I wonder if he, on reading closely his own words, would accept an alteration to "that which causes change" - this being definitional. Among the benefits of simplicity is the shearing away of excess. In this case leaving only the word "cause" to be either more fully explicated or itself accepted as definitional."anything which results in a change" — Metaphysician Undercover
Under my below definitions, for example, a virus is alive and takes actions towards a goal. So, if you do not regard a virus as a living being making intentional actions then you have to point out exactly where/how my definition is flawed, and argue why a virus is inanimate matter, not making selective decisions to make an action or not. — Sir Philo Sophia
undefined ambiguous terms like "piece of matter", and "free energy". So it appears like you have something like "free energy which...transfers some kind of energy...which...results in a change...". — Metaphysician Undercover
that is a false general definition of life. It is purely anthropomorphic. See my factual arguments made in comments in my last post for more exactly why and how, which are currently spread out on page 2 here:It is because the lack of cytoplasm, lack of cell division etc.. They have been described as "organisms at the edge of life". — philosopher004
All thinking is based in presuppositions, and sorting them out and sometimes even being aware of what they are is not-so-easy. — tim wood
I would tend to disagree with that. I'd say that there is no "cause" unless you observed and effect, so you cannot separate the two, they come as a pair. a 'cause' that made no observable 'change', was not a 'cause' of anything...In this case leaving only the word "cause" to be either more fully explicated or itself accepted as definitional. — tim wood
The ideas behind the emphasis on definitional being of course only that as a definition, it is not the naming of something found, but instead the establishment of a meaning in a context, a term of art - how well it works to be determined. — tim wood
I believe that with this you have said everything anyone needs to know about your purposes and understanding.my definition does not require any thinking, — Sir Philo Sophia
Correct. I am not limiting to human "action" as you seem to be, which, BTW, in many instances, may not require thinking either. inanimate objects make 'actions' as well. So, you should broaden your philo horizons...I believe that with this you have said everything anyone needs to know about your purposes and understanding. — tim wood
Wouldn't your definition for "action" be a lot simpler, and say essentially the same thing if it was worded something like this: "anything which results in a change"? — Metaphysician Undercover
I am a scientist — Sir Philo Sophia
my definition does not require any thinking — Sir Philo Sophia
I agree. — jgill
Wouldn't your definition for "action" be a lot simpler, and say essentially the same thing if it was worded something like this: "anything which results in a change"? — Metaphysician Undercover
action can be defined in any theory that admits a Lagrangian formulation. Lagrangian dynamics applies to a very important class of theories in physics and other sciences. — SophistiCat
Because Lagrangian dynamics is a general mathematical model that is applicable in multiple contexts, action cannot be given a single physical definition that will cover all applications. This is a feature, not a bug. — SophistiCat
Amen, and a small point. Anything can be defined by anyone anyway they choose to define it - whether any good a different topic. Insofar as the definition is a text intended to convey a definite meaning, wrt to that text the language matters, is in fact the first and arguably only thing that matters.action can be defined in any theory — SophistiCat
By - using - what metric can you tell the difference?not useful for Sentient actions. Only good for inanimate matter actions — Sir Philo Sophia
By - using - what metric can you tell the difference? — tim wood
I also think you have not entirely understood your own project. Definition and description are two different things. Are you describing or defining? — tim wood
Basically, to define something, you have to define what it's opposite is first, or at least be aware of it when validating your own, ie. what is and what isn't. — Outlander
And this is description not definition.all these formative scientific definitions... to... only be based upon external observables — Sir Philo Sophia
How do you know? And in case you do not understand the question, which seems to me likely, my point is that you don't know, but rather presuppose and define, and confuse that with description and knowledge.as stated in the def., violating the PLA at least once. — Sir Philo Sophia
Here's a place to start:
as stated in the def., violating the PLA at least once.
— Sir Philo Sophia
How do you know? And in case you do not understand the question, which seems to me likely, my point is that you don't know, but rather presuppose and define, and confuse that with description and knowledge. — tim wood
a virus is alive and takes actions towards a goal.... and argue why a virus is inanimate matter, not making selective decisions to make an action or not. — Sir Philo Sophia
One must conclude from this you do not know what you're talking about. Viruses, at the edge on the border between what is considered alive v. not alive, do not decide, do not select, certainly do not make selective decisions, certainly do not think or do anything like thinking, do not "make" anything, — tim wood
certainly do not think — tim wood
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