And what’s the argument, exactly? That nothing exists, that everything is a mental construction, or that any proposition or truth is impossible? — Xtrix
Everything is a mental construction. Everything subjective. There’s no such thing as truth. Nothing exists. Everything changes— but change isn’t a thing. — Xtrix
Cratylus, "you cannot step in the same river once." — Jackson
if something is universal, it must be able to take into account subjectivity
taking into account subjectivity creates the consequence that it is not universal
In other words: if something is universal, then it is not universal.
Even in shorter way: if being is, then it is not. — Angelo Cannata
“First, each metaphysical question always encompasses the whole problematic of metaphysics and in fact is the whole of metaphysics. Secondly, to ask any metaphysical question, the questioner as such must also be present in the question, i.e., must be put in question. From this we conclude that metaphysical questions must be posed (1) in terms of the whole and (2) always from the essential situation of the existence that asks the question.” — Angelo Cannata
And what’s the argument, exactly? That nothing exists, that everything is a mental construction, or that any proposition or truth is impossible?
— Xtrix
The argument is that the given, the absolute, objective reality, is culture dependent. — Haglund
Claiming it to be not only serves to favor one's own given. — Haglund
But what that's like depends on the cultural medium it's in — Haglund
Not that this is about postmodernism, but....Even Heisenberg said subjectivity can never be eliminated from the scientific experiment. — Jackson
Mathematical physics are dynamical systems where anything that is mathematically possible is also physically possible until the theory is shown to violate some physical law. — magritte
It’s simple: you can’t step even once because, as soon as you touch the water, one instant later it is not anymore the same you touched initially, because it is flowing. — Angelo Cannata
Nice point.It is similar to Zeno’s paradox of the arrow, but the opposite way. — Angelo Cannata
I've studied Heidegger. I have no idea what he means by "being." — Jackson
Existence is culture dependent. — Haglund
It's not just some interesting objective feature of an objective reality that can have meaning and plays a role, it constitutes an objective reality. — Haglund
Your objective story is another one than mine. In my story you are an indirect creature of God, claiming that existence is objective. — Haglund
Of course, you exist, I exist, our stomach digests. If you look at it in a certain way. Then what is "it"? You will, like me, probably say, the material structures in my belly". But that's already a culture dependent statement. But in another story you and I, maybe all creatures on Earth, are no more than specks of dirt (no offense!). — Haglund
In reality objective existence is not viewd on, has no perspective, no focus, is without POV, without an angle. — Haglund
Rocks existing is a mental picture. — Haglund
In reality objective existence is not viewd on, has no perspective, no focus, is without POV, without an angle.
— Haglund
But that statement certainly is. Namely, a sophomoric, silly perspective. Which happens to be complete nonsense. — Xtrix
Better than having a so-called adult take on existence. Which is just another view — Haglund
if movement exists, then nothing can have an identity (the river can never have an identity). Zeno is the opposite: if the the arrow has an identity, then it cannot be moving, because identity implies permanence, which means stillness. — Angelo Cannata
Mathematical physics. A person engaged in this pursuit seeks mathematical ideas and procedures that might illuminate aspects of physics — jgill
And, non-trivially, I’ll emphasize that I have not once brought up “objective existence.” Being is not an object — Xtrix
Numbers as pointers to a geometric line can be talked about, — magritte
This actually brings us to Heidegger, that I already explained — Angelo Cannata
if everything changes continuously, then it is never possible to know what we are talking about, because one second later it has changed its meaning. — Angelo Cannata
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