Um, what do you mean? — frank
But the universe is expanding. What is it expanding into if there's a limit?
yes, which is fine, but then given the words apparant position-taking on substance, it would probably be good to change the term.What 'physical' comes down to a lot of the time is, 'what science might agree to exist' — Wayfarer
Most belief systems start with a default. Then consider this default as not having an onus in the way other defaults do. This is fine if we view such options as generative, and science has generated incredible knowledge, but problematic when it is considered confirmed ontology.Scientific analysis 'brackets out' the subjective — Wayfarer
If 'physical' has no definition, then nothing is necessarily beyond the physical sciences.We embody cultural tropes, archetypes, potentialities, and so on, that are beyond the purview of the physical sciences as such (although not necessarily in conflict with them.) — Wayfarer
If res cogitans is unreal or 'less real', then conclusions based on it are even less tenuous. Which should make people laugh, but it tends not to. It's really biting one's mother's teat rather than being grateful.Fruit of the poisonous tree (objection) is a legal metaphor in the United States used to describe evidence that is obtained illegally. The logic of the terminology is that if the source (the "tree") of the evidence or evidence itself is tainted, then anything gained (the "fruit") from it is tainted as well.
The word “process” is a noun, but it is series of actions. These actions are reified into a noun. For instance the word “jog” can be used as a noun. “I went for a jog”. But is a jog a thing? I think the grammar leads to confusions and unnecessary reifications. — NOS4A2
please provide some sort of authority for these unstated rules you have regarding the proper attachment of "thing" to entities.
you seem to make arguments for having such rules without providing any information as to what the rules are or where they can be found.
I will wait here.
What rules? — NOS4A2
What is the basis upon which you make your claim to the non-thingness of truth, processes, and jogs.
What is the basis upon which you determine thingness/non-thingness.
So far, all you have offered is some ill-defined fear of the potential for grammatical errors and that strikes as insufficient.
Truth is not a thing because it doesn’t have a boundary — NOS4A2
doesn’t have any objectivity or reality outside of the mind. — NOS4A2
So you have no criterion other than your own preference for determining thingness/non-thingness.
I respect that and I am going to adopt that.
And truth is bounded by non-truth.
What does that even mean? You could not possibly come to understand anything meaningful about the world in which you find yourself in the absence of truth. If you drive to work, you can only do so because you know the truth regarding how cars work (I presume you would consider cars to be outside your mind, whatever that means), where to get gas (I presume you consider the gas station to be outside your mind, whatever that means), and the route to work (also outside your mind?). You could not make your way around in the world in the absence of truth. So even if you really do buy into this internal/external inside/outside subject/object nonsense, you could have no meaningful understanding of anything "outside your mind" in the absence of truth.
That’s why I do not believe there is something called “truth” because to do so would be untrue. — NOS4A2
I mean it would take a sheer act of will to exclude the word “truth” from the mental lexicon — NOS4A2
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.