No. Nowhere have I said that internal dialogue wasn't linguistic. — fresco
It's like a fractal - however we magnify our cognition, the same pattern keeps appearing. That is where propositional logic has its merits, it explains the pattern. — Merkwurdichliebe
Let's think on that. If existence is had by all things, then there can be no difference between things that exist and things that don't...
And hence, that such-and-such exists adds nothing to it that's not already implicit in the such-and-such. — Banno
I find that talking in terms of something's existence is just talking about the thing.
Existential dependency doesn't require talking in terms of something's 'existence'. It's more about a common sense method of approach. It requires talking in terms of something's elemental constituency. If something consists of something else, it is existentially dependent upon that something else. If something exists prior to something else, it cannot be existentially dependent upon that something else. — creativesoul
What you're missing here is the analysis of the different kinds of existence we can conceive of. — Janus
Different kinds of existence. How so? — Banno
Physical existence, fictional existence, conceptual existence, possible existence, desired existence. — Janus
You've just named them, so you've answered your own question ! — fresco
But that's not what you said — Banno
Are you now saying that the need of a tree for water is not inherent in the tree itself...
Honestly, I am having difficulty thinking in such a confused fashion. — Banno
I'm saying the tree is dependent upon water which it does not provide for itself. — Merkwurdichliebe
That's just not true, since existence is the one attribute all things, however diverse, share.
— Janus
Let's think on that. If existence is had by all things, then there can be no difference between things that exist and things that don't...
And hence, that such-and-such exists adds nothing to it that's not already implicit in the such-and-such. — Banno
You'd need a lot more than just that to have me take any more interest in your line of thought. — Banno
Ok, so I am presuming that there must be something that each of these kinds has in common, such that they are all the one attribute. — Banno
One thing they all have in common, is that any confirmation of any type of existing thing is dependent upon an observer. — Merkwurdichliebe
Nuh. There are things that no one has seen. — Banno
Like gravity, right? — Merkwurdichliebe
it still requires an observer to confirm it. — Merkwurdichliebe
If I'm following, you move about the world and interact with it on the basis that there is an 'observer independent world'. You just don't philosophically commune with it?I cannot philosophically commune with the idea of an 'observer independent world' even though we obviously operate, moment to moment, on that basis as though there were. — fresco
Now is there a 'mind-independent and language independent world'? No one knows — EricH
I think it couldn't be more obvious that there is, and I see the view that it's a problematic question as pretty juvenile if not infantile (if I'm being honest rather than trying to be PC and not hurt anyone's feelings). — Terrapin Station
I find that talking in terms of something's existence is just talking about the thing.
Existential dependency doesn't require talking in terms of something's 'existence'. It's more about a common sense method of approach. It requires talking in terms of something's elemental constituency. If something consists of something else, it is existentially dependent upon that something else. If something exists prior to something else, it cannot be existentially dependent upon that something else.
— creativesoul
Yes, but you are talking about the existence of things both dependent and depending; that is the point. — Janus
You can say that something depends on something else, but that is not the same as saying that the existence of the thing depends on something else, or the existence of something else.
The idea of existence or being is just the broadest most general concept we can apply to all objects of thought and experience.
That's not true, because I'm not talking in such terms. — creativesoul
The term "existence" has no referent. — creativesoul
You can say that something depends on something else, but that is not the same as saying that the existence of the thing depends on something else, or the existence of something else.
Right. It's not the same kind of linguistic practice. So, why did you say otherwise above? You're contradicting yourself. — creativesoul
You are talking in such terms, though. The term 'existential' is an adjective pertaining to the noun 'existence'. — Janus
I haven't contradicted myself as far as i can see. If you want to show me that I have, then show me where I "said otherwise"? — Janus
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