I've attempted to be clear. If it has mass, then it's in reality. It's also real. If it's an idea, no mass, real, not in reality. — tim wood
sense of wonderment is a feeling; wondering is thinking; consciousness is an idea.
— Mww
What do all of them have in common? — 3017amen
Humanity? Intellect? Rationality? All of the above? — Mww
Self-awareness. — 3017amen
Tim's not correct Wayfarer. Gravity consists of particles called Gravitons (the hypothetical graviton, is a massless particle traveling at the speed of light, just like photons in the electromagnetic theory/we don't actually know for sure), which have no mass. — 3017amen
I think these do not have mass, consequently not, on my understanding, in reality, though perfectly real. If you think they exist outside of minds, then an adequate account of that would be nice. — tim wood
So I can tell the difference. I asked you if we were fruit salad. It appears we are. And I think you are allowing for a careless equivocation in your usage. — tim wood
And how would they know? Are they making any distinction between real and reality? And, "part of" reality: what part, how? — tim wood
It appears you mean "inside itself." That is not what I mean (nor, I suspect, anyone else on the planet). I merely meant that which corresponds to your act of naming and pointing. "Brick" is an idea. But a brick, the particular one named and referred to, the one having mass, is both real and (ok, here) inside of reality, in ways that "brick" is not. — tim wood
And, to be sure, wave functions in any case just are ideas - methods of describing. — tim wood
But ours is essentially simple. There are various ways that I might demonstrate to you the reality of a brick. And those criteria I define as being the criteria not for the real, but for reality. You're certainly free to not like my definition and to have your own. But I invite you to show me how an idea, by these criteria, is, in reality. And I will allow that my criterium, for it's an -um and not an -a, is mass. — tim wood
Great! What? The world wants to know.but "wavefunction" describes something real, — Metaphysician Undercover
we know self-awareness exists — 3017amen
I've attempted to be clear. If it has mass, then it's in reality. It's also real. If it's an idea, no mass, real, not in reality. — tim wood
You shall have to tell me what the materialist view is, because I suspect I am not a materialist, because I suppose ideas to be non-material. And that my view, such as it is, seems reasonable and makes sense. Unless I'm misunderstanding, you want ideas to be other than creatures - product - of mind, and not material or matter, but you won't say what. And so you can, but please refrain from parting shots if that's all you've gotThat's the materialist view. I don't agree with it, and you're giving me no reason to accept it. — Wayfarer
You shall have to tell me what the materialist view is, — tim wood
Materialism is a form of philosophical monism that holds that matter is the fundamental substance in nature, and that all things, including mental states and consciousness, are results of material interactions. According to philosophical materialism, mind and consciousness are by-products or epiphenomena of material processes (such as the biochemistry of the human brain and nervous system), without which they cannot exist. — Wikipedia
Ideas are certainly real. But not real in any material sense. — tim wood
The human race is just a chemical scum on a moderate-sized planet, orbiting around a very average star in the outer suburb of one among a hundred billion galaxies. — Stephen Hawking
The very best that can be claimed, is that self-awareness is a subjectively valid representation. — Mww
If no mind, is there judgment? If no mind, is there an ability to abstract?We rely on judgement whenever we say ‘is’, ‘is not’, ‘because’, ‘is equal to’. Reason itself is reliant on these elements - they are like the ‘ligatures’ of thinking, based on the ability to abstract. — Wayfarer
If no mind, then does 2+2=4? — tim wood
In his seminal 1973 paper, “Mathematical Truth,” Paul Benacerraf presented a problem facing all accounts of mathematical truth and knowledge. Standard readings of mathematical claims entail the existence of mathematical objects. But, our best epistemic theories seem to debar any knowledge of mathematical objects.
Mathematical objects are not the kinds of things that we can see or touch, or smell, taste or hear. If we can not learn about mathematical objects by using our senses, a serious worry arises about how we can justify our mathematical beliefs. .....Sets are abstract objects, lacking any spatio-temporal location. Their existence is not contingent on our existence. They lack causal efficacy. Our question, then, given that we lack sense experience of sets, is how we can justify our beliefs about sets and set theory. ...Some philosophers, called rationalists, claim that we have a special, non-sensory capacity for understanding mathematical truths, a rational insight arising from pure thought. But, the rationalist’s claims appear incompatible with an understanding of human beings as physical creatures whose capacities for learning are exhausted by our physical bodies.
but I'm inclined to say, as I said, that primitive arithmetical truths will be the case for any mind capable of grasping them, but they're only graspable by a mind. — Wayfarer
And what might they be? This: "A mathematical object is an abstract concept arising in mathematics. In usual language of mathematics, an object is anything that has been (or could be) formally defined, and with which one may do deductive reasoning and mathematical proofs. Typically, a mathematical object can be the value of a variable, and therefore can be involved in formulas. Commonly encountered mathematical objects include: numbers, integers, integer partition, or expressions."entail the existence of mathematical objects.
You ignore my distinction between reality and real, even as I tell you it's my distinction and why I make it. — tim wood
But put it away: my distinction is between ideas and things not ideas, ideas being matters of mind. If they're not matters of mind, say so, and tell me what they then are and where they are. — tim wood
"• x is subjective = x's existence is mind-dependent (e.g. fictional (fictions exist too))
• x is objective = x's existence is mind-independent (e.g. real)"
I've been using mass and materiality to try to make this distinction. Subjective/objective seems good too. — tim wood
...because I suspect I am not a materialist... — tim wood
if you buy the mind of God, then you acknowledge that mind can do pretty much anything. — tim wood
Given the roughly 5x10^8 years of the evolution of mind on this planet, and all that mind, for better or worse, has accomplished by itself, it does not trouble me to suppose that mind invented logic. — tim wood
...because I suspect I am not a materialist...
— tim wood
Wow, a person who defines "reality" with "materiality" and doesn't consider that to be a case of materialism. I'm dumbfounded. — Metaphysician Undercover
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