The latter. The way I would put this is to say that if the apple has form and matter then it is substantial. That is, it exists. — Andrew M
At some point the apple grew on a tree and before that the tree grew from a seed. And in the other direction, at some point the apple will be eaten or decompose and perhaps its seeds will grow into into new trees. This is just matter changing form such that we can identify substances like apples. So the boundaries at the coming-into-existence and going-out-of-existence of an apple can be vague or ill-defined. But the apple is clearly identifiable when it is fully formed. And so we can develop language to talk about it. — Andrew M
To relate this back to QM. The formalism is the Schrodinger equation. The primary dispute is whether the equation is substantial. That is, is the wave function real? If it is, then that explains why we see interference effects. — Andrew M
No, if something is computable (doesn't encounter the Halting problem), then it is real in some sense. — Question
If something can't be computed then that is indicative of a gap in understanding or that there are some things that are unintelligible. — Question
I have yet to see proof that every physical law can be computed, which you (by the way) state as an absolute truth(?) Until then this is an unsubstantiated claim that you're throwing around here and there. — Question
I hope you understand, that to say the apple consists of matter and form, in the Aristotelian sense, is to invoke a type of dualism. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we cannot validate the existence of matter, then we cannot justify that the apple continues to be the same apple despite changing, because we know that even the molecules and atoms are changing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Instead object persistence is implied when we talk about particular apples. — Andrew M
The simple explanation is that the apple's identity doesn't depend on its molecules and atoms being the same. — Andrew M
So the issue is really about meaning and use, not justification. — Andrew M
No, it's really a matter of justification. You can sit and watch the apple all day, and even see it change, without taking your eyes off it, so you know that no one has switched it. You know that it has changed, so you know that it is not the same apple. Yet we say that it is the same apple. — Metaphysician Undercover
Saying that it is the same apple does not cause it to be the same apple. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes we do. That's because object persistence is part of the ordinary concept of an apple. — Andrew M
That's correct, but the issue here is what is meant by the term "apple". — Andrew M
No, that is not what is at issue here, you don't seem to get it. We know what is meant by "apple", or "object", temporal continuity is implied, but the question is whether or not this is a misconception. We know that the word "apple": is being used to refer to the appearance of a persistent similitude on the table. We know that the idea of temporal continuity is implicit with the concept of "apple", but the question is, is this temporal continuity real, or is it just an appearance. If it is just an appearance, then this is a misconception. — Metaphysician Undercover
So help me out here. Do you think there is a causal basis for the apple on the table appearing as it does from moment to moment? Or do you think that, for all we know, it's just random coincidence? — Andrew M
I just did a quick read on Wikipedia and found that a world line applies to a point. Yet you referred to a "distribution of particles". So it appears impossible that a distribution of particles could follow a single world line. — Metaphysician Undercover
World lines apply to objects, whether particles or apples. The world line for an apple is the convergence of particle world lines. — Andrew M
That's a causal explanation. But in everyday life, it is intelligible to talk about an apple as persisting because we know its continued appearance is not random coincidence, whether or not a causal explanation is readily available. Which is sufficient justification for the claim that the apple exists. — Andrew M
There is no such thing as the convergence of particle world lines, each is an individual. You could create an average, or a gravitational centre, but this requires another completely different assumption. — Metaphysician Undercover
But don't you agree that the true philosophical approach, and consequently the scientific approach, would be to attempt to determine and understand the activities of this cause? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, we should try to figure out what the cause is. My only point is that we don't need to doubt the existence of the apple just because we don't know what that specific cause is. — Andrew M
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