I don't see logic as empirical in the sense of being 'dependent on experience' — Wayfarer
I see logic as innate to the structure of the mind, an innate capacity. In that sense, I'm sympathetic to the generally platonist view. — Wayfarer
logic or reason, the capacity to understand terms such as 'the same as', 'greater than', 'because', and so on - are based on the mind's ability to grasp the relations of ideas. Those abilities can't be explained in materialist terms. — Wayfarer
↪Kenosha Kid
Superposition is an epistemological situation, right? — frank
... if you adhere to the shut-up-and-calculate philosophy or the Copenhagen interpretation (which I think of as shut-up-and-calculate minus the shutting-up part) then the PBR result shouldn’t trouble you. You don’t have an ontology: you consider it uninteresting or unscientific to discuss reality before measurement. For you, ψ is indeed an encoding of human knowledge, but it’s merely knowledge about the probabilities of various measurement outcomes, not about the state of the world before someone measures. — Get real - Scott Aaronson, Nature Physics, June 2012
What we know, including what we understand the world to be, is a cognitive act, a constructive effort on the part of the embodied mind. — Wayfarer
There are fundamental, general and simple logical principles, such as the law of identity and the law of the excluded middle, which must be true in all possible worlds. — Wayfarer
Not a separate sort of object from matter. — Wayfarer
according to Husserl, the basis of any sort of whole of independently apprehended parts (a whole in the pregnant sense) is the collective combination, which is an abstracting act of consciousness uniting parts. — Joshs
Kant characterizes synthesis as “the act of putting different representations together, and grasping what is manifold in them in one cognition” (A77/B103); it is a process that “gathers the elements for cognition, and unites them to form a certain content” (A78/B103). — SEP
Reasoning is a capacity, not something that's "out there". — khaled
The stoics said that reasoning is more than a capacity of thought, because it's also a principle of cosmic order. Reason is efficacious because the reason that orders the world is also a characteristic of the reason that is internal to the mind. — Wayfarer
Reason is efficacious because the reason that orders the world is also a characteristic of the reason that is internal to the mind. — Wayfarer
Intentionality is neither the province of the mind in itself nor that of the material world. It precedes both of these derivative and inadequate ideas. It is the inseparable mutually dependent relation between a subjective (egoic) and objective pole of the intentional act. — Joshs
Comparisons, differentiations, additions and subtractions are actions performed on already constituted formal objects — Joshs
While the temperature at a point on Earth is what it is, regardless of whether you measure it, electrons have no definite position until the moment you observe them. Prior to that, their positions can only be described probabilistically, by assigning values to every point in a quantum field that captures the likelihood you’ll find an electron there versus somewhere else. Prior to observation, electrons essentially exist nowhere — and everywhere.
“Most things in physics aren’t just objects; they’re something that lives in every point in space and time,” said Dijkgraaf. — Quanta
(Neo-)Copenhagen interpretations get around it by saying that you can't talk about the state of reality independent of measurement. — Andrew M
As such, I don't care about "the reason that orders the world". Maybe it is the same as the reason in my mind, or maybe the reason in my mind is just an "evolutionary shortcut", a hack, a parody of the real thing optimized for survival. Either way, I don't have access to "the reason that orders the world" so I don't care about it. — khaled
That is the point that I was trying to make. I think it calls into question Kenosha Kid’s view that there is ‘one objective reality’ which all interpretations try to approximate or interpret. I agree that reality may be one, but that unity must necessarily transcend subject-object dualism, meaning that it’s out of scope for naturalism as such. — Wayfarer
The philosophical mind has the desire to know. So such statements are very unphilosophical. — Metaphysician Undercover
You don’t have an ontology: you consider it uninteresting or unscientific to discuss reality before measurement. — Get real - Scott Aaronson, Nature Physics, June 2012
I don't have access to "the reason that orders the world" so I don't care about it. — khaled
the shut-up-and-calculate philosophy or the Copenhagen interpretation (which I think of as shut-up-and-calculate minus the shutting-up part) — Get real - Scott Aaronson, Nature Physics, June 2012
There's a resemblance to Kant's 'synthesis', isn't there? — Wayfarer
Comparisons, differentiations, additions and subtractions are actions performed on already constituted formal objects
— Joshs
I want to call that out too. I think the qualification ‘formal’ is key here. Use of the qualifier ‘formal’ denotes this as a specifically philosophical expression. — Wayfarer
But I wouldn’t say reason orders the world in the first place, which grants me access to it, whatever its composition or use. — Mww
Again, I don't see the need to place logical principles in the world. I would say even these simple logical principles are akin to sight and hearing. Reasoning is a capacity, not something that's "out there". — khaled
Reason doesn’t organize.....order.....the world; it only informs me of the consistency and legitimacy of the ordering. And THAT I certainly do care about. — Mww
It was Wayfarer that was trying to conceive of an “order out there”, so I pointed it out that it’s useless to talk about such a thing because you’ll never have access to it. — khaled
I would say the argument that our reasoning capacities can be trusted since there is evolutionary advantage in having good reasoning is valid. But not the argument that our reasoning or senses are complete — khaled
How would you define a formal object in Husserl’s sense? — Joshs
I agree with wayfarer if he says it is conceiveable that there is order out there, which makes perfect sense iff it is we who order, which, of course, we do. But it isn’t reason, it’s intuition, the subconscious part of the human cognitive system, responsible for it. — Mww
There is an argument that says the world must be ordered, for the simple reason our understanding is very seldom in conflict with it. — Mww
Either way, and no matter what, without us and our system, the world, ordered or otherwise, is ontologically, epistemologically, and completely, irrelevant. — Mww
As weak as they are, I think our sensory system is complete, insofar far as we are affected by the external world with the system we have. — Mww
You are more well-versed than I — Mww
The world isn’t mathematical; we are. — Mww
Mathematics does play [a] sovereign role in physics. This was already implied in the statement, made when discussing the role of applied mathematics, that the laws of nature must have been formulated in the language of mathematics to be an object for the use of applied mathematics. The statement that the laws of nature are written in the language of mathematics was properly made three hundred years ago;[8 It is attributed to Galileo] it is now more true than ever before. — Wigner
Only a fool would want to know something they know they can’t know. — khaled
(Neo-)Copenhagen interpretations get around it by saying that you can't talk about the state of reality independent of measurement.
— Andrew M
That is the point that I was trying to make. I think it calls into question Kenosha Kid’s view that there is ‘one objective reality’ which all interpretations try to approximate or interpret. — Wayfarer
I agree that reality may be one, but that unity must necessarily transcend subject-object dualism, — Wayfarer
meaning that it’s out of scope for naturalism as such. — Wayfarer
I'm partial to an Aristotelian four-causes naturalism — Andrew M
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