them.
The disagreement between MindForged and myself is about the status of non-existent objects as it is hypothesised by philosophers (not by novelists, who mostly probably don't think about it). MindForged holds that we need there to be non-existent objects to explain how we can speak truthfully about them; I disagree. — Herg
It's easy to have the wrong idea about what you're doing when you think about non-existent objects. Both Meinong and Russell got it wrong. Russell thought that when he wrote 'the present King of France is bald', he was claiming, falsely, that there was a real present King of France. However, he was not; he was pretending that there was a real present King of France. — Herg
If you say 'Sherlock Holmes is the world's greatest detective', this is not a true statement. We only pretend that it is true, just as we pretend that there is such an object as Sherlock Holmes. — Herg
What do you think about objects in dreams? If you dream about a horse, do you hold that there is a horse? I hold that there is not.
That's not what I said. I said the proposal to believe non existent things (Meinongianism) have some sort of being is proposed to explain how we speak truthfully about fictional things. I did not say fictional things are created so that we can speak truthfully about them. In other words, tan explanation for why I can say true things about Sherlock Holmes is the theory that non-existent objects corresponding to these things exist. — MindForged
But I don't think we can say that what's referred to by 'him' is the bundle of concepts.A nonexistent object is not a bundle of concepts, — Herg
Nor do I agree that Holmes is 'in your mind'. He is not mental; he is nonexistent. — Herg
When I said "there's actually no 'him'", I meant what I said: in the actual world (which, not being a David Lewis-type modal realist, I take to be the same as the real world), there's no 'him'. — Herg
In the case of Holmes, I think that 'him' only has reference in Griffin's context of supposition, — Herg
Holmes is not in the actual or real world in any way whatsoever. — Herg
When you phrase it as "pretending" is sounds like you're calling me deceptive rather than misguided. If that wasn't the implication my mistake. — MindForged
I think the sentence was "Sherlock Holmes is more famous than any detective" or something like that, but disregard that. To say the sentence is false seems to require adopting something like Russell's theory of definite descriptions. After all, few would hear me say "Sherlock Holmes is the most famous detective" and interpret that as me saying Holmes exists. Because that's how Russell's theory would interpret that. And obviously that assumption is false and thus the sentence that assumes it.
If that's not how you are determining it isn't true, the only recourse that comes to mind is a restriction of either the Principle of Excluded Middle or of Bivalence. — MindForged
What do you think about objects in dreams? If you dream about a horse, do you hold that there is a horse? I hold that there is not.
A non-existent horse, yes. An existent horse, no. If one holds to Meinongianism, "there is" is not the same thing as "exists". Being has been partitioned into different kinds so if I speak truthfully about the horse in my dream I'm not committing myself to the existence of the dream horse. It has enough being to predicate things of it but it's a thin sort of being, not physical. — MindForged
Nor do I agree that Holmes is 'in your mind'. He is not mental; he is nonexistent.
— Herg
What a ridiculous thing to say. Holmes is something we're imagining (aside from talking about Holmes as a character someone is playing, etc.) That means that Holmes is indeed in your mind. You're not being Aspie-ish about that, are you? Thinking that people are saying literally that some person is in your mind? Holmes is mental content--something imagined. You're imagining a person. It's not literally a person. — Terrapin Station
Holmes can't be mental content, because he is a physical object. He is six feet tall, he lives in Baker Street, he injects himself with cocaine, he plays the violin, he is a member of the species homo sapiens. Mental content cannot have any of these properties, only a physical object can, and therefore Holmes is a physical object. — Herg
All mental content is physical first off. — Terrapin Station
But there isn't a Holmes who is six feet tall. — Terrapin Station
Someone imagines him to be six feet tall, someone has written him to be six feet tall, or an actor playing him may either actually be six feet tall or the actors (and scriptwriter etc.) might be pretending that he's six feet tall. When we say that Holmes is six feet tall, one of the above (or something similar) is all that it amounts to. — Terrapin Station
The "nonexistent" adjective applies to the question of whether they also occur as something in the world external-to-minds. — Terrapin Station
I agree that some kind of externality is at play, but maybe it's best frame as external to the individual imagination. Does the white house exist? If we strip away everything mental, piece by piece, then I think we are left with nothing. Anything you could say we were left with would still be intelligible or mental. Bunch of waves and particles? What are they but concepts and mathematics, very mental. 'External-to-minds' is parasitic upon the idea of junk in our absence which still has a shape, a boundary, some border that cuts it out from its background. — macrosoft
To me, stuff like this seems like philosophers obsessing over people qua people, so that they can't allow themselves to address anything other than people, people's perspectives, etc. I see it as a case of not being able to move past seeing oneself as the "center of the world," or thinking that the "world revolves around them." — Terrapin Station
http://emilkirkegaard.dk/en/wp-content/uploads/Steven-Weinberg-%E2%80%9CAgainst-Philosophy%E2%80%9D.pdfThis is not to deny all value to philosophy, much of which has nothing to
do with science. I do not even mean to deny all value to the philosophy of science, which at its best
seems to me a pleasing gloss on the history and discoveries of science. But we should not expect it
to provide today's scientists with any useful guidance about how to go about their work or about
what they are likely to find. — Weinberg
I don't at all agree that if we strip away everything mental we are left with nothing. I think it's rather absurd to suggest that somehow the world didn't exist at all prior to us, and then we just popped into existence as whatever it might be that you think we are, exactly, and created the world wholesale simply because we popped into existence. — Terrapin Station
I don't think stuff like that is anything even remotely like a philosophical insight. I think it's more akin to being developmentally stuck at a stage that most people grow out of by the time they pass toddlerhood,or at best, it's rather sophomoric and/or off-the-charts self-centered. — Terrapin Station
I understand why one might say that. But a person might ask what the motive away from the human is really about. — macrosoft
The idea of getting beyond the human is like the idea of getting beyond experience. — macrosoft
Assuming that there is some kind of physics-stuff that precedes the emergence of human consciousness (which I indeed believe), we can't say anything about it. — macrosoft
Any concept it could have — macrosoft
Not to be insulting, but your readiness to think that that is what people are getting at is itself self-centered. I can't think of anyone who claims that, period. — macrosoft
Of course we can say things about it. Why on Earth would we believe that we are not able to? — Terrapin Station
If you are trying to talk about something beyond human conceptualization (mind-independent reality), — macrosoft
The stuff we're talking about doesn't "have concepts." Concepts are mental phenomena. That doesn't mean that we can't say anything about the stuff that's not us. — Terrapin Station
Mathematics is not mental in the sense you mean. It is grasped by the mental, but it is not constituted by the mental, because it is external to us. — Herg
Mind independent reality isn't beyond human conceptualization in the slightest. Why would anyone believe that it is? — Terrapin Station
I think you are missing the fundamental difficultly in cashing out 'mind-independent.' — macrosoft
?? I didn't say anyone says that. I said it's what's going on in those situations. It's like a kind of developmental retardation, and I don't at all mind if anyone reads that as insulting. — Terrapin Station
I think you're completely avoiding the need to support the notion that thereis some fundamental difficulty to it. — Terrapin Station
But then some of the famous philosophers are developmentally retarded — macrosoft
Mathematics is not mental in the sense you mean. It is grasped by the mental, but it is not constituted by the mental, because it is external to us.
— Herg
That is an arguable position, but I'm not a default Platonist. The problem is just repeated here. What is this 'external' to us? IMV, we have unclarifed language here. — macrosoft
I'm not a Platonist either. And 'external to us' is perfectly comprehensible: I don't see your difficulty.
Are you trying to sell us idealism? Because idealism is hopeless. It's a philosophical dead end. — Herg
Sure. Okay, here's something about it. "There are lots of rocks on the Appalachian Trail near the Pennsylvania-New Jersey border."I am willing to do so. I think the best way is to ask you to say something about mind-independent reality. Then I will try to point out the contradictions. — macrosoft
Sure. Okay, here's something about it. "There are lots of rocks on the Appalachian Trail near the Pennsylvania-New Jersey border." — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.