This puzzles me. IS Terra's claim that the number 2 is a brain state? — Banno
But that's nonsense, since it would mean that my 2 and your 2, being different brain states, are different numbers. — Banno
And here you are spinning the word "physical". — Banno
And indeed that's the case, a la it being a nominalistic truism that two instantiations of "the same" anything are not actually identical. — Terrapin Station
And indeed that's the case, a la it being a nominalistic truism that two instantiations of "the same" anything are not actually identical. — Terrapin Station
You're assuming that an ontological account is necessarily a physicality account. — Janus
if you want to make it a coherent ontological account, then when you want to say a logical entity, for example the number 2, is identical with a physical brain state, — Janus
you would need to make sense of that claim by explaining the two-ness of the brain state in physical terms. Can you do that? — Janus
Of course two physical instantiations of any abstraction are not physically identical, but they are semantically and logically identical which shows that no coherent physicalist account of logic or semantics is possible. — Janus
It's not a bad assumption, if only for the purpose of checking out possibilities. Whta woudl be the alternative? — Banno
There's no necessity here. Understanding 2 is being able to do stuff with 2. — Banno
You're assuming that an ontological account is necessarily a physicalist account. In any case even granting that condition for the sake of argument,if you want to make it a coherent ontological account, then when you want to say a logical entity, for example the number 2, is identical with a physical brain state, you would need to make sense of that claim by explaining the two-ness of the brain state in physical terms. — Janus
Don't jump the gun. That Terrapin Station has it wrong does not make it impossible. — Banno
To say that a physicalist account of logic and semantics is possible then, would be to say that a comprehensive and intelligible explanation of all logic and semantics could be given in the language of physics (mathematical equations). This seems obviously unsupportable, or at least it does not seem possible to discover any reason to believe it could ever be done. — Janus
Well, yeah. But do you conclude that there is stuff that is not physical? 'Cause that does not follow. — Banno
Then, since you are talking about a completely different thing to the rest of us, why should we pay you any attention? — Banno
Why not treat your argument as a reductio, — Banno
since it makes language impossible — Banno
Numbers are something we do; they consist in our counting and calculating. — Banno
Knowing what 2 is, is not having a particular brain-state, — Banno
you would need to make sense of that claim by explaining the two-ness of the brain state in physical terms. Can you do that? — Janus
but they are semantically and logically identical which shows that no coherent physicalist account of logic or semantics is possible. — Janus
Physicalist accounts are not themselves physical, — Janus
There was a typo there: it should have read "physicalist account". My point was just that the physical form in which all accounts are given is irrelevant, in terms of their mere physical configurations, to their meaning. Of course this is not to say that the conveyance of meaning is not effected by recognizable physical configurations, but to make the fairly obvious point that there is no necessary, or necessarily physically recognizable, connection between physical conformation and meaning. — Janus
So, a physicalist account (which is itself always a logical and semantic, as well as a physical, entity) would be an account in the language of physics. — Janus
Yes, but first we need to go over what the "rules" for explanations are going to be. Can you do that with me? — Terrapin Station
Also, are you going to get to your alternate nonphysicalist account in terms that aren't just negations once we do that? Or are you never going to get around to that? — Terrapin Station
You can claim they're logically and semantically identical, of course. — Terrapin Station
Can you get to the ontological account of what they are in unique, non-negative terms already? — Terrapin Station
Physicalism is NOT subservience in any regard to the science of physics. — Terrapin Station
This puzzles me. IS Terra's claim that the number 2 is a brain state?
— Banno
Yes. — Terrapin Station
"Not identical" does not amount to "completely different" (in the sense of "completely dissimilar"). — Terrapin Station
This is pretty straight-forward Wittgenstein, where we drop the search for the meaning of "2" and instead look at what we do. — Banno
You are going to use some notion of language as communication between your homunculus and our homunculi, — Banno
What "rules for explanations"? Are you going to propose that they must be in physicalist terms to count as explanations? That would be very convenient for you. — Janus
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