Logically, if there are two electrons. then they are not the same. Perhaps you mean that there is only one electron that appears as two electrons in superposition. You can't have it both ways. — Janus
So, is the claim that we have that idea from the moment of birth? — Janus
Cartesian anxiety refers to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other". — Richard Bernstein
The decisive distinguishing feature of Western philosophical spirituality is that it does not regard the truth as something to which the subject has access by right, universally, simply by virtue of the kind of cognitive being that the human subject is. Rather, it views the truth as something to which the subject may accede only through some act of inner self-transformation, some act of attending to the self with a view to determining its present incapacity, thence to transform it into the kind of self that is spiritually qualified to accede to a truth that is by definition not open to the unqualified subject. — Ian Hunter, Philosophy and Spirituality in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
That which is (A) is not and cannot be that which it is not (not-A). This being a more long-winded way of saying that “each given is identical with itself”, or “A = A”. Which is what the law of identity stipulates to be an innate and determinate aspect of our awareness and, derivatively, of how we think. Hence being deemed "a law of thought" - since it is deemed to govern all thought without exception. — javra
For Spir the principle of identity is not only the fundamental law of knowledge, it is also an ontological principle, expression of the unconditioned essence of reality (Realität=Identität mit sich), which is opposed to the empirical reality (Wirklichkeit), which in turn is evolution (Geschehen). The principle of identity displays the essence of reality: only that which is identical to itself is real, the empirical world is ever-changing, therefore it is not real. Thus the empirical world has an illusory character, because phenomena are ever-changing, and empirical reality is unknowable. — Afrikan Spir, Ontology
There are two electrons in a superposition. That's the object used in quantum computing. There have been made superpositions of 100 of them even. The electron's identities get mixed up totally. There is no logic applicable. Love and hate are completely crazy and illogical. Not to mention irrational. — Hillary
If you mean, a human infant kept in an isolation tank will never learn English, then, sure. But that's not really the point. Expose any sentient being other than a human to experience, and they're not going to learn to speak, notwithstanding your 'logical dog'. :-) — Wayfarer
Epistemic priority is not necessarily temporal priority. It's not as if human infants are born with the ability to reason — Wayfarer
Expose any sentient being other than a human to experience, and they're not going to learn to speak, — Wayfarer
Aquired in the womb but still. — Hillary
Is there any sense of differentiation in the womb? Interesting question but hard to answer, I'd say. — Janus
For Spir the principle of identity is not only the fundamental law of knowledge, it is also an ontological principle, expression of the unconditioned essence of reality (Realität=Identität mit sich), which is opposed to the empirical reality (Wirklichkeit), which in turn is evolution (Geschehen). The principle of identity displays the essence of reality: only that which is identical to itself is real, the empirical world is ever-changing, therefore it is not real. Thus the empirical world has an illusory character, because phenomena are ever-changing, and empirical reality is unknowable. — Afrikan Spir, Ontology
(I've found a well-formatted translation of his major work, which I'm going to try and get around to studying.) — Wayfarer
[…] the principle of identity, which is the characteristic of the supreme being, of the absolute, of God. God is not the creator deity of the universe and mankind, but man's true nature and the norm of all things, in general. [...] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrikan_Spir#Religion_and_morality
In the fragments, Heraclitus describes a single force that stands apart from all else and guides the universe according to a set purpose. Heraclitus calls this force 'the god', 'the wise', 'the one', Zeus, and the thunderbolt, and he explicitly connects these four words with each other in the fragments. Fragment 41 identifies this controlling force as 'the wise' and 'the one', showing that these two names stand for the same concept in Heraclitus' thought: — https://www.swarthmore.edu/classics/heraclitus-and-divine
A worthwhile mention while I’m at it: Heraclitus, despite his philosophy of cosmic flux - and despite his fragments being open to interpretation - held a belief in a singular, absolute governing force that stands apart from all else - what we could nowadays label a belief in “the Real” or the Absolute — javra
Flux of what is (akin to a wave or a process) vs. permanency of what is (akin to a particle or an entity) - and, to my mind, taking into account that we and our mental faculties are intrinsic aspects of nature, this imo results in a kind of flux/permanency duality intrinsic to nature at large. — javra
I’ve probably rambled, and I get that all this might be overly opinionated. — javra
So, is the claim that we have that idea from the moment of birth? — Janus
The body has its inherent capacities, no doubt, and we are not born as "blank slates". — Janus
Are we able to think of anything that is not something we have heard of, or at least a composite of things experienced and/ or heard of? — Janus
But I get what you mean. In this day and age, with the world seemingly so small, so many damn people, so much information, so much new stuff all the time.....seems like it’s impossible not to be influenced by it all. Think about it, though......what gets lost in all that noise? — Mww
I hold with materialism with respect to external objects of perception, yes. All external objects are substance, or, material, and the material of the object is that which affects my perceptive apparatus. In conjunction with that, I hold that these sense organs have no cognitive power, they merely relay the presence of material, upon which that part of the reasoning system having to do with sense impressions, functions. — Mww
Do my eyes qualify as chemically imbalanced upon hallucination, or is it in the brain, where the impressions are received, that the chemical changes occur? If in the brain, and the philosophical equivalent of brain is a theory of cognition, in which comparable manifestations appear, then it is in the reasoning process where judgement is affected, that stands in for chemical changes in the brain. — Mww
It is the cognition of the object given from the reasoning process, not the impression the object gives me, that tells me I’m stoned. — Mww
Agreed, in that the body (actually, the sub-conscious process you favor, which I call intuition) creates a phenomenon that determines how the impression should be represented. In this respect, then, causes are always and only internal, but only regarding the reasoning process itself, having nothing whatsoever to do with causes of objects, or that which objects cause.
We might agree, on the other hand, that objects cause, are the raw unprocessed material for, perceptions, but then, perceptions (raw material) alone are not impressions, which are the purview of sensation (representation of raw material). Again....minutia. — Mww
I hold that these sense organs have no cognitive power....
— Mww
....But the power which receives information from the senses (...) is not properly a "cognitive power". — Metaphysician Undercover
What I am saying is that we need to account for the system which gives the object to the cognitive (conscious) system. — Metaphysician Undercover
This system is intermediate between the object itself, and what appears in the mind as the sense image of the object. This is the sensing system. — Metaphysician Undercover
So it's somewhat inaccurate to say "the impression the object gives me", I have to say that it is 'the impression that the sense system gives me'. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then I can understand that the sense impression in my mind is not "given" by the object sensed, it is given by that deeper system, and it is faults within the system which are causing me to hallucinate. — Metaphysician Undercover
We can see when something is outside of the norm, (....) but we really cannot say that the norm is "real", or even how things "should be represented". — Metaphysician Undercover
Consider that the representation could be extremely arbitrary, like the way we use symbols and words to represent. — Metaphysician Undercover
The word, or symbol, has no necessity to bear any resemblance to the thing represented, it may be a completely arbitrary assignment, for memory purposes or simple facility. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the conscious mind uses symbols in this arbitrary way, (no real reason why this symbol represents that object), then the subconscious could behave in a very similar way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Except the object is never given to the cognitive system, that being merely a representation of it. So yes, we need a sub-system that accounts for the creation of representations. — Mww
Except the sense system has no cognitive power, only creative, the object itself determining the limits of such creative power. It isn’t my eyes that are deceived by hallucinogens or mirage or delusions in general, it is that fault within the conscious system, that is. Sense system does this job but not that; the conscious system does that job, but not this. — Mww
Hallucination resides right there, merely a misunderstanding of that which the sense system gives to it. — Mww
I agree the sense representation could be extremely arbitrary, but only when under the influence of an object completely unknown to us. In such case, we can say only what the object is not, but cannot say what it is. Otherwise, we’d know it, hence not arbitrary at all. — Mww
left to its own devices, possibly, sure. A very good reason why it isn’t; it is utterly dependent for its creative powers, on the object perception gives to it. — Mww
Nevertheless, without the object, there is still imagination, which does not depend on perception, in which case, we can manufacture any damn thing we want. Even logically contradictory objects.....dogs with wings. — Mww
But no matter what, we can’t seem to imagine impossible things. Impossible experiences, yes, but not things we cannot think, which is all that makes a thing impossible in the first place. — Mww
Still, if the sub-conscious does all this....how would we be made aware of it? — Mww
Good stuff. Fun to play with. No right or wrong here, just musings galore, right? Or...musing run completely amok. (Grin) — Mww
This depends on how one understands "the object". From the perspective of what I've been arguing, objects are a creation of the sensing system..... — Metaphysician Undercover
......You call (what I call) the object, a representation, but what it represents you cannot really say, though you assign "object" to that...... — Metaphysician Undercover
So there is an appearance in the mind, the appearance of an object, you say it is a representation, I say it's the object, but what it represents, we don't know. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the Idealism described in Plato's Republic, and Berkeley's Dialogues, the reality of objects is within the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Representation" I believe, is a way of using symbols which evolved from communication, when we assume an external object which we both may apprehend and talk about. — Metaphysician Undercover
It isn’t my eyes that are deceived by hallucinogens or mirage or delusions in general.....
— Mww
I don't agree with this. I think it is the sensing system itself which creates the hallucination. So it is a fault within the sensing system, and this in turn deceives the cognitive power. — Metaphysician Undercover
We do not exactly know what the "creative power" is, and the extent of its creative capacity. — Metaphysician Undercover
So I do not think we can conclude logically that it is limited by what it is sensing. — Metaphysician Undercover
The creative power has evolved so that it is adapted to the world it is sensing, and the needs of the sensing being, but that doesn't mean it couldn't have developed a completely different sensing capacity. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the living beings cannot remove what's already there deep within the sensing system, developed when the "object" was completely unknown. So this makes the fundamentals of basic sensation very arbitrary. — Metaphysician Undercover
So sensing is fundamentally based in a not-knowing system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nevertheless, without the object, there is still imagination....
— Mww
See, I do not respect this proposed division between imagination and sense perception. I don't think it's real or true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ok, that’s fine, if you like. I hold that objects are material substance with extension in space and duration in time. With that, objects cannot be created by the sensing system, but exist as physical things independently from it. — Mww
Ehhhh....technically I wouldn’t say here appearances are in the mind, insofar as we are not conscious of the creation of these representations as phenomena. This has support in the physical sciences as well, so....all is not hopeless metaphysical handwaving. It is here, also, I find agreement with your sub-conscious system that creates its “object”. — Mww
Yes, exactly, but such idealism is rendered obsolete by late-Enlightenment transcendental idealism. — Mww
Representation is that, but much more than that. Think scientifically: for any exchange of energy dissimilar systems, there is a loss. If there is a loss, the output of the exchange cannot be equal to the input to it. As such, the output merely represents the input. — Mww
Besides, if, as I maintain, the sense system has no cognitive abilities, it cannot assign symbols, insofar as, on the one hand, there is no faculty or repository from which to withdraw symbols, and on the other, there is no conscious logical system in sensibility which authorizes which symbol to draw in relation to a given perception. — Mww
I submit, one must understand what he perceives long before he can talk about it. I mean, if one doesn’t understand.....what could he say about it? — Mww
Ok, fine. How does a system that receives sense data create something that falsifies what it receives? If this were the case, what prevents us from always being deceived? How does the sensing system distinguish a deception from a valid appearance? — Mww
Correct, and a perfect reason to require the actual conscious system to ride herd on it, to regulate it, by synthesizing conceptions to the objects created by the sensing system, in order to make them understandable, and hence, to permit knowledge of them.
But you are correct, in a truly metaphysically undercover way: we have no way of knowing exactly anything at all, except that by which the system itself informs. I am sufficiently informed that the thing I just tripped over was a tree root, but was it really? I have no good reason to ever think it wasn’t, and I do myself no favors by going through the motions of attempting to come up with one. — Mww
“It” understood as creative power of the sensing system, if what you say is the case, then it is possible the creative system can create its objects without anything being perceived. If not logically limited by what it is sensing, it follows it is limited by itself, or it has no limits at all. Which, in effect, if true, makes the creative system a self-contained causality.
While I tacitly agree with the validity of a self-contained causality, I hold that it is not in the creative power of the sensing system, but in the synthetic a priori manifestations of pure reason. So...you are basically on the track, but you’ve got the cart before the horse. — Mww
If by sensing capacity you mean the functionality of the sense organs, you’ve invoked a logical question-begging. We have THIS sensing capacity, which makes explicit the creative power couldn’t have developed any other kind, and doesn’t give sufficient ground for allowing that creative power, in and of itself, developed anything except itself, which excludes sensing capacities, which are strictly predicated on physiology. While it is true we would have a completely different experience base if the creative power evolved differently, but.....it didn’t, so what we have is all we’re logically permitted to discuss.
Unless I misunderstand, you’re saying a different creative power could have developed our senses to sense differently, which is a function of natural evolution alone. — Mww
You say arbitrary, I say undetermined. It is true humans....the only living beings I care about.....cannot remove what already there deep within the sensing system, such is just an admission that the use of it is inescapable. Extending that necessity, we find that, at this stage of the reasoning system as a whole, anything perceived is as yet undetermined, which is precisely how a thing is completely unknown. — Mww
Real metaphysics is in books of hundreds of pages covering everything pertinent; modern metaphysics is in a few peer-reviewed pages covering minor incidentals. — Mww
I hold that objects are material substance with extension in space and duration in time....
— Mww
But space and time are conceptual. They are concepts created to help us understand the appearance of objects. We really have no thorough understanding of what it is which is independent of us. — Metaphysician Undercover
technically I wouldn’t say here appearances are in the mind....
— Mww
Well, what is in the conscious mind then, if it isn't the appearances? — Metaphysician Undercover
When I look around with my eyes, and I have images in my mind, of objects, aren't these images "in my mind"? If not, what is it which is in my mind? Is anything "in" my mind? — Metaphysician Undercover
I submit, one must understand what he perceives long before he can talk about it. I mean, if one doesn’t understand.....what could he say about it?
— Mww
I don't believe this is the case. We name things without understanding them. — Metaphysician Undercover
As a form of "causality", the self-contained causality must be prior in time, therefore its existence must be prior to any faculty which it is found to reside within, or else that faculty would be dependent on something else for its capacity to function. The "something else" then would be its cause, and it would not be a self-contained causality. — Metaphysician Undercover
The uncertainty is always within the premises, and it's the mistaken premises which lead to faulty conclusions. — Metaphysician Undercover
free will is a sort of manifestation of the deeper self-contained causality. My position would support the latter. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose we assume an object which is completely unknown. Now, we want to set up a sensing system to develop some knowledge about that object. — Metaphysician Undercover
When these sensing systems came into existence, the creatures knew nothing about the objects they wanted to learn about. — Metaphysician Undercover
So it's not true to say "what we have is all we’re logically permitted to discuss", because there is a variety of ways in which "possibility" is dealt with by logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
While it is true we would have a completely different experience base if the creative power evolved differently, but.....it didn’t, so what we have is all we’re logically permitted to discuss. — Mww
But the living beings cannot remove what's already there deep within the sensing system, developed when the "object" was completely unknown. So this makes the fundamentals of basic sensation very arbitrary.
— Metaphysician Undercover
You say arbitrary, I say undetermined. — Mww
You say arbitrary, I say undetermined.....
— Mww
No, I really mean arbitrary, so I think you misunderstand. Suppose we assume an object which is completely unknown. Now, we want to set up a sensing system to develop some knowledge about that object. Since we know absolutely nothing about that object, anything we set up would be completely arbitrary. We'd have to set up some sort of trial and error system without any knowledge of where to start. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes we do have a way of thoroughly understanding: we declare what each and every single thing that is existentially independent of us, how it is to be known by us, in direct accordance to the rules by which understanding works. We may fail in our thorough knowledge of what the object actually is, but we do not fail to understand the existential independence of them. — Mww
And while space and time are conceptions, they have nothing to do with the ontology of objects themselves, but only with the human method of granting their possibility. — Mww
Ok, that’s fine, if you like. I hold that objects are material substance with extension in space and duration in time. With that, objects cannot be created by the sensing system, but exist as physical things independently from it. — Mww
Appearances are merely informative impressions, affects on physiology, hence not yet part of the reasoning process. — Mww
Yes, the images are in your conscious mind, but they are representations, which are not given by looking around with your eyes. All looking does, and perception in general, is give material to form the representations. — Mww
Actually, this is quite impossible. A name is assigned to a thing at a time strictly in accordance to how it is understood at that time. That is not to say such named things are understood correctly, but that has nothing to do with the naming of them. — Mww
There are two major necessary characteristics imbued in the human being, such that he can be so called: morality and reason. In keeping with the topic, reason the condition, is antecedent in time to all that for which it is the condition. Hence, the notion of self-contained causality is logically justified. — Mww
.....shows up, in that, where reason is the conclusion, understanding is the major and judgement is the minor premises respectively. It is common knowledge our judgements are quite apt to be erroneous, hence the conclusions will be as well. Understanding, on the other hand, the faculty from which all our conceptions arise, cannot be in error, with respect to that part of a synthesis for which it alone is responsible. This requires some exposition which I won’t go into here. — Mww
Nahhhh....that ain’t gonna work. Any developed sensing system still needs to go through the one we have, in order to obtain knowledge. Telescopes were such a system, but we still need to look through the eyepiece, or look at the the display which obtains its information directly. — Mww
Before sensing systems, what sense does it make to say creatures wanted to learn? — Mww
Possibility is dealt with in one way only, in affirmation or negation, one or the other, not both simultaneously for the same thing. — Mww
I understand we can’t remove what’s already there deep within the sensing system. I understand all objects are completely unknown with respect to the sensing system we have, which is that very system we cannot remove. Again.....the senses do not give knowledge; they merely set the stage for the possibility of it. — Mww
I don’t understand why the fundamentals of basic sensation are very arbitrary. I guess I’d have to ask.....what are the fundamentals of sensation, such that any sensation can be of any thing? I mean...I cannot see an odor and I cannot hear a twisted ankle. — Mww
I agree we would use trial and error to invent a sensing system for that which we know nothing about, but I disagree we have no knowledge of where to start. First, whatever sensing system we set up must possible, which is the same as we won’t set up a system we don’t know how to design. Second, whatever sensing system we set up must be capable of sensing something that will be intelligible to us, for to set up for sensing that which we would never understand, is quite impossible. To get technical, the categories always tell us the absolute bare necessities of anything we sense, but we’ll leave that alone for now.
Nahhhh....I suggest we might very well set up an arbitrary sensing system for objects we know nothing about, but that system must be conditioned by what we already know. Case in point, we really knew nothing about celestial manifestations, and the telescope sensing system for far-away big stuff we set up to find out about, was designed specifically with respect to the sensing system we already have. Going the other direction, we knew absolutely nothing about germs until we set up a sensing system that magnifies close-in little stuff, which also respects our own sensing system. — Mww
Yes we do have a way of thoroughly understanding: (...) in direct accordance to the rules by which understanding works.....
— Mww
But we do not have a thorough knowledge of the rules by which understanding works.... — Metaphysician Undercover
Independent existence of objects is what I disputed. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the issue is, how can you distinguish between an "appearance" (I'll call it an 'image' maybe) which is a direct percept, derived through sensation, and an image which is a creation of the mind, like a dream, or a memory. — Metaphysician Undercover
I ask this, because I do not know how you can separate out "the reasoning process" as you do. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that because of this reality of the mind creating such things, and it's not the conscious mind doing the creating, nor the sensing process, we must allow that there is creative activity of "the mind" which is neither sensing nor reasoning. — Metaphysician Undercover
I place this creative activity as intermediate between reasoning and sensing because it can create principles (or rules if you like) for reasoning to follow, but it does not necessarily derive the things that it creates directly from the senses. — Metaphysician Undercover
So this is how I propose that the mind creates the objects which we believe that we are sensing...... — Metaphysician Undercover
....they are somehow created by the subconscious mind, or maybe "brain" or "nervous system" would be more appropriate here. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you go by a different definition of "understand", or "understood" than I do here. (...) However, "understanding" is a product of the reasoning process. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would say that "understand" implies the use of the conscious reasoning process to derive some sort of meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, we have to consider the "objects" given by the subconscious system, which is is not a part of the conscious system, not a part of the the reasoning process. These are the representations. In order for the conscious system to work with them in a reasoning process, a logical process, they must be given names. — Metaphysician Undercover
So we have two layers of representation. The images or representations, received into the conscious mind, and the names, words, which the conscious mind assigns to these representations, to represent them, in order to understand them. From this perspective then, the naming is necessarily prior to the understanding, as a prerequisite for understanding. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we can conclude that naming must occur without understanding, as a primary step toward understanding. — Metaphysician Undercover
This allows that knowledge and understanding can be emergent. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are two major necessary characteristics imbued in the human being, such that he can be so called: morality and reason......
— Mww
What I am trying to get you to consider is the conditions which are antecedent to reason. — Metaphysician Undercover
we can start with the requirement for images, representations, or symbols. Reasoning cannot proceed without some such things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Reasoning cannot proceed without some such things. — Metaphysician Undercover
This means that reasoning cannot be a "self-contained causality". — Metaphysician Undercover
this is where that problem with terminology rears its ugly head. However, I think that "wanted to learn" makes more sense then saying that the creature already had some type of "understanding". But this is the question, 'what is prior to understanding and knowledge?'. — Metaphysician Undercover
Possibility is dealt with in one way only, in affirmation or negation, one or the other, not both simultaneously for the same thing.
— Mww
This is not true, possibility is most successfully dealt with through modal logic and probabilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think you are grasping the necessity for an intermediary between the sensing system, and the conscious mind which is the knower. — Metaphysician Undercover
The intermediary (for simplicity I'll call it the brain) produces the images or representations which the conscious mind works with. — Metaphysician Undercover
These representations are not produced by the sensing system (evidenced by the reality of dreams), nor are they produced by the conscious mind. So we must assume something intermediary. — Metaphysician Undercover
So it's not the sensing system whose assignments are arbitrary, it's the assignments made by the intermediary, the brain, which are arbitrary. — Metaphysician Undercover
The pivotal point is that the type of sensing system which we, as human beings have and use, was created prior to there being knowledge about the things to be sensed. This is fundamental to the nature of knowledge, as emergent, coming into being from not being, and the question of how is this possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
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