Abstract objects don't "exist" in any particular mind. Pi is an abstract object. It's not a resident of my mind in the way my grocery list is. I can't be wrong about my grocery list. I can be wrong about pi. It's that sort of thing. — Tate
Abstract objects, last I checked, have been, at the very least, more closely associated with the mind than the physical world. — Agent Smith
Also, for the moment, ignore the notion of abstract(ion) and give me an example, if there is one, of an object that's exclusively mind, having no connection at all with the physical world. — Agent Smith
But a difficulty emerges as soon as we ask ourselves how we know that a thing is white or a triangle. If we wish to avoid the universals whiteness and triangularity, we shall choose some particular patch of white or some particular triangle, and say that anything is white or a triangle if it has the right sort of resemblance to our chosen particular. But then the resemblance required will have to be a universal. Since there are many white things, the resemblance must hold between many pairs of particular white things; and this is the characteristic of a universal. It will be useless to say that there is a different resemblance for each pair, for then we shall have to say that these resemblances resemble each other, and thus at last we shall be forced to admit resemblance as a universal. The relation of resemblance, therefore, must be a true universal. And having been forced to admit this universal, we find that it is no longer worth while to invent difficult and unplausible theories to avoid the admission of such universals as whiteness and triangularity. ... — Bertrand Russell, World of Universals
Yes, thank you.Brief defense of universals, bolds added. — Wayfarer
OK, if we require “exist” to apply to only things in space/time, then universals don’t exist but they subsist.But universals do not exist in this sense; we shall say that they subsist — Russell, World of Universals
How about the following? "Luminiferous aether or ether ("luminiferous", meaning "light-bearing") was the postulated medium for the propagation of light. It was invoked to explain the ability of the apparently wave-based light to propagate through empty space (a vacuum), something that waves should not be able to do."Can you give me an example, one will do, of a pure abstract object and by that I mean an (abstract) object that has no links whatsoever with the physical world? It should exist only in the mind is what I'm saying. — Agent Smith
OK, if we require “exist” to apply to only things in space/time, then universals don’t exist but they subsist. But if we make this requirement of "exist", then it seems “is” and “was” are fundamentally different. — Art48
the relation 'north of' does not seem to exist in the same sense in which Edinburgh and London exist. If we ask 'Where and when does this relation exist?' the answer must be 'Nowhere and nowhen'. There is no place or time where we can find the relation 'north of'. It does not exist in Edinburgh any more than in London, for it relates the two and is neutral as between them. Nor can we say that it exists at any particular time. Now everything that can be apprehended by the senses or by introspection exists at some particular time. Hence the relation 'north of' is radically different from such things. It is neither in space nor in time, neither material nor mental; yet it is something.
The luminiferous aether is an abstract object that the universe fails to instantiate. — Art48
That's just not true, though; they each reflect light at wavelengths closer to each other than objects of other colours do compared to them, and consequently they look more similar to each other in terms of colour than objects of other colours do compared to them. The first is a material condition of the second and the second is the reason we refer to both as being grey, for our use of the word "grey". — Janus
From where did we get the idea of two if not by first observing more than one thing? How can we observe more than one thing if we don't already posses the category "tree" of which many similarly looking things are are a member of? Without categories there would only be one of everything.Without the idea of two, we cannot apply the idea of two to a pair of apples. Example, I define “xyz” as the set of all xyz things. Not a very useful definition. — Art48
Don't you mean our mind plays the role of the picture on TV and the cameras and microphones at the baseball game play the role of the senses? Do we directly experience our mind? What information are we missing when experiencing something indirectly vs. directly? For instance, what information are we missing by watching the game on TV vs being at the game? We know the score and can see and hear the announcer describing the plays whether we are at the game or watching it on TV, so what is missing? If you asked me about the game the next day and I was able to tell you the score, who won and about the great plays that were made, how could you tell if I was at the game or watched it on TV?An analogy: Imagine indirect experience as watching a baseball game on TV, as opposed to being in the park. We don’t directly experience the tree; our senses play the role of TV. — Art48
How did we come to understand, or possess, the idea of "particular" and its relation with the idea, "unversal"?Apple is a universal. A particular apple is an instantiation of the universal called “apple”. — Art48
What reason does one have for "applying the idea of two to a pair" of objects, if not for communication?Without the idea of two, we cannot apply the idea of two to a pair of apples. Example, I define “xyz” as the set of all xyz things. Not a very useful definition. — Art48
Is the apple/atom left the only apple/atom in existence? If not, then there are still at least two apples/atoms that exist.Moreover, the set of all existing two things is constantly changing. If I eat one of the two apples, then the “set of all existing two things” has changed. If two atoms are crushed out of existence in some neutron star in another galaxy, the “set of all existing two things” has changed. — Art48
How do ideas and physical objects interact? How did you come to know of the concept, "physical"? What are you referring to when you use this term?Ideas exist in the “mindscape.” Physical cats exist in the physical world. — Art48
How did you come to experience the universal by observing just one pattern (a particular) of rough brown patches and smooth green patches?Experience is concrete. I physically experience rough brown patches and smooth green patches, which lead me to mentally experience a universal, i.e., the idea of a tree. — Art48
My view is that ideas already exist in the mindscape, just as trees exist in the landscape. Seeing a pair of apples may awaken our mind to the idea of two, but the idea already exists. Any being which lacks the mental capacity will never perceive the idea "two." Imagine an earthworm, for instance, crawls over two pebbles. I doubt the idea of two ever enters what mind it has.From where did we get the idea of two if not by first observing more than one thing? — Harry Hindu
See previous answer. All ideas exist in the mindscape. Some minds (like ours) access ideas to make sense of sensory input. We find an idea in the mindscape that fits what we observe.Newton found F=ma. Einstein found different ideas which better describe what we observe.How did you come to experience the universal by observing just one pattern (a particular) of rough brown patches and smooth green patches? — Harry Hindu
Probably because it would be useless to its survival. Would it be useful to know that there are two birds looking to eat it for lunch? Perceiving more than one bird but less than 3 birds would be useful to its survival.My view is that ideas already exist in the mindscape, just as trees exist in the landscape. Seeing a pair of apples may awaken our mind to the idea of two, but the idea already exists. Any being which lacks the mental capacity will never perceive the idea "two." Imagine an earthworm, for instance, crawls over two pebbles. I doubt the idea of two ever enters what mind it has. — Art48
Sure, just as we can have the idea of a unicorn without ever having seen one.Can you have an idea of "tree" without having first perceived more than one tree? — Harry Hindu
A particular tree is a concrete object which we recognize as an instantiation of the idea of a tree. The idea of a particular tree is the idea, say, of the oak tree in my yard.What is the difference between the idea of the universal tree vs the particular tree? — Harry Hindu
What does the idea of two look like? It has various properties: synonym for pair; the first natural number after one; the only even prime number, etc.What does the idea of two look like in the mind independent of the scribble, "2" or "two" and independent of the observation of two particulars? — Harry Hindu
Is the idea of "two" independent of observation of two particulars? Yes. I grant that empirical experience often leads the mind to ideas but I regard the ideas as pre-existing. Just as when I take a walk, I see a rock that was there before I saw it. Similarly, the idea "two" existed before anyone thought of it.How do you know that you are holding the idea of 2 in your mind independent of these forms — Harry Hindu
If all objects are viewed as individuals, it seems that some types of knowledge would be difficult or even impossible. Yes, I could gain knowledge about this particular object but I couldn't apply that knowledge if I encounter a similar object later because I wouldn't recognize the two objects as being instances of the same universal.they view all objects as individuals — Richard B
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. How do we create a language of universals without acknowledging the existence of universals?Why would I need to hypothesize that inhabitants who use universals can perceive some Platonic realm, when I simply can appeal to our make up that favors detecting commonalities and creating language of universals vs detecting differences and name individuals? — Richard B
So light with a wavelength of 650nm is the same colour as light with a wavelength of 651nm because they're very similar wavelengths? — Michael
The literal meaning of 'subsist' is nothing like what he's trying to convey here. — Wayfarer
That's just not true, though; they each reflect light at wavelengths closer to each other than objects of other colours do compared to them, and consequently they look more similar to each other in terms of colour than objects of other colours do compared to them. The first is a material condition of the second and the second is the reason we refer to both as being grey, for our use of the word "grey". — Janus
“Object” should not be taken too literally; think “abstract entity.”) — Art48
How about the following? "Luminiferous aether or ether ("luminiferous", meaning "light-bearing") was the postulated medium for the propagation of light. It was invoked to explain the ability of the apparently wave-based light to propagate through empty space (a vacuum), something that waves should not be able to do."
The luminiferous aether is an abstract object that the universe fails to instantiate. — Art48
Just keep in mind that if you find that your analysis of abstract objects contains the very thing you're trying to analyze (such as 'things we do', which is a set, and therefore an abstract object), you may take that as a signal that what you're dealing with is more primal than you previously may have thought.
But at least at this point, you've recognized that they exist and all that's left is to join the ongoing debate about how to understand them. — Tate
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