A mathematical truth has nothing of prediction or experience — Isaac
Leaving aside merely formal propositions, for now. — David Mo
Why? What does this add to the methods we already have? — Isaac
you can't be madly in love with your girl if you think your girl doesn't exist. — David Mo
Ahh yes. The search for external social group validation for one's beliefs. — Isaac
Now - get off my couch and pay the receptionist on the way out. — Isaac
Agreed, for in no other way is criterion for truth irreducible, then to the form to which all substitutions in it must adhere. If substitution violates the form, the substitution is false.
— Mww
The substitution axiom is a mathematical axiom. I would like to know what it has to do with the existence of objects outside the mind — David Mo
We don’t use truth as a mark of existence of real objects, for they are necessarily presupposed by the cognition of them. It is, after all, impossible to cognize any real object that doesn’t exist.
— Mww
You have simply transferred the problem of truth to the problem of "cognition". You've changed one word for another. — David Mo
"When I state a true proposition?" is equivalent to "When I have a cognition of a thing?" — David Mo
With the aggravated problem that you can't recognize and communicate a "cognition" if you don't speak about it through propositional language. — David Mo
What they are an experience of, and thereby what they are known as, depends solely on the logical form of truth intrinsic to human thought.
— Mww
Do you mean to say that my experience of an emotion and that of a lizard is subjective? — David Mo
the form of my cognition is something subjective, which does not depend on the known object. This does not seem to me to stand up. It seems that the object I know has something to say about the way I can know it. — David Mo
Imagining stems from the brain's ability to form concepts and goals. The goal in the mind is just as imaginary as Santa Claus. It doesn't exist in the world outside of the mind. But it drives the behavior of the body to change current conditions to reach that goal - so that world and mind are in sync - homeostasis. — Harry Hindu
I thought we had reached some sort of an agreement that it might be processes/relationships all the way down, not objects which would imply the "physical vs. non-physical" dichotomy I was trying to stay away from. You might need to re-read our previous exchanges. — Harry Hindu
If you refer to yourself as a "subject", and others refer to you as an "object", are we both talking about the same thing, or are we talking past each other? — Harry Hindu
You don't try to get people to agree with you, and see things how you see them outside of a philosophy forum, like in everyday life? Being on a philosophy forum or not has no bearing on how you use words to communicate ideas about the world. — Harry Hindu
Then your mind has no purpose?
How can "physical" stuff represent "non-physical" stuff, and vice versa, except by causation? — Harry Hindu
Imagining stems from the brain's ability to form concepts and goals. The goal in the mind is just as imaginary as Santa Claus. It doesn't exist in the world outside of the mind. But it drives the behavior of the body to change current conditions to reach that goal - so that world and mind are in sync - homeostasis. — Harry Hindu
But, Harry, we do agree on almost everything. — Banno
:rofl:But, Harry, we do agree on almost everything.
— Banno
Why do you believe that? — frank
Here's the new presidential candidate that all Americans are "agreeing" on:Make a list of all your beliefs, from your presidential preferences down to the size of your shoe. — Banno
OK, but there are many theories of mind - some of which contradict each other, or aren't compatible with each other or other things that we know, so why did you use this theory? Why is it interesting?My words are about human minds in general because the theory is. Not being the author of the theory, the onus is not on me to defend it, but if the theory is interesting, my understanding of it accords with the interest the theory holds, and an arbitrary (because of all the theories with which I am familiar) persuasion (this one, as reflected in the words I use concerning human minds) arises. — Mww
No, I don't. How is talking about thinking different from thinking about thinking? How is talking about thinking different from thinking, when it requires thinking about the words to say, and how to say them? It's like you're saying that you cease thinking when talking about thinking.First of all.....you must surely understand the vast dissimilarity between thinking and talking about thinking. In that is found the worth of the theory, as the means to describe what the mind is doing when it’s not being talked about. — Mww
It seems to me that in order to think of an unextended body, you must have had an experience/knowledge of unextended things and an experience/knowledge of a body prior to thinking it. The mind can only imagine unique amalgams of previously experienced concepts, so there is a causal process at work.Second.....I can think whatever I want, and if you’re interested, thought is nothing but “...cognition by means of conceptions....”, and conceptions “...are based on the spontaneity of thought....”. Understanding is the synthesis of conceptions, so while I am not prohibited from synthesizing body with unextended in thought, the two conceptions so conjoined contradict the principles of causality for empirical objects, which all bodies, per se, must be. The human system absolutely mandates something from which certainty is at least possible, otherwise we have no ground for claiming any knowledge whatsoever, which in humans is the LNC. Therefore, even if I can think a contradiction, I must have in place some means to prevent any experience from ever following from it, in order to preserve my requirement for possible certainty, and by association, knowledge itself. This manifests in the fact that while I can think “unextended body”, I couldn’t possible describe the properties such a thing might be given, which means such a thing is not possible for me to know.
So to answer your question, there are forms of those conceptions, it is just impossible to cognize anything by the conjunction of them on the one hand, yet serves as justifiable criteria for the valid cognition of things like lines and points on the other. — Mww
Rationality is the quality of a rational procedure, the form of it given through its schema, re: sub-categories, instances, iterations, occurrences, etc. I may never know I’m being irrational, if I never understand certain schema do not actually reflect states of affairs in the world. I might be crazy but think I’m doing alright. Why shrinks drive Beemers.
Normally though, I would be irrational if I insist on knowledge proven to be illicit. If I insist I can demonstrate the reality of an unextended body, for instance. Or, if I insist the interior angles of any triangle cannot sum to greater than 180 degrees. — Mww
But you just did, in bold.Not sure what to do with this. Not sure rationality is something to be asserted. — Mww
I'm not trying to say that.
First of all, you have too much confidence in the absolute exactitude of chess computers. The possibilities for the development of the Sicilian Defense are endless. At one point in the '85 confrontation between Karpov and Kasparov the Whites played Bg2. Experts disagree as to whether this was a basic error or why. Neither do the chess computers. Therefore, if the best solution exists it is not in anyone's brain, artificial or otherwise. We have two options: whether it exists as a mere possibility of a current set of conditions of a conventional symbolic system or it exists in another world.
We have two options: whether it exists as a mere possibility of a current set of conditions of a conventional symbolic system or it exists in another world.
We already "conceptualise a reality of "processes/relations all the way down"".Anyways while I am sympathetic to the idea of getting off the beaten path, I am not sure how to conceptualise a reality of "processes/relations all the way down". It seems to me that both processes and relationships require "things" as a substrate. How would you describe a process without the things it processes? How a relationship without the things it relates? — Echarmion
What do you consider to be all of you?They're not the same, or they shouldn't be. If people refer to me as an object, they refer to what they observe. That isn't all I am, or so I believe. — Echarmion
Saying they are reasoned is the same as saying your views are objective.Just because I want to convince people doesn't mean I regard whatever I want to convince them of as an objective truth. I wouldn't claim, for example, that my views on morality are objective. At best they're reasoned. — Echarmion
As for representation: think about how a certain wavelength in the EM spectrum represents the colour blue. — Echarmion
How can you say that something represents another without causation? Does the representation exist before or after what it represents, and how does a representation come to represent something else?This sounds somewhat similar to the "representation" idea I have been advancing. What you're describing doesn't sound causal to me. — Echarmion
I don't know what this means. You know something if you have an idea about it that you can rationally justify. Knowledge differs from belief because belief cannot be rationally justified. I don't know what matter and universal form have to do here. Is this Aristotelianism? Does this mean that to understand something you have to explain it in terms of a universal law?cognition is the result of the logical substitution of the matter of that object into the universal form of objects in general. — Mww
Since I don't know what the LNC is I don't know what you're talking about.it must adhere to the LNC in order to for a truth claim to be valid — Mww
Language is not just talking to someone. It's talking to yourself also. According to psychologists, when you are "sitting in an armchair" thinking your mind works in terms of words and images. Thoughts don't exist without that. Not to mention that our speculation from a couch depend on a previous history of socialized verbal contacts.Haven’t you ever just sat there and thought about stuff, cognizing this and that one right after another, actually quite endlessly, without telling anybody about it? — Mww
I suggest you go to Google Scholar and search for "experience of emotions". I suppose you will change your mind about this. It is totally different to see a lizard than to be afraid of a lizard. The difference between a direct complement (that which is seen) and a circumstantial complement (that which causes an emotion). Because the lizard exists outside the mind (as a thing or phenomenon) and the emotion does not.And we don’t experience feelings; we experience the objects responsible for the invocation of feelings. — Mww
It would be a miracle if something generated exclusively in my head allowed me to manipulate objects outside of my head. And here's the thing about knowledge. Which is not mere speculation but an effective way of moving in the world.The object you know has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with how you know it, except such object must actually be available for you to know about. The mechanisms for knowing are in your head, that to which the mechanisms are directed is outside your head. How can the external object direct the internal mechanism? — Mww
False problem: the object does not dictate the knowledge. Knowledge is the interaction between object and subject. The mistake is the disagreement between themOtherwise, the object is telling me what I know which is the same as directing my intellectual capacities, so if I get it wrong, it is necessarily the object’s fault. But no, if the object is telling me what it is, how could I get it wrong, assuming my capacities are operating properly? — Mww
Nobody thinks that way.eah, yeah, I know.....objects absolutely must tell the brain something definitive about themselves — Mww
Ah well. I thought you were defending platonism.A move sequence can certainly exist as a possibility. — BitconnectCarlos
No. The future does not exist as reality but as possibility. Sartre called it the nothingness that is within being. It is beautiful.The reality exists and the teacher passes it down. — BitconnectCarlos
Our scientific theories even describe objects as being the relationship between smaller objects, all the way down. Objects are conceptions of processes/relations. — Harry Hindu
What do you consider to be all of you? — Harry Hindu
Saying they are reasoned is the same as saying your views are objective. — Harry Hindu
How can you say that something represents another without causation? Does the representation exist before or after what it represents, and how does a representation come to represent something else?
Can you say the opposite, that the colour blue represents a certain wavelength in the EM spectrum, but from a different view? — Harry Hindu
Thinking is all that we (our minds) do. — Harry Hindu
I think, therefore I am. — Harry Hindu
But you just did, in bold. — Harry Hindu
Are we ever irrational? Maybe from another's perspective..... — Harry Hindu
hence the origins and manifestations of thinking and of talking are necessarily completely distinct and separate, even if they are under some conditions related. — Mww
The reality exists and the teacher passes it down.
— BitconnectCarlos
No. The future does not exist as reality but as possibility. Sartre called it the nothingness that is within being. It is beautiful.
the present exists — Cidat
How do we know? This seems like a silly question. It is how we describe the world based on our observations. We even invent objects as processes. Think about a watch - an object that is a process of time-keeping. Would a watch be a watch without a particular relationship of gears and springs? Would you be a body without a particular relationship of organs? A solar system without the relationship of the sun, planets, gravity, etc.?But then how do we know there are processes behind the objects? — Echarmion
You keep using this term, "physical". What does it mean?It would certainly have to include my internal thoughts, the way I feel about things etc. I am not convinced that is all physical stuff. — Echarmion
Then you didn't reason your way to some moral conclusion. To claim that you used reason is to claim that you abandoned your subjectivity in favor of objectivity. I agree that there is no such thing as an objective morality, but that simply means that there is no way to reason one's way to some moral conclusion. Any moral conclusion would be based on one's own perspective, needs and goals, which means that it would be subjective.I disagree. Morality has nothing to do with objects. It's about relations between subjects. "Objective morality" is a category error. — Echarmion
In a deterministic universe, effects represent their causes and causes represent their effects. Time can go either way. It is how we make predictions. If a particular effect necessarily follows a particular cause, then from different views in time, causes can represent their effects and vice versa.Yes, you can say the opposite. That's one major difference to causal relationship. Causality is unidirectional, representation is not.
As to how it works, there is no before or after, since those are temporal and therefore causal relations. Green is a certain wavelength (or spectrum), and that wavelength is green.
On the one side, you have the entire physical process: light is emitted, parts of it are reflected and strike the retina, electronic signals are emitted, a pattern of brain activity results. On the other hand you have "green-ness". — Echarmion
That's not how it seems to me at all. If you can think without talking, but can't talk without thinking, then that tells me that thinking is fundamental, and that talking is a kind/manifestation of thinking.Thinking is all that we (our minds) do.
— Harry Hindu
Exactly. From which it follows necessarily that talking is not something our minds do. We can think without talking but cannot talk without thinking, hence the origins and manifestations of thinking and of talking are necessarily completely distinct and separate, even if they are under some conditions related. — Mww
Exhibiting it is the same as asserting it. How else do you show the existence of rationality. I would ask for the same type of evidence for the existence of God, wouldn't you?Hmmm......did I? Did I assert some rationality, or did I merely exhibit a quality represented by that which is asserted, from which some judgement of yours with respect to rationality, is facilitated? When I tell you about a thing rationally, I am not telling you anything whatsoever about rationality itself. Exhibiting it, yes; asserting it, no. You witness rationality, or the absence of it, and judge accordingly. — Mww
But then how do we know there are processes behind the objects? — Echarmion
We can think without talking but cannot talk without thinking (...)....
— Mww
That's not how it seems to me at all. If you can think without talking, but can't talk without thinking, then that tells me that thinking is fundamental, and that talking is a kind/manifestation of thinking. — Harry Hindu
Exhibiting it is the same as asserting it. — Harry Hindu
How else do you show the existence of rationality. — Harry Hindu
Everything from a purely physical standpoint is a process. Particles cling together for finite durations then proceed on their way, in the "direction" of whatever impelled them to begin with plus the sum of interactions. It is only because we have a psychological affinity for a specific spatio-temporal scale (the observable universe) that we preferentially identify things as "things". Change the spatio-temporal scale slightly and some things begin to look more like processes.... — Pantagruel
Right, but note that your description of the process is based on particles. So the particles ("things") seem to be required to have a notion of a process. — Echarmion
Yes, I used the term particles consistent with the accepted model of physics. It in no way constitutes or represents an atomistic ontology. Technically, particles are instantiations of underlying fields. I was expecting this response however. — Pantagruel
I do know that this is the case, but are fields "processes"? — Echarmion
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