So at what epistemic level is a non-viewer based emergent event happening. You keep giving me the human picture of how emergence looks. The viewer is baked in. Next it's going to be shoehorned in by some generic level of "forces" but what does that even mean without the epistemic viewer? Then people will make the odd epistemic imaginative leap to pretend they are the first person view of a localized physical event that combines forces and matter. Nope. — schopenhauer1
If there is no view from nowhere, there are views from somewhere.If there is no view from nowhere, then "what" is happening? Can one speak of this? — schopenhauer1
Make sense? — Olivier5
2 is just 1 multiplied by 2. — Olivier5
Emergence has a view from one thing to another. I'll call it a an epistemic leap. In fact, I don't even know if there was a view to start from that leaps, so perhaps nothing is leaping anywhere. — schopenhauer1
So some facts are agreed by many. But if there was no private experience of facts, no public fact would exist. — Olivier5
Is this another version of "if a tree falls and no one sees it fall, did it really fall?" — Olivier5
Are you making some assumption about emergence here, that would require this question to be asked in the case of emergence but not for a tree falling in the forest? — Olivier5
What is an "extra" layer of epistemic value, may I ask???? Something you haven't yet read about in a book? Something non-canonical? And how can you possibly check if some "layers of epistemic value" are "there" or "not there"??? What are the criteria for the existence of layers of epistemic value?It's like matter and forces are given extra layers of epistemic value that are not there. — schopenhauer1
In other words, could you clarify your perspective? Seem you are making many assumptions here that you are not aware of, assumptions that you are not prepared to challenge or even explore, and as a result you can't arrive at a clear question. — Olivier5
The viewer is baked in. Next it's going to be shoehorned in by some generic level of "forces" but what does that even mean without the epistemic viewer? Then people will make the odd epistemic imaginative leap to pretend they are the first person view of a localized physical event that combines forces and matter. Nope. — schopenhauer1
It's to do with the view from nowhere and everywhere. — schopenhauer1
You are asking the wrong guy. The view from nowhere and everywhere is the view of God, and I am an atheist. — Olivier5
I am going to try and interpret this in my own language, if you don't mind. Correct me if I am wrong. The question would translate in my language as: is scale only in the eye of the beholder, an arbitrary choice of the viewer, or are there events (e.g. related to causality) that objectively happen at a certain scale and not below or above that scale?So where do events localize? — schopenhauer1
I am going to try and interpret this in my own language, if you don't mind. Correct me if I am wrong. The question would translate in my language as: is scale only in the eye of the beholder, an arbitrary choice of the viewer, or are there events (e.g. related to causality) that objectively happen at a certain scale and not below or above that scale? — Olivier5
Did I understand the question? — Olivier5
To precise even further: are the laws of nature -- as seen or even designed by a hypothetical all-knowing god, not the laws of nature as we feeble humans apprehend them but the noumenal laws, if they exist -- the same at all scales, or are there certain laws, certain forms of causality that only crank up and become applicable at certain scales, and not below? — Olivier5
This actually, has a few assumptions baked into it, leading to certain kind of answers, so I'd rather focus on paragraph one. — schopenhauer1
Is scale only in the eye of the beholder, an arbitrary choice of the viewer, or are there events (e.g. related to causality) that objectively happen at a certain scale and not below or above that scale? — Olivier5
Is that an acceptable way to go? — Olivier5
Assuming that the laws of nature are local, — Olivier5
It rules out action at a distance. — Olivier5
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