This is a very simplified picture, but it is instructive insofar as it provides hints on viewing where this new domain of phenomena; that which is studied by chemistry; came from. When fields interact they make particles, when particles interact they make atoms, when atoms interact they make compounds, when compounds interact they make chemistry. Organisation of one domain (atoms) can generate novel behaviours (chemistry) which have extra causal powers (chemical reactions) than what was organised (particle-particle interactions). The general principle suggested here is that when you get enough and the right sort of interactions between stuff, when interaction can organsie, you get new domains of entities which then stick out from their background. — fdrake
So flow they do, along the paths they feel they must, but they empathise; they feel in unison, constrained by the interactive context of the material's organisation and constitution. — fdrake
Is there a “hard problem” in your view? — Noah Te Stroete
Can you remind us what nominalism is in your own words? — Noah Te Stroete
And what was nominalism an answer to? You said “where nominalism begins.” What was the question? — Noah Te Stroete
that doesn’t answer the question of HOW individuality happens. — Noah Te Stroete
Right. By definition then if one accepts nominalism. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, it kind of follows from the nonidenticality of discernibles in general. If we can discern two things, they can't be identical. — Terrapin Station
Yes. I guess a better question than where is how individuality happens. I think that was the subtext. — Noah Te Stroete
Basically it's a brute ontological fact. — Terrapin Station
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