If esse est percipi, then others are exhausted by your perception of them. — dukkha
All that means is that one has yet to read Popper. — tom
Ed Feser, who describes himself as 'Aristotelean-Thomist', presents the idea that 'the concept of triangle' is neither a visual representation or a particular idea, but a concept. — Wayfarer
Concepts are subjective/private — Terrapin Station
A concept of triangularity can be an image of a particular triangle, of a particular color, etc — Terrapin Station
“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, to Alice, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.”
You often say that, but then you proceed to write in the full confidence that those who read your posts understand what you mean. — Wayfarer
But of course, that doesn't matter to you, because your concept of 'a concept' is your personal private and subjective view of what 'concept' means, — Wayfarer
Of course it is a particular, but it is not a particular leaf, it is a particular drawing of the generalized form of the maple leaf. — John
And after all, a drawing by itself can't be a representation in the first place. What makes something a representation is someone thinking about it that way. — Terrapin Station
Reading something, no matter who wrote it, doesn't mean agreeing with it. Hell, even the philosophers I like best are folks with whom I agree no better than half of the time, and there are plenty of philosophers with whom I disagree literally multiple times per sentence. — Terrapin Station
It was intended as a representation of the general form of the maple leaf, produced as such, and so it exists as such. — Metaphysician Undercover
It doesn't require someone thinking about it as a representation to actually be a representation, — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, but can you find a single point of disagreement with Popper's realist epistemology? — tom
can't exist as that outside of someone thinking about it that way, though. — Terrapin Station
Yes it does. It doesn't matter what it was "made to be." Outside of someone thinking about it as a representation, it's just a set of marks on paper, pixels on a screen or whatever. — Terrapin Station
Do you think that if something was "made to be" a house, it doesn't exist as a house without someone thinking of it as a house? — Metaphysician Undercover
The materials exist, just like marks on paper do (re what people think of as representations). There's no concept or meaning etc. of it as a house outside of people thinking of it that way. But there's still the drywall set at 90-degree angles, with a roof, etc.--the materials exist whether anyone does or not. — Terrapin Station
Re explaining myself--I did. Again, re a representation, all that exists outside of someone thinking about it as a representation is a set of marks on paper or whatever the particular material is that we're talking about. — Terrapin Station
The general form is just an 'averaging out' of the particular forms. — John
Of course it never will be the perfect form... — John
By that logic, then there's no drywall, or 90 degree angles, or anything nameable without someone there naming it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Likewise, the symbol, or representation is there, without someone there to name it as such. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are completely unjustified in your claim that the set of marks on the paper exist, but they are not a representation. Clearly the marks on the paper are a representation. — Metaphysician Undercover
There's none of that stuff per those names, sure. It's important not to conflate the names (and concepts, and meanings, etc.) with the objective stuff, though. I used certain names for it because I have to since I can only type words to you here. — Terrapin Station
Yeah, again the marks on paper or whatever are there, but it doesn't represent anything without thinking about it in that way. Again, this is just like concepts, meanings, etc. in general. — Terrapin Station
Something is a representation by virtue of standing for or referring to something other than itself. How do the marks do this in lieu of anyone thinking about them that way? — Terrapin Station
The act of determining what the marks stand for, is an act of interpreting. Therefore it is an act of understanding existing relationships. It is not an act of creating relationships. — Metaphysician Undercover
But to express the most general character of the edges of the leaves minus all the particular differences from straightness that exist on all the edges of all the dissections of all the maple leaves as a straight line is to represent the universal perfect form of the maple leaf. — John
This is where we disagree. It is an act of creating relationships, and interpretations and understanding involve creating meanings. There are no meanings outside of individuals' heads (more specifically, outside of their brains in particular (processual) states). Intending marks one out down to stand for something occurs only in that creator's head. It doesn't somehow transfer or embed meaning in the marks themselves. The marks are just marks. Meaning remains in person's heads. — Terrapin Station
A representation is a relationship between things. Relationships between things are objectively real, and exist outside of individuals' heads. — Metaphysician Undercover
Working on Meillassoux's argument — Cavacava
I have his book on order, just tracked it and found out it's going to previous address :(
Anyway, I've been reading the secondary literature. He also argues that the realists suggestion that objects exist separately from us ends in a contradiction. If objects are posited as existing separately from thought, it is still only through thought that they are posited. There is no way to determine if what is in itself, is isomorphic with its appearance, with what we know about the object, making knowledge itself problematic. — Cavacava
The ontological separation of thought and subject does seem problematic, especially if one is a physicalist and reduces thoughts to brain activity. We have this physical thing here which is the Sun and this physical thing here which is brain activity, but what is the relationship between the two such that the latter is a thought about the former? Is there a unique kind of physical connection between the two? — Michael
You've already alluded the the physical connection. We're physical beings in a physical world, so of course there is a connection between the sun and our perceiving it, and then talking about it.
If it's all physical interaction, then it's just a matter for science, right? — Marchesk
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