I'm not sure how you can extricate ontology from epistemolog, other than as an epiphenomon of taking an absolutist stance. — fresco
Wait a second, I think you are setting me up. I'm gonna assert something that doesn't exist, and you are going to tell me how the non-existing thing derives a virtual existence within the presupposed content of my assertion.
So...unicorns? — Merkwurdichliebe
Firstly I don't think any non-linguistic idea could be rightly thought of as an abstract idea. You might say that prior to language thinking is "private/ subjective" but I think that is kind of misleading,because it seems that such non-linguistic thinking of existence would be akin to an unmediated apprehension of existence and hence instinctive, which would be native to and shared by all members of whatever species we are considering. — Janus
would say that unicorns have a fictional or imagined existence. — Janus
I would say that thinking is dependent on existence, and for the existing thinker, "existence" is primary, and "thought" secondary. Then, thinking about existence would be tertiary. — Merkwurdichliebe
When you mention "non-linguistic thinking of existence" as "akin to an unmediated apprehension of existence and hence instinctive, which would be native to and shared by all members of whatever species we are considering", I cannot agree that this qualifies as "thought" without further qualification. As it stands here, it would say that it represents cognitive immediacy, in which a primitive, non-linguistic mode of thought may or may not exist. But the abstraction of primitive ideation into linguistic thought, is where direct existence (including primitive ideation) is properly mediated into a rational concept. — Merkwurdichliebe
I believe animals definitely think, but they do not hold or stand by their thinking such that we could say they "have thoughts". this latter comes about only with language where the thoughts can be precisely formulated and therefore "grasped" and "held". — Janus
All use of the term "existence" is language use.
All language use is existentially dependent upon language acquisition. [. . .] The presupposition of existence does not require language use for it happens in autonomous fashion within non-linguistic thought/belief.
That which is prior to language use cannot be existentially dependent upon language use.
The presupposition of existence is not existentially dependent upon language use.
All notions of "existence" are. — creativesoul
Then the mistake, imo, is that we can escape from the domain of 'language' at all. — fresco
I could have been clearer there. When I said 'no one knows', I meant that - at least to my knowledge - it cannot be proven philosophically/logically (or any other way) with absolute certainty. — EricH
Physical existence, fictional existence, conceptual existence, possible existence, desired existence. — Janus
All use of the term "existence" is language use.
All language use is existentially dependent upon language acquisition. [. . .] The presupposition of existence does not require language use for it happens in autonomous fashion within non-linguistic thought/belief.
That which is prior to language use cannot be existentially dependent upon language use.
The presupposition of existence is not existentially dependent upon language use.
All notions of "existence" are.
— creativesoul
I agree with almost everything you said here. In fact you are onto something good, maybe genius. But if your name is "creativesoul", then you need to put some more creative soul into it. There is something robotic about such formulaic speech, and I think you can 'get down' much better. :grin: Whatever the case, you present an honest and reasonable counterbalance to speculative philosophers like myself, and I value your contributions. — Merkwurdichliebe
I believe animals definitely think, but they do not hold or stand by their thinking such that we could say they "have thoughts". this latter comes about only with language where the thoughts can be precisely formulated and therefore "grasped" and "held".
— Janus
That is a great point! For our purposes here, we could say that any thought that can be grasped or held can be called a concept. — Merkwurdichliebe
That is to say that thinking is not having thoughts. That's nonsense.
We talk about our thought/belief. We have them prior to talking about them. — creativesoul
Whatever the case, you present an honest and reasonable counterbalance to speculative philosophers like myself, and I value your contributions. — Merkwurdichliebe
He denied that animals can have thoughts at all. — creativesoul
I believe animals definitely think, — Janus
I believe animals definitely think, but they do not hold or stand by their thinking such that we could say they "have thoughts". this latter comes about only with language where the thoughts can be precisely formulated and therefore "grasped" and "held".
don't store or recall thoughts other than immediately during thinking — Shamshir
Well, it matters if it's what @Janus means when he refers to holding thought. As he'd then be right that they can't hold thoughts, but clearly can have thoughts, which is different when looking at thinking as a river.The duration of the correlation doesn't matter. — creativesoul
The duration of the correlation doesn't matter.
— creativesoul
Well, it matters if it's what Janus means when he refers to holding thought. — Shamshir
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