That's how conversations work, dude. — Terrapin Station
Elaborate or where won't get anywhere. — S
Elaborate --because you don't understand what I'm saying? — Terrapin Station
Right, we don't agree. What is elaboration going to do? — Terrapin Station
If phenomena exist, there's going to be some empirical evidence of it. — Terrapin Station
An existent non-phenomena? Are you just randomly combining words? — Terrapin Station
A phenomenon is any event, occurrence, etc. — Terrapin Station
So something could exist, have properties, etc. but there could be no evidence of it? — Terrapin Station
Either the hypothetical event wouldn't necessitate empirical evidence, or it would, but we'd just be unaware of it because we wouldn't be there. — S
First, the idea re whether empirical evidence is appropriate or not isn't saying anything dependent on our awareness. — Terrapin Station
Ontologically, empirical evidence is appropriate if we're talking about things that have properties, that interact with other things. If they do--and everything does, then there will be empirical evidence available of those things whether we're aware of it or not. — Terrapin Station
Our awareness is about epistemology.
Our awareness is pertinent to whether we have reason to believe something or not. — Terrapin Station
I'm asking what kind of thing a set of rules is, fundamentally. What kind of thing is a set, fundamentally? What kind of a thing is a rule, fundamentally? What kind of thing is language? What kind of thing is meaning? What do they consist of, on a fundamental level? Physical? Mental? Abstract? Concrete? Objective? Subjective? Location? No location? Is location a category error? How does interaction work? How does it all tie together to result in language use? — S
Hence, empirical evidence isn't inappropriate.There'd be empirical evidence. — S
We wouldn't be aware of it, which we agree is beside the point.
Hence, empirical evidence isn't inappropriate. — Terrapin Station
I just said that whether we're aware of it is pertinent to whether there's any reason to believe it. — Terrapin Station
No, it's inappropriate in the relevant context. — S
We're aware now about circumstances of the possible future event. There'd be rocks. There'd be meaning — S
Alright, I've vented my weekly spleen, and I'll concede that it is an interesting and worthwhile topic. I wouldn't know where to begin though. It seems irreducible to all of those categories. — csalisbury
Okay, then we'd need to break down what I was talking about, and try to account for each "thing" and their relations. That's my wording we'd have to do that with, not yours.
So, going back, we have rules, language, following or not following, a person, what he wants, and changing the language.
What next? You want to name or categorise each thing? Seems to me that there are abstractions, actions, a person, a desire, relations. Fundamental laws of logic and facts also seem necessary to make sense of the situation, as does science to some extent. — S
Anything extant has empirical evidence available --it has properties, for example. The relevant context here is whether there's empirical evidence. — Terrapin Station
What? I was saying whether we're aware of empirical evidence. What empirical evidence are you saying we're aware of here? Circumstances of the possible future event? It's not clear what that's saying, especially in terms of empirical evidence. — Terrapin Station
Jesus Christ. We're back at square one again! My argument is all the evidence I need. — S
Square one was me asking you what empirical evidence you're referring to re the unclear-to-me phrase "circumstances of the possible future event"? — Terrapin Station
Look, basically you think of things like definitions as being meaning, and the definitions still exist as words in a dictionary, say, even when no people exist, and that's about the extent you've bothered to think about this up to now--you've not bothered to think about just how words in a dictionary amount to meaning or anything like that. People commonly call definitions "meaning" and so that's good enough for you. You don't want to think about it any further than that, really, because you don't want to wind up thinking and saying something that's going to seem weird to people who just go with the unanalyzed flow. — Terrapin Station
"Set" is a name used to pick out a group of different particular things.
— creativesoul
No, that talks about a word. My question was about a thing. De re, not de dicto. — S
Are you disagreeing with me here?
Are you saying that my assertion is false? — creativesoul
Are you disagreeing with me here?
Are you saying that my assertion is false?
— creativesoul
Let me get this straight. You don't even understand that I was saying that you don't understand? — S
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