So yes, either matter comes to exist spontaneously, or it's always existed (those are the only two options for whatever we're positing ontologically) and we can explain how minds come to exist by explaining stellar and planetary development, explaining how certain materials in certain conditions amount to life, explaining evolution and how it leads to brains, etc. — Terrapin Station
So what, at least roughly, would you analogously do for an ontology where mind somehow exists first and creates things like planets? — Terrapin Station
If only minds exist on your view, then how would you claim that you can ever observe anything, including other people/other minds, aside from your own mind? In other words, how would you establish anything other than solipsism? — Terrapin Station
And then poof minds arise out of brains. — leo
Our minds would be connected in some way, I'm not saying we would all live within our own mind disconnected from others. — leo
it would be nice if you could start answering mine. — leo
There's not much "poof" to it. That's simply the properties of the matter in question, from the frame of reference of being the matter in question. — Terrapin Station
But just "some way" doesn't really answer it. We just have no idea how it's supposed to work other than "some way," and then don't worry about it? — Terrapin Station
Sure but one thing at a time. Let's keep the posts short. I like to do this more or less just like we'd talk if we were having a conversation in person. (Which is what ideally I'd prefer, and then I'd prefer a phone conversation, then online chat.) — Terrapin Station
I'm willing to do my best to entertain and understand your point of view. So you say there is a real way the world is from a particular spatio-temporal location, and that it's meaningless to talk about how the world is without reference to a spatio-temporal location.
So it means that from your spatio-temporal location "there is a real way the world is from a particular spatio-temporal location" is true, whereas that might not be true from another spatio-temporal location? Or is the statement "there is a real way the world is from a particular spatio-temporal location" made without reference to a spatio-temporal location?
Then, from your spatio-temporal location, if you see someone say that they have seen a ghost who was as real as a tree and that they weren't hallucinating, does it mean to you that they really saw a ghost from their spatio-temporal location, or that they hallucinated a ghost, and how do you reach that conclusion? — leo
So it means that from your spatio-temporal location "there is a real way the world is from a particular spatio-temporal location" is true, whereas that might not be true from another spatio-temporal location?
— leo
Without getting into issues about truth, yes. What's the case at reference point x might not be the case at reference point y. For example, at reference point x, F is round, while at reference point y, F is oblong. — Terrapin Station
Re the ghost thing, I answered that already. — Terrapin Station
So you agree that the statement "there is a real way the world is from a particular spatio-temporal location" is true from your spatio-temporal location, but this statement might not be true from another spatio-temporal location? — leo
So for instance one could say that "there is no real way the world is from some particular spatio-temporal locations", and it could be true from their spatio-temporal location? — leo
What I'm trying to understand is, do you consider you would have seen a ghost as well if you were at their spatio-temporal location, do you consider that there really was a ghost which could be seen from that spatio-temporal location? Or that if you were at that spatio-temporal location you wouldn't have seen one? — leo
Trying to avoid that, I'm not saying anything like, "Whatever anyone claims is what's the case." — Terrapin Station
Although I love the fantasy of ghosts, it's difficult for me to say what would be required for me to believe that I actually saw one. Chances are that I'd be skeptical of it no matter what, because I can't figure out how to make the idea of them coherent. — Terrapin Station
But when you say that what a being experiences is what the world really is like from their spatio-temporal location, it seems like you're saying that as long as people don't lie then what they claim is what's the case. — leo
rather you're referring to a spatio-temporal location in addition to what is present at that spatio-temporal location. — leo
So for instance two beings present at approximately the same spatio-temporal location could disagree about what the world really is like not in virtue of their different spatio-temporal location, but in virtue of them being different beings. — leo
Which implies that in your view, what the world really is like doesn't just depend on spatio-temporal locations, — leo
It seems to me your ontological primitives are spatio-temporal locations and things such as beings, rather than a world that contains spatio-temporal locations and beings. Is that correct? — leo
Can we say matter can be passive in its reception of an imposed form? — Mww
How is the form imposed? Where does the imposed form originate? What forces are in play to impose the form? — Mww
In a natural process, the matter (hyle) is never a thing or a stuff. — Dfpolis
How does Aristotle treat what we now understand as established entirely subjective predications? — Mww
I'm not saying anything like "Perceptions can not be mistaken."
What I'm saying is "Perceptions can be accurate." Contra claims that they can't be or that there's no reason to ever believe that they are. — Terrapin Station
There's no difference. Space and time never exist "on their own." — Terrapin Station
I said that properties are different at different spatio-temporal locations, and there's no way to be absent a spatio-temporal location. I'm not talking about dependencies, though. What things are like depends on properties, and everything has unique properties, including beings. — Terrapin Station
My ontological primitives are matter and relations, where the relations are often dynamic. — Terrapin Station
If we are, on the other hand, referring to the possibility of a reality consisting of things-in-themselves, apart from how they are experienced, if that's what we mean by objective reality, then objective reality is not experiential. — luckswallowsall
Okay, but you do say that what a being perceives is what the world really is like from their spatio-temporal location, correct? — leo
So how can you distinguish between perceptions that are accurate and perceptions that are mistaken? — leo
So let's stop here for a minute and make sure there's no issue with the first part ("It's what some part of the world is like . . .") so that we don't have to repeat that bit. — Terrapin Station
It's what some part of the world is like at that spatio-temporal location, sure, including possibly their brain--if they're hallucinating, for example. — Terrapin Station
You're saying what a being perceives at a spatio-temporal location is "what some part of the world is like at that spatio-temporal location".
What do you mean exactly by "including possibly their brain--if they're hallucinating". Are you talking about the being perceiving their own brain, or are you saying that the spatio-temporal location possibly includes their brain? — leo
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