The materialist is saying that what is stands independently of what we know. — Mongrel
but at least as expressed, my materialism doesn't amount to that. — Terrapin Station
But as a card-carrying materialist, what does it amount to.. to you? — Mongrel
The materialist is saying that what is stands independently of what we know. The materialist is basically saying "I don't know anything until the world tells me." For some strange reason somebody started calling that realism... I don't quite understand why. — Mongrel
Realists argue for the independence of things. Materialists argue that all things are material. The latter might entail the former, but the former doesn't entail the latter. Objective idealists, for example, are realists but not materialists. And depending on what is meant by "matter", physicalists are another example of realists who aren't materialists. — Michael
And others might reject the very notion of some fundamental substance (and so wouldn't be materialists, physicalists, or idealists), but nonetheless claim that things are independent (and so be realists). — Michael
(Not sure what you're saying there) — Terrapin Station
OK. But if realists argue that things are independent, what is the opposing view? That things aren't independent? If things are dependent.. then on what? — Mongrel
Some just focus on causation. You're a physicalist if you believe all causes are physical.
Dummett's account of realism and anti-realism. If the truth of "X exists" is verification transcendent than X is an independent thing, and if it isn't then it isn't. — Michael
That certainly doesn't work for me, because of my view on what truth is/how it works as well as my view about whether sentences can refer mind-independently, my view on meaning, etc. — Terrapin Station
I think the easiest way to understand the independence of things is with reference to Dummett's account of realism and anti-realism. If the truth of "X exists" is verification transcendent than X is an independent thing, and if it isn't then it isn't. — Michael
And to say that a cause is physical is to say that the causal object/process is made of physical stuff? — Michael
The fact that the moon exists and is spherical is independent of anything anyone happens to say or think about the matter. — Terrapin Station
Really? I thought it's primary weakness is that it falls back on Correspondence.Haha, oh--well, I wouldn't say that realism implies any particular epistemological view. — Terrapin Station
Really? I thought it's primary weakness is that it falls back on Correspondence. — Mongrel
That would work if one were a truth realist. I'm not. — Terrapin Station
my claim is that traditional realism is (implicitly, if not also explicitly) truth-realism. It's historically tied to the correspondence theory of truth. If all you want to say is that "mind-independent things exist" is true, but not also that this statement is made true by some verification-transcendent truth-condition, then it isn't traditional realism. — Michael
The distinction between the truth-realist and the truth-anti-realist both claiming that mind-independent things exist is akin to the distinction between the nominalist and the Platonist both claiming that numbers exist. Although they're both making the same assertion (and so both saying that this claim is true), what they mean by it is very different; they're arguing for different metaphysics. — Michael
That seems completely unsupported/arbitrary by the way. Does he have some sort of argument for that? — Terrapin Station
You can say that, but you're simply saying it. It would require extensive empirical evidence. And that empirical evidence would have to support not that truth realism and correspondence theory are typically correlated with realism (in other words, the simple fact that most realists tend to be truth realists and/or tend to employ correspondence theory wouldn't work); it would have to be evidence of people saying or at least strongly implying that realism includes truth realism and correspondence theory, otherwise it isn't realism.
It also couldn't be evidence of simply a handful of philosophers asserting or at least strongly implying this. To claim that it's the traditional view, you'd need evidence of that being the widespread view.
Do you have that evidence available? — Terrapin Station
Very few self-proclaimed realists will claim that the existence of the moon is independent of human experience and belief and linguistic practices but that this claim is only true because, for example, it coheres with some axiomatic sentences within our language game. — Michael
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