thanks, hadn't noticed that second usage. Careless on my part. Hope it doesn't detract from the main point. — Wayfarer
then we could say that particular numbers subsist in collections of objects that instantiate the appropriate numbers. As I say in my response to @Tate we cannot see the number three but we can see the pattern that three objects make.a. to exist as a concept or relation rather than a fact
b. to be conceivable — Janus
Processes are not a problem. Swimming, runnning, etc. are universals.There might be an error even here. Perhaps at least some of what you call "abstract objects" are things we do, not things we find. — Banno
True, the language we develop has indications of what exists but if our interest is ontology, language is subordinate to reality. In the middle ages, language included much talk of "witches" but that didn't mean witches really exist.Those with a background in philosophy may recognise what I am suggesting as deriving from philosophy of language. Instead of looking for the meaning of the terms we use, stand back and look at how they are used. — Banno
I see problems with defining abstract objects in terms of sets because it seems you need a definition of the universal before you can decide what is or is not in the set. For instance, "American" is used to refer to people in the U.S. and also to anyone living in Canada, Chile, Cuba, etc. (i.e., North and South America taken as continents, not a particular country.) We need to understand the meaning of "American" before we can define the set.'things we do', which is a set, and therefore an abstract object — Tate
You originally asked: " 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?"The aether is a medium for waves, both these concepts have links to the physical (water waves/ripples). — Agent Smith
True and most working mathematicians say discovered; i.e., they accept Mathematical Platonism, which says mathematical objects exists "out there." True, our minds apprehend them but "triangles exist only in our mind" seems wrong. A geometry teacher is not trying to teach about what exists in his/her mind but the triangle "out there." Question: suppose I say triangles exist in my mind and they have four sides. How could anyone dispute what I say? Sure, triangles in another person's mind might have three sides but so what? Triangles in someone else's mind might have five sides. Clearly a definition of triangle is needed. Would you agree that definitions exist in the external world not only in our minds?there's a controversy with regard to whether math is invented or discovered. — Agent Smith
I would argue, are numbers abstract — Janus
That is the prevailing view in philosophy of math. — Tate
But 'NO!' the physicalist will cry 'the view that the physical is primary is the more plausible'. Yet plausibility is not a precise measure and a sense of it is gained only by comparing many cases, and in this connection we have only the one case to consider. So, it seems that our sense of plausibility here is merely a reflection of conditioned habit and the dominant paradigms of our social milieu. — Janus
If you're a physicalist, you probably accept that in some sense the universe is aware of itself, so I don't know if it's more plausible. It's just the starting point our culture embraces. — Tate
Does this idea of the universe being aware of itself mean that the whole universe is aware of it wholeness, or just that some parts are aware of parts? Of course the latter is uncontroversial, as animals and humans seem to show various degrees of self-awareness. — Janus
I think of awareness as usually being like a flashlight in a dark room. I just meant that physicalism, to the extent that it's monistic, has to accept that the universe has awakened to itself. That's what we are. — Tate
Processes are not a problem. Swimming, runnning, etc. are universals. — Art48
True, the language we develop has indications of what exists but if our interest is ontology, language is subordinate to reality. In the middle ages, language included much talk of "witches" but that didn't mean witches really exist. — Art48
I think that it is undeniable that without awareness the universe would be as good as nothing. It might be said to exist in some sense, but it would be an entirely blind, deaf, dumb and senseless existence, whatever we might dimly be able to imagine that could be. — Janus
an abstract object does not exist in space and time. — Art48
A geometry teacher is not trying to teach about what exists in his/her mind but the triangle "out there." Question: suppose I say triangles exist in my mind and they have four sides. How could anyone dispute what I say? Sure, triangles in another person's mind might have three sides but so what? Triangles in someone else's mind might have five sides. Clearly a definition of triangle is needed. Would you agree that definitions exist in the external world not only in our minds? — Art48
Frege held that both the thought contents that constitute the proof-structure of mathematics and the subject matter of these thought contents (extensions, functions) exist. He also thought that these entities are non-spatial, non-temporal, causally inert, and independent for their existence and natures from any person's thinking them or thinking about them. Frege proposed a picturesque metaphor of thought contents as existing in a "third realm". This "realm" counted as "third" because it was comparable to but different from the realm of physical objects and the realm of mental entities. I think that Frege held, in the main body of his career, that not only thought contents, but numbers and functions were members of this third realm. Entities in the other realms depended for determinate identities on functions (concepts) in the third realm. Since logic was committed to this realm, and since all sciences contained logic, all sciences were committed to and were partly about elements of this realm. Broadly speaking, Frege was a Platonist about logical objects (like numbers and truth values), functions, and thought contents. — Tyler Burge, Frege on Knowing the Third Realm
Ideas exist in the “mindscape.” Physical cats exist in the physical world. — Art48
A lot of Cartesian dualism here— mind/body, subject/object, mental/physical, inside/outside. — Xtrix
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".
I think there’s something to that, yes. I don’t know who Bernstein is, but I bet he read Heidegger. — Xtrix
Bernstein diagnosed a serious issue that affects much of modern philosophy as it oscillates unendingly between two untenable positions; on the one hand, the dogmatic search for absolute truths, and on the other, the conviction that “anything goes” when it comes to the justification of our most cherished beliefs and ideas. According to Bernstein, what underlies this predicament is a deep longing for certainty, the urge “to find some fixed point, some stable rock upon which we can secure our lives against the vicissitudes that constantly threaten us.”[10]
This is what he calls the Cartesian anxiety, a mostly unacknowledged existential fear that seems to lead us ineluctably to a grand Either/Or: “Either there is some support for our being, a fixed foundation for our knowledge, or we cannot escape the forces of darkness that envelop us with madness, with intellectual and moral chaos”.
Although in philosophy this Cartesian anxiety mostly shows up in the discussion of epistemological issues, Bernstein is pointing to something much deeper and universal with this notion, something that permeates almost every aspect of life and has serious ethical and political consequences.
By and large, Kaccayana, this world is supported by a polarity, that of existence and non-existence. But when one sees the origination of the world as it actually is with right discernment, "non-existence" with reference to the world does not occur to one. When one sees the cessation of the world as it actually is with right discernment, "existence" with reference to the world does not occur to one. — Kaccayanagotta Sutta
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