Purely abstract concepts are the things we know we don't know and the things we don't know we don't know, they may also be the things that we don't know that we know. — Mark Dennis
Anchoring a purely abstract concept requires giving it a physical point with which to identify it physically through language. — Mark Dennis
I would say Mark, that anchoring abstracts is a method of apprehending or perceiving such through cognition. And through that cognition, we can posit it through the logic of language or consider it an ineffable phenomena — 3017amen
so it might be risky to say the anchor point is the minds of people as opposed to the language of people. — Mark Dennis
And the question begging notion that in either case of apprehending reality, it is not knowable. It just is. — 3017amen
maybe pros and cons to thinking this way. — Mark Dennis
Anchoring a purely abstract concept requires giving it a physical point with which to identify it physically through language. — Mark Dennis
A fair point. Would It be fair to say then that the anchor points lie in cognition and the language used to describe cognition? — Mark Dennis
Were certain Qualia of Kants mind doomed to become pure abstract the moment he died or do his writings retain the anchor points to our anchored abstractions of Kants mind and thoroughly preserve the Qualia of his mind? — Mark Dennis
I think one would have to define anchor points first(?). Similarly: — 3017amen
just don't see where one would find the time to experience a priori knowledge — Mark Dennis
begs the question, what does it feel like to run calculations (?). — 3017amen
If it were me, I’d just call pure abstract knowledge impossible, and anchored abstract knowledge possible. — Mww
So back to your question, if you take known a priori qualities, or the so-called nature of mathematics/music for example, what kind of existence is that? Here are some possible choices:
1. purely abstract
2. metaphysical abstract
3. cosmological abstract
4. universal abstract (universal languages-math/music)
5. physical abstract (through the ability to describe physics)
6. cognitive abstract (our consciousness)
and so on... — 3017amen
Calculating feels like thinking, but what does it feel like to think? I — Mark Dennis
Maybe it can be said then our encounter with a priori mathematical abstracts is all part of another phenomenon? — 3017amen
Is there pragmatic utility in these distinctions between purely abstract and Anchored abstract? — Mark Dennis
Pragmatic utility in the distinction? I would have to say no, because of the way they’re defined. Purely abstract, the unknown, unnamed, realistically non-affective conceptions, is never even presentable to our attention, so can’t have any practical use. It seems irrational to infuse an unknown with purpose the fulfillment of which could never be shown. It follows that if half of the content of a distinction is unavailable for any practical use, the distinction itself disappears. — Mww
Interesting thought there. Your first two paragraphs capture the classic Existential angst that one, at some point, will encounter during life's sojourn; intrinsic fear and anxiety. How can we mitigate that? — 3017amen
That notion makes me think whether humans encounter metaphysical phenomena everyday, without realizing it... ?
In the alternative we're back to trying to define one of the greatest metaphysical abstracts of all called Love.
This isnt Noumena its phenomena. Pure abstract is just unamed and unnoticed until someone, anyone names and notices it. Ethics as a word, was pure abstract until someone conceptualised it. — Mark Dennis
In effect, we knew all about how to treat each other, except we didn’t know it was ethics?
Am I understanding better? — Mww
What does this do for pragmatic utility? How much pragmatic thinking grounded in rules? — Mww
Are we creating language or discovering it? — Mark Dennis
What is Existential Love? What is Love? A mixture of joy, gratitude and care of the object of love? Does all life, love something the universe contains? Do all humans? — Mark Dennis
Abstract Love: what is the love we have for aesthetics?
Consider the feeling when we look at an object, thing, person, an idea, agreement, et al. and we say 'I love that', what kind of truth is that? — 3017amen
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