So this is the question:
If Alice is thinking something, must we conclude there is something that Alice is thinking? — Srap Tasmaner
Compare with:
If Alice is kicking something, must we conclude there is something that Alice is kicking?
Yes, for example, a ball. — Andrew M
We don't have to do or conclude anything. And that unlocks the thing. In this case, I argue, that if you care about meaning and language, then yes you do. That is, there's the unstated if.If Alice is thinking something, must we conclude there is something that Alice is thinking? — Srap Tasmaner
(a) Descartes's cogito,Sure, but what goes in place of "something" in "Alice is kicking something"? It's a noun phrase of some kind:
(a) A proper name: "Alice is kicking Steve";
(b) An indefinite noun phrase: "Alice is kicking a ball";
(c) A definite noun phrase: "Alice is kicking the ball."
Can we do the same thing with "Alice is thinking something"? No, no, and no — Srap Tasmaner
Why not? In addition to thinking about the cogito, she can also be thinking it itself."Alice is thinking Descartes's cogito"? I don't think that's English. — Srap Tasmaner
Are you trying to prove something about the world through grammar? — tim wood
I think idea are things, just exactly not like bricks, but rather as ideas. That is, they must be something. — tim wood
They're something and not nothing, yes? And if not nothing, something, but not like bricks. In fact, not like any thing. They're something but not a thing. It seems like an absurdity. — tim wood
As to what, exactly, let's give the science another fifty years or so. — tim wood
Sure, but what goes in place of "something" in "Alice is kicking something"? It's a noun phrase of some kind:
(a) A proper name: "Alice is kicking Steve";
(b) An indefinite noun phrase: "Alice is kicking a ball";
(c) A definite noun phrase: "Alice is kicking the ball."
Can we do the same thing with "Alice is thinking something"? No, no, and no. — Srap Tasmaner
Anaphoric constructions aside, we know what goes in place of "something" in "Alice is thinking something"; it's constructions like
"that the roof will never hold"
"of going to graduate to school in the fall"
"about her grandmother's house".
Any of those look like things to you? — Srap Tasmaner
When we see Alice grab her umbrella, we assume she thinks that it is going to rain. But that is an abstraction over her behavior, not some additional thing that has an independent existence. And we can consider that abstraction separately from its concrete context, i.e., as an abstract entity. — Andrew M
The tl;dr is that if what's being thought is an abstract entity, is that because there's something special about thinking? or because thinking is acting? or because thinking is an event occurring? Is it abstract because it's thinking, or because all our descriptions are abstractions? — Srap Tasmaner
1. "Alice is grabbing her umbrella" is also an abstraction, right? We are leaving out whatever else is going on with Alice in describing her current behavior as "grabbing her umbrella". — Srap Tasmaner
2. "Alice thinks it's going to rain" is an abstraction in the same way (1) is -- we're not talking about whatever else may be going on in her mind -- but is it an abstraction in some other way? Is there another sense of abstraction in play here? — Srap Tasmaner
3. Alice is a concrete entity and Alice's umbrella is a concrete entity; is "Alice grabbing her umbrella" an abstract entity? Is that what actions are? Or events? How do we capture the difference between "Alice grabbing her umbrella", a sort of abstract event that might occur, and "Alice is grabbing her umbrella" which, while an abstraction in the simple sense of (1) is pretty concrete -- it's a realization of "Alice grabbing her umbrella" after all. — Srap Tasmaner
4. Is there yet a third sense of "abstract" — Srap Tasmaner
By an abstraction, I simply mean something that does not exist independently of a concrete and particular context but can be considered independently of that context. Whether that be events, actions, thoughts, descriptions, or whatever. — Andrew M
I'm intending just the one sense. In considering something abstractly, we are being selective as you note, and there are different ways that might manifest, including at increasingly complex levels. But the key point is that it depends on something concrete. — Andrew M
Even if not, it doesn't follow that abstractions are nothing. — Andrew M
So glad you've chimed in, Andrew M! — Srap Tasmaner
Your approach (which you would say is broadly Aristotelian?) seems very sound: there is only one sense of "abstraction"; it is what we do when we consider a particular concrete context selectively. — Srap Tasmaner
I wonder, though, why is existence -- as in the first quote
Even if not, it doesn't follow that abstractions are nothing.
— Andrew M
-- part of this story at all? If Alice is thinking it's going to rain, why even say that there is a thing, the thought that it is going to rain, that does exist, only it doesn't exist independently of Alice thinking it is going to rain, or of someone thinking it is going to rain? — Srap Tasmaner
I ask for two reasons:
(1) If I'm of a mind to deny that Alice thinking something entails there is something Alice is thinking (( that is, except as a matter of grammar; I mean to deny only that "there is" should be taken in the full-blooded sense of something existing )), and you insist that we can consider what Alice is thinking independently of the concrete occasion of Alice thinking it, I do not need to deny this -- why would I? I only need to deny that us considering what Alice is thinking entails there being something we are considering. — Srap Tasmaner
(2) If the point is to emphasize our capacity to consider things selectively, and to describe this somewhat picturesquely as an ability conjure abstract entities for our consideration rather than being compelled always and only to consider the totality of the concrete situation, I will point out that we are already doing that all the time simply by using language in the first place. — Srap Tasmaner
Insofar as we want to ignore whatever else is going on with Alice except her thinking about the chance of rain and taking her umbrella, we say, "Alice is taking her umbrella because she thinks it's going to rain." "Considering selectively" is not a special thing we do sometimes with language; it's practically all we ever do. — Srap Tasmaner
But there does seem to be an exception to the idea that language is always selective: names of concrete particulars. When we refer to Alice, we mean everything about her, or at least intend not specifically to exclude anything about her.
The question then is whether, in creating "names" on-the-fly, we are referring to abstract particulars such as "Alice taking her umbrella" (an action or an event), and that question seems particularly acute when the name is anaphoric and thus somewhat open-ended: "what Alice said" or "what Alice did" or "what Alice was thinking". — Srap Tasmaner
I think it's just a matter of grammar. I don't think there are metaphysical implications in that phrasing. — Andrew M
As long as we take care not to reify such abstractions, is there really a problem here? — Andrew M
Right, this is the part of your position I've ignored: abstract entities have only dependent, not independent existence. By "reify" you mean precisely attributing independent existence to something that doesn't have it.
Here's one way we can talk. There is a general event type, someone thinking it's going to rain; there is a particular event type, Alice thinking it's going to rain; and then there are particular instances of that, Alice's thinking yesterday that it was going to rain. (Obviously lots of other ways to carve that up...)
That last is a particular, but in your terms it is not a concrete particular, not because of anything to do with types and instances but because every instance of Alice thinking it's going to rain is dependent for its existence on Alice existing, is inseparable from Alice. We separate what Alice is thinking from Alice only fictively, by means of abstraction.
And then two people thinking the same thing is still as simple as I want it to be, just a matter of using the same words to describe what you fictively detach as "what they're thinking." If you then generalize, you can talk about the idea "that it is going to rain" as what anyone you would describe as thinking it's going to rain is thinking. — Srap Tasmaner
One little question: in this analysis, every instance of Alice thinking it's going to rain is dependent for its existence on Alice existing, not on Alice independently existing, right? I'd love to stay away from saying what that's supposed to mean, but we don't seem to rely on it anyway. Do you agree? — Srap Tasmaner
So far we're juggling general vs. particular, abstract vs. concrete, and dependent vs. independent. There are obvious temptations to match them up (respectively) that I'm trying to be careful about. — Srap Tasmaner
Well, thinking needs a subject (such as Alice). But Alice doesn't, in turn, have a subject - any chain of dependencies terminates with her. So in that sense, she is not dependent on anything further for her existence. — Andrew M
For Aristotle, ordinary objects (his primary substances) were the fundamental entities. — Andrew M
Truth is not correspondence to reality. Why? — Dfpolis
But true sentences can correspond only to made-up abstractions — bongo fury
But true sentences can correspond only to made-upabstractionschimaeras. — bongo fury
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