For machines. and other mechanisms,→ to Acceptance, the Intentional Disregard, or Rejection for the problem or dilemma are three alternatives. The computer or other forms of automation (what you call "things) DO NOT make a choice. The response by any computer or other forms of automation is compliance-oriented. Faced with a problem or dilemma, the device under examination (DUE) will respond according to its programmed instructions. The program which drives the response comes (ultimately) from the human source. The response represents the ability of the program developer to have addressed the alternatives in responding to the problem or dilemma. To the DUE problem or dilemma does not recognize the operation as either a problem or dilemma. To the DUE it is merely a set of conditions to establish a path that corresponds to that which the DUE must deal with. How well the DUE responds to the contains is based on the knowledge, skills, and abilities of the program developer. The DUE will reflect whatever the program developer directs.Ah but a thing's patterns is not rejected in nominalism
All trees, just like humans, have DNA. {SOURCE LINK} There are pretty obvious differences between plants and animals, but – at the chemical level – the cells of all plants and all animals contain DNA in the same shape – the famous “double helix” that looks like a twisted ladder. (Posted by Editors of EarthSky October 13, 2008}Trying to argue that two trees share something in common and meaning more to this than that they have near identical components seems to me to be the corruption of Plato,
Metaphysics (re: physis = nature), no? — 180 Proof
Perhaps. However, I was replying to your "nature of nature" comment. — 180 Proof
No. It's an idea of "why" stuff is stuff. — 180 Proof
Ask an Aristotlean / Thomist. (I'm not either.) — 180 Proof
That's good. Kant definitely wasn't Platonic. The true "realists" seem to be those who take the world as it is and doesn't bother with what is "behind it" (as if essence can permeate beyond what we sense). There is much medieval baggage in how we talk though — Gregory
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