If it is the agreement of others that shows what the rules are then my having watched many games and finding a consensus about the way the game is meant to be played is sufficient to show me that I have understood the rules. — Janus
Having admitted that it is the agreement of others which determines the rules, how can you then say that your own personal judgement of whether you have understood what the consensus is, is now sufficient? — Isaac
...a rule is necessarily public and so a merely private understanding of it remains a mere opinion until demonstrated. — Isaac
Too analytic. Understanding the rule and implementing it are coextensive. As if a lecture on bike riding were enough to teach you how to ride a bike....you would first have to understand a rule in order to be able to demonstrate that understanding. — Janus
language, which enables me to understand the rules, without having to implement them. — Janus
If I couldn't be sure that I understood rules, how could I be sure that I understood that there is consensus? — Janus
Having admitted that it is the agreement of others which determines the rules, how can you then say that your own personal judgement of whether you have understood what the consensus is, is now sufficient? — Isaac
If can describe the rules then I understand them — Janus
If I can't understand a rule without demonstrating it, then how could I be sure that I had understood consensus without demonstrating it — Janus
An embarrassing load of crap, Isaac; you should be ashamed. — Janus
I'd gently commend Quine to you, to help you along your path. — Banno
And how are you measuring that degree of curvature exactly? What is your non-arbitrary yardstick? :rofl: — apokrisis
Let me check. So to be flat is to lack curve. And to be curved is to lack flat?
Thus we agree? :up: — apokrisis
All that remains is for you to explain how you measure the difference in some non-arbitrary metric basis. — apokrisis
You say that a lot. — Wayfarer
Ohfercrissakes......all this beating around the proverbial “rule” bush. — Mww
.....we were talking about Philosophical Investigations, folk might be using the notion of rules from there. — Banno
Anybody else? — frank
Nobody is paying attention to what "logical" necessity actually is, so we may as well drop the logic part. — frank
I think it plain redundant, so we lose nothing but dropping it. Necessity is a logical condition anyway, right? — Mww
That's an interesting observation. The late emergence of "objectivity", as a formal verbalizable concept , may be explainable in terms similar to Julian Jaynes' theory of the bicameral mind. He proposed that explicit human consciousness was a consequence of complex social interactions, requiring words to distinguish me from you. I don't know if that thesis is provable, but it's certainly suitable for philosophical conjectures.With respect to "the criterion of objectivity": I did some research on the word and found that it only comes into use in the early modern period. — Wayfarer
Actually, the Enformationism thesis requires that I think beyond the conventional modes of Dualism & Matrerialism, into a more Holistic BothAnd way of thinking. Unfortunately, I came to that crossroad late in life. So, I'm still picking my way along an unfamiliar path. And, in my posts on this forum, I must assume that most of us are still thinking in terms of that "customary attitude". Until we learn how to read minds, and to communicate directly from mind to mind, we'll be forced to discuss "what is beyond" in "quasi-objective terms". :nerd:And I think you're still actually thinking within that mode, while wanting to see beyond it, and sensing something beyond it That's why you revert to the images of 'ghostliness' or 'ethereality' to depict your understanding of anything 'beyond the empirical', because you still are trying to conceive of what is beyond it in quasi-objective terms. — Wayfarer
HA!!!! Just like that, although any critique needs internal support consistent with it. — Mww
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