A proposition has no location in time or space. Does that figure in your view? — frank
I don't buy that there is anything with no location in time or space — Terrapin Station
So you're pondering proposition P.
P is your brain state.
I can't have your brain state because I don't have access to your brain.
Does that mean we can't ponder the same proposition? — frank
The universe has no location in time or space. — frank
Correct, they're not going to be identical, but they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD. — Terrapin Station
It's a good practical one. I use that conclusion all the time in interactions with others and it leads to expectations being met. This is of course fallible and depends on many factors - like how well I know them, how much time we had to communicate, how often do we seem to take the same ideas in the same ways as far as expected behavior and further communication - but I can even tweak things given my knowledge of others and myself and the context. IOW I have a sense of how close our senses of something will be or not. And sometimes....I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion. — frank
in the ways I experience the results....they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD. — Terrapin Station
The universe has no location in time or space.
— frank
Sure it does. It is all locations of time and space. — Terrapin Station
I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion. — frank
So in your view matter isn’t extended within space? Just extended? — AJJ
It would make no sense to say that locations have no location, right? — Terrapin Station
Sure, that was my point and objection to your view view that there isn’t anything with no location in time or space. — AJJ
Where is my location located? — AJJ
It's ontology/metaphysics. Science doesn't really comment on it either way. I'm a nominalist on the nominalism vs realism (on universals/types) issue. — Terrapin Station
I don't think nominalism leads one to believe that if two people contemplate the same proposition that their brain states are similar. — frank
Again, as I wrote, "They are locations, and locations are always defined in terms of relative extensional relations."
So, for example, the Earth is located between the orbits or Venus and Mars. — Terrapin Station
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