and it's my notion. It's about existence not subsistence(continued existence). — creativesoul
Let me rephrase. Electromagnetic waves are not colors. These waves are converted to electrical impulses in the eye before going into the brain. But electrical impulses are also not colors, and yet we report to see colors. Therefore, the question is why, and the answer is either:
a. we actually see colors (colors exist)
b. we only think we see colors (colors do not exist) — Zelebg
There are three completely distinct things here: (1) frequency, (2) spectral distribution, (3) color. — InPitzotl
Since what matters for detection is simply the raw number of photopsin events, and there's multiple ways of reaching that number, then we're not detecting (2)'s; we're detecting "numbers of events".
— InPitzotl
This bit leaves me a bit confused though. When you say that "we're not detecting (2)'s; we're detecting numbers of events" are you referring to us or the photoreceptors under consideration? — creativesoul
Sort of (changed from yes); I'm referring to the number of photopsin molecules (available for detection). (2) has a particular effect on our eyes. A different (2) could also have the same effect on our eyes. So call the former (2a), and the latter (2b). The effect is (3x); (2a) would have effect (3x), and (2b) would also have effect (3x). Since we can't distinguish (2a) from (2b), it doesn't make sense to say that we detect (2a). What we detect instead is (3x). 3x is "an equivalence class of spectra". 2a is just a member of that equivalence class. 2b is another member. — InPitzotl
Okay, but I'm a bit confused why you're struggling:I'm still struggling a little bit here, particularly when I perform a substitution of terms with your proposed referents/definitions for those. — creativesoul
The idea here is correct (though the phrasing's a bit strange; "equals" is a relation between two quantities; "equivalence classes" are things that can define an equality relation).Either the sheer number of photopsin events is equal to an equivalence class of spectra — creativesoul
I'm still struggling a little bit here, particularly when I perform a substitution of terms with your proposed referents/definitions for those.
— creativesoul
Okay, but I'm a bit confused why you're struggling: — InPitzotl
I guess to me, to say that something exists is merely saying that there is a predicate that when applied to everything yields some results. — Douglas Alan
The set of all chairs is the set of all x such that P(x), where P is a predicate that is true for chairs and false for non-chairs. — Douglas Alan
...we measure with this photoreceptor... — InPitzotl
The number three would exist, even if there were no intelligent beings to comprehend the number three. Likewise, the predicate P that picks out chairs exists, even if there were never any humans to breathe life into P. — Douglas Alan
Predicate logic, when used as too strict a guideline for everyday thought and belief, places a linguistic boundary around that which is not linguistic. — creativesoul
I couldn't disagree more. Logic, like math, is discovered, not invented. Though I believe that everything that is invented is actually a form of discovery. — Douglas Alan
The predicate P that picks out chairs, existed as an abstract object in the space of predicates long before people existed. — Douglas Alan
You too with the equivocation... — creativesoul
The number three is the name we've attributed to a specified plurality of things... a quantity. Numbers are names for quantities. — creativesoul
The number three is not a name, it is an abstract entity that represents certain properties of a certain quantity. — Douglas Alan
Moby Dick there too? — creativesoul
The number three is a specific mark of our own invention. We use "3" as well as "three" to pick out a specific quantity of individual things. — creativesoul
If and when we meet space-faring aliens, I guess it will come to you as quite a surprise to you when they have "invented" the same math that we have. What will explain that, prey tell? — Douglas Alan
I've a hard leaning towards methodological naturalism — creativesoul
I've a hard leaning towards methodological naturalism
— creativesoul
There's nothing supernatural about necessary truth, such as that which is expressed by mathematics. — Douglas Alan
That's incorrect. As you yourself say, "photoreceptors are just doing what they do". And what they do, with respect to responding to light, is send signals proportional to some amount of isomerization of photopsin molecules that they contain. That's it; nothing else. That thing is (3). And if (3) cannot distinguish between spectral distributions (2), then (3) cannot be said to measure which (2) you have. If (3) cannot distinguish frequency components (1) in a spectral distribution, (3) cannot be said to measure frequencies in a spectral distribution. (3) can do neither of these things, so it measures neither.If that were true then measuring requires only detection (3), reception, excitation, folding, and/or perception. According to this criterion, it would make sense to say that a mantis shrimp's eyes are measuring light frequencies(1) and distributions(2)... — creativesoul
...doesn't quite seem so to me. Ignoring your flexing and crowing posts, the only thing you've demonstrated so far was a lack of understanding of what the assessment even is.Please. I've given due attention — creativesoul
Novels before the author just has no compulsory force whatsoever to me. There's not enough evidence in support of such a claim. All evidence is to the contrary. — creativesoul
If that were true then measuring requires only detection (3), reception, excitation, folding, and/or perception. According to this criterion, it would make sense to say that a mantis shrimp's eyes are measuring light frequencies(1) and distributions(2)...
— creativesoul
That's incorrect. — InPitzotl
3+2=5 because we won't let it equal anything else. — creativesoul
Sans the labels, it's a direct quote. If you don't mean what you say, just say what you mean.That is not a correct report of what I wrote. — creativesoul
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