I agree that a unicorn here on our world is not consistent with our particular universe of discourse, but I didn't ask if it existed in our universe of discourse, I asked if it exists (the general property form, not the relation with our concrete world), and it being in our particular universe of discourse is not a requirement for its logical consistency. — noAxioms
Every time you say 'exists', you qualify it with a relation to a UoD.If there is a logically consistent definition of unicorn in a particular universe of discourse then the unicorn exists (in that particular universe of discourse and thus also in reality as a whole). — litewave
I never asked if it exists on our planet, but I did mention a common evolutionary ancestor which at least eliminates unicorns on distant star systems. Under say MWI, Earth with unicorns on it is as likely (probably more likely) than an Earth with humans on it. It's a possible world, and thus it exists (say in the UoD of all the evolved coherent states of the Earth's wavefunction 150M years ago) as much as this world does. There's nothing logically inconsistent about that.I just meant to point out that although it may seem that the definition of a unicorn existing on our planet is consistent
There's the term 'reality' again. Is this a separate property than that of 'existence'? What possible evidence have you that unicorns (logically consistent ones) are not also a part of reality?This is a perhaps somewhat surprising point about logical consistency: reality cannot be different than it is because then it would be what it is not and thus would be inconsistent.
You said 'exists' means 'logically consistent', not 'logically consistent with the universe of discourse — noAxioms
You say the unicorn is consistent with its own particular UoD, so how then is the unicorn not logically consistent? — noAxioms
You also introduce 'reality as a whole' here, which, absent a different definition, I presume to mean 'all things that exist' (no specified relation), which means all that is logically consistent. — noAxioms
Under say MWI, Earth with unicorns on it is as likely (probably more likely) than an Earth with humans on it. It's a possible world, and thus it exists (say in the UoD of all the evolved coherent states of the Earth's wavefunction 150M years ago) as much as this world does. There's nothing logically inconsistent about that. — noAxioms
Your demonstration of inconsistency assumes an empirical definition. You don't see them, so you say they don't exist here. — noAxioms
That makes no sense. You're not logically consistent with a UoD of a two-spatial dimension universe, so since there's something with which you're not consistent, you don't exist?But 'logically consistent' means 'logically consistent with everything'. — litewave
Likewise, you're not consistent with a different UoD in which no litewave exists.It is, but only as a part of that UoD. It would not be consistent as a part of a different UoD in which no unicorns exist.
So by your' 'with everything' definition just above, there are no triangles because they're not also circles. They're not logically consistent with everything.Like a triangle is consistent as a member of the set of all triangles but inconsistent as a member of the set of all circles.
Being sure about consistency is just an epistemological problem.I guess that's right although if you don't know all the details you can't be sure about the consistency.
Right. So it's not in your personal UoD. By your original definition, your ability to see something has nothing to do with its property of existing. My definition did (sort of). I would never have used the word 'see'.Well, I took it for granted that it was included in the definition of 'unicorn' that if a unicorn was standing right now in front of my house I would see it. And so since I don't see it I conclude that there is indeed no unicorn standing in front of my house right now.
Right, but nobody asserted it was standing in front of your house right now. It's in its own UoD. It's logically consistent with that UoD. Therefore (until you changed the definition above), it exists.And if there is no unicorn standing in front of my house right now, it would be logically inconsistent if a unicorn was standing in front of my house right now
"But 'logically consistent' means 'logically consistent with everything'." — litewave
That makes no sense. You're not logically consistent with a UoD of a two-spatial dimension universe, so since there's something with which you're not consistent, you don't exist? — noAxioms
Likewise, you're not consistent with a different UoD in which no litewave exists. — noAxioms
Right, but nobody asserted it was standing in front of your house right now. It's in its own UoD. It's logically consistent with that UoD. Therefore (until you changed the definition above), it exists. — noAxioms
I wasn’t aware of this. Can you expand or provide a link about this issue? — noAxioms
Moreoever, most mainstream interpretations of quantum mechanics, including the Everett interpretation, spontaneous collapse models and the de Broglie Bohm approach, are prima facie temporally local.
But SR of course already tells us that the idea of a present moment and tidy temporal order is problematic. And this then is a reason why Bohmian mechanics and its pilot wave fails to be relativised.
https://doi.org/10.3390/e20010041
That mathematical models of the universe is just that -- no actual "reality" was harmed in the making of a model. No fire of life can be felt within a mathematical model. We cannot answer the normative questions such as "why is there a universe?"But what else is meant by the "breathes fire", "makes a universe", "should be a universe", and "bother of existing"?
If my interpretation of those words is a bit overzealous, then what did Hawking actually mean by them?What for instance, other than the ontological property itself, would distinguish two sets of rules and equations, one which exists, has fire breathed into it, and the other doesn't exist, no fire, etc. Suppose they're even the same empirical thing. — noAxioms
The role of time has to do with my selection of an alternate definition of existence based on causality, something not defined the same way for non-temporal structures. Still, my definition only seems to work for local interpretations of our physics. The primary definition of existence is the sort spelled out in the OP with the prime number example. There’s a term for that sort of existence, but it escapes me for the moment.And also you seemed to want to clarify something about the role of time in all this. — apokrisis
This is already a relation since it seems only related to a structure following QM rules. Yes, there’s an everythingness about it, but how to explain the quantum structure in the first place? That seems to be what Hawking is asking.The cosmos exists as it does not because nothingness was impossible but because quantum "everythingness" was self-limiting.
This sound like what I’m attempting to resolve with this topic. It seems to be an issue with any form of realism.But structuralism still suffers from needing a model of the raw action - the initial everythingness - that can breath fire into the equations.
I’d call it an initial state. Relativity theory seems to have no problem with initial and final states, but a unified theory would probably be needed before we can actually assert that.There is still a "first cause" issue in some form.
If that little material something needs fire breathed into it, then it matters not that it’s minimal. The problem is still there. I eliminate the problem at the start by not suggesting the need for it. But it acts against a strong bias and nobody else seems to be able to accept that.But the big step forward is that it is as little of a "material something" as could be imagined. It is just a quantum foam of possibility as yet to be structured by an emergent topological order.
I don’t actually. I’m a locality kind of guy, but I’m aware of other interpretations that have these things.given you seem to want to incorporate retrocausality or temporal nonlocality into whatever QM interpretation you wind up with.
Again, I don’t know what that term means.Moreoever, most mainstream interpretations of quantum mechanics, including the Everett interpretation, spontaneous collapse models and the de Broglie Bohm approach, are prima facie temporally local.
Pilot waves require a preferred ordering of events? I was unaware of that, but such a preferred ordering has never been disproven either, despite even my attempts to do so.But SR of course already tells us that the idea of a present moment and tidy temporal order is problematic. And this then is a reason why Bohmian mechanics and its pilot wave fails to be relativised.
How do the BM people respond to this criticism? I wasn’t even sure if they still clung to the pilot wave model since the physical wave tanks failed if baffles were put in.But in general, BM doesn't relativise because where QFT path integral demands that particles take all possible paths, including the non-classical, BM's pilot waves just take classical trajectories.
But I’m not talking about a model, which is an epistemological tool. I’m talking about mathematics itself, that our universe (and others) is, at the most fundamental level, a mathematical structure. Life can very much be felt within such a thing, and my addition to this premise is the lack of need of the fire to feel that. The mathematics is no different with or without the fire, so it isn’t necessary.No fire of life can be felt within a mathematical model. — L'éléphant
Maybe, but in finding the question unanswerable, I suggest instead that it is the wrong question.We cannot answer the normative questions such as "why is there a universe?"
Fine. The unicorn is part of that other UoD, so at the objective level, it exists (per your definition, not mine) as much as do you since both are members of this universe of sets.The UoD in which I exist is a particular set. Another UoD is a different set. — litewave
If that little material something needs fire breathed into it, then it matters not that it’s minimal. The problem is still there. I eliminate the problem at the start by not suggesting the need for it. But it acts against a strong bias and nobody else seems to be able to accept that. — noAxioms
How do the BM people respond to this criticism? — noAxioms
It isn't answering the question at all. Do you at all understand what I'm getting at? Any cause (material, formal, whatever) is still only related to a created thing, and the universe cannot be such a thing. That's the category error I was talking about. You're treating a causal structure like a caused structure. This is intuitive, yes, but only because language treats it so. It's still wrong.Minimising our notion of material cause by maximising our understanding of formal cause is still progress. It is answering the question of cosmic existence in causal terms. — apokrisis
No, a material cause cannot do that. The material in question has to already exist, so the 'fire' is already there (unexplained). A material cause (or any cause) is something explaining a caused thing, which is a different category.And at the same time, the material cause – which is what folk conventionally think of as the bit needing to be supplied as the animating fire
Again, wrong category, but great example. Yes, I say a ball on a dome must roll off on some random side at a random time with computable probability even. But the question asked by the topic is, does there need to be an existing ball on a dome for this to occur, or will just a ball on a dome suffice? None of your causal discussion seems to be relevant to that question.The ball on the top of the dome has to roll off.
It isn't answering the question at all. Do you at all understand what I'm getting at? Any cause (material, formal, whatever) is still only related to a created thing, and the universe cannot be such a thing. That's the category error I was talking about. You're treating a causal structure like a caused structure. This is intuitive, yes, but only because language treats it so. It's still wrong. — noAxioms
But the question asked by the topic is, does there need to be an existing ball on a dome for this to occur, or will just a ball on a dome suffice? — noAxioms
But I'm arguing against any act of creation, so yes, at least one of us is not following what the other is saying. I'm hardly an expert in the views you're referencing, so it's more likely to be me not following, but the language of creation seems entirely inappropriate to address the problem to which I'm seeing. Structuralism, while something I may indeed not fully understand, seems to not address the issue at all.I thought I was clearly arguing against a "first cause" position. Emergence and development are different from "acts of creation".
So I would say you don't follow what I've actually said. — apokrisis
But the substantial being (your term, not mine, so maybe I'm using it wrong) of the ball and dome is what the topic is about, so you were very much meant to pay attention to that. The mathematics says the ball rolls off after a while, uncaused if you will. It actually takes infinite time to do so, but they had a mathematical model of one that doesn't take infinite time. I cannot find a reference on short notice. All besides the point. The point is that the 'substantial being of the ball and dome' (its objective existence) isn't relevant to what happens to the ball. The ball/dome system doesn't behave differently depending on its ontology.You were meant to pay attention to the mathematical structure of that example, not the substantial being that is some literal ball on some literal dome.
Either I am massively misunderstanding most of your post, or you're wildly off topic.Again, my argument is that we start by following Aristotle in dissecting substantial being into its formal and material causes. And what we find is that we wind up where we do in mathematical physics. We have a tale of Platonic-strength structural necessity – the inevitability of the invariances due to symmetries – coupled to the most nebulous sense of "materiality" possible. QFT winds up talking about excitations in fields due to inherent uncertainty or instability.
I'm not asking how the world we see emerges from the quantum foam. I'm questioning the objective existence of the quantum foam or any other structure or system, temporal or not. — noAxioms
But the substantial being (your term, not mine, so maybe I'm using it wrong) of the ball and dome is what the topic is about, so you were very much meant to pay attention to that. — noAxioms
It's kind of an anti-platonic view. Plato says abstract things exist (that the existence property is meaningful, and that such abstract things have it). — noAxioms
Can you explain to me what you think the topic is about? — noAxioms
But I’m not talking about a model, which is an epistemological tool. I’m talking about mathematics itself, that our universe (and others) is, at the most fundamental level, a mathematical structure. — noAxioms
By definition, measurement isn't objective. I suppose that point can be argued.OK. So how would you objectively measure the quantum foam? — apokrisis
Agree, which is why I point out in the OP that "tell me why it exists' is the wrong question. It presumes it exists. A better question is to first ask if it exists, or if its existence can be meaningful. 'No' seems a better answer to both questions, so the question of why vanishes.If you properly follow that question, you can perhaps start to see how a substance ontology – one that says "show me the fundamental substance, and then tell me why it exists" – is just an inadequate way of framing the ontological issues.
But I'm not. I'm saying its a mistake to presume it. The 'God did it' answer doesn't work for the reason you give: "well, why that?".You keep looking for the "stuff" that breathes fire into the equations.
But the substantial being (your term, not mine, so maybe I'm using it wrong) of the ball and dome is what the topic is about, so you were very much meant to pay attention to that.
— noAxioms
Aristotle starts with primary matter. Well, why that? If you start with something, it is just a discussion of how it evolves from that start. Off topic.I was doing so in arguing for Aristotle's hylomorphic view of substantial being.
Seems off-topic since it starts with the presumption of potential. Why is there that potential at all?Have you studied hylomorphism? That seems to be the sticking point.
No, but this one actually seems to have a potential for being relevant. I cannot seem to find a good reference discussing it. The receptacle seems to be a thing with presumed existence, which would make it off-topic. I could not find a decent description of what ‘chora’ is, distinct from that.And have you studied the Timaeus closely enough to see that Plato also needed to breathe fire into his equations by positing a chora or receptacle to take the imprint of his forms?
This seems to be a statement of what you’re talking about, not the subject for which I opened this topic.Can you explain to me what you think the topic is about?
— noAxioms
I agree that Hawking is scratching at the right itch. But say he - like you, and indeed most – still make the mistake of thing of material cause in terms of actually formed stuff.
Again, not sure what you mean by ‘substantial being’, but the kind of being that I’m talking about should not be measurable at all, hence it being meaningless.Substantial being. Something that can be measured in some basic way, even if it is a bland stuff like some kind of clay.
All this seems to be about what keeps it going, and not at all about why it is in the first place.But then mass became confined energy under relativity. Energy in turn became an entropy gradient, and even information. Physics has kept moving its understanding of the animating fire into a more and more structural definition.
Of course I am, but despite my usage of this tool, the tool isn’t what the topic is about.you are, in fact, exhibiting Hawking's MDR. — L'éléphant
As one possibility, yes. Hard to think of a different one. It being a mathematical structure is a MUH topic, and this topic is an ontological one.That's what it means by model-dependent: you have in mind a universe that has a mathematical structure.
I don’t claim to know this at all. I’m claiming a solution to the problem naively worded as: “why is there something instead of nothing?”. I’m not claiming that things cannot be otherwise.And the question you should be asking yourself is -- how do I know this?
Right, but the topic isn’t about how we think. The disclaimer in the OP says it isn’t about epistemology.How did I come to think this way? MDR posits that it is inescapable. We, by default, think in terms of a model.
Yes, I agree. The mistake is to assume the universe was created to raise human emotions. — jgill
By definition, measurement isn't objective. — noAxioms
A better question is to first ask if it exists, or if its existence can be meaningful. 'No' seems a better answer to both questions, so the question of why vanishes. — noAxioms
I am apparently not conveying my point at all. Nobody seems to get it, even if to just disagree with it. You’re all discussing other things.
Forget our physics and materials and quantum foam and such. Start with the simple examples like the triangle and such where talk of ‘cause’ and such doesn’t come into the picture. — noAxioms
The Timaeus is Plato’s only cosmological dialogue where one of the most difficult questions
of his doctrine is considered in some detail: the so-called ‘participation’ of ‘sensible world’ in
the intelligible world, or the Forms or Ideas.
The khôra is not only the place where perpetual changes of the sensible bodies occur, but also the unqualified and unchanging ‘genus’ required to explain these perpetual changes; it is the dynamical whole, consisting of these bodies in perpetual change, their ‘nurse’, their nourisher and their ‘mother’.
First, Timaeus claims that anything that is born must have a body. Thus, to be corporeal, the
universe needs to be both ‘tangible and visible’. For the former attribute to hold true, earth is
needed, fire for the latter. However, Timaeus claims immediately that the unity of the world
needs both elements to be strongly bound, and that the ‘most beautiful’ bound, is the
‘proportion’ between four terms: a/b = c/d.
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2008.11947.pdf
You the one who asked how one would objectively measure the quantum foam, so if it was epistemic measurement you were talking about, then it is you that is off topic.By definition, measurement isn't objective.
— noAxioms
We were talking about the problem of substantial existence - ontology rather than epistemology. So this is off the point. — apokrisis
This is closer to being on topic. I spent quite some time failing to find a decent article on modality of existence. The modality page on SEP is quite careful to use the term existence only in a relational sense, and seems to not discuss objective existence at all, which, if nothing else, seems to lend weight to what I'm saying. They're not committing the category error that I pointed out above.My argument is that this is about modalities of existence.
All depends on the definition of existence again. As a property, I don't see how anything has necessary existence. Given a 'member of' definition, sure, all those things are relevant. The SEP article only seemed to use the relational definition. Apo exists in this world, and not in others. Apo does not exist in the set of integers. Apo has potential existence in the quantum foam. All relations. The article seemed not to delve into 'Apo exists' at all, but it's a long thing and maybe I missed it.We can have potential existence or actual existence. We can have accidental existence or necessary existence. We can have vague existence or definite existence.
Let's go with the question "does a triangle have three corners?". I'm talking about a geometric triangle, not a physical triangular shaped thing. We can confine it for now to Euclidean geometry if you like. If the answer is 'no' or 'maybe', then elaborate. If 'yes', then my point has been illustrated.Where did you lay out a triangle argument?
I reworded it as a positive question (corners) instead of the negative one (round) which just made it confusing. As for forms, I suppose yes. I had no specific triangle in mind except a typical one (no weird edge cases where one angle is 180° or something). As for it being Platonic, I said my position was sort of anti-platonic, so probably not. Eternal? Planar geometry doesn't require a triangle to be contained temporally, so it is eternal (timeless) by that definition.You mean why a triangle is not a circle? You mean triangles as eternal Platonic forms?
But what if I don't see the necessity to attempt that? Said ideal forms are no less forms without fire breathed into them.If you checked out the Timeaus you would see that triangles become a good example of how Plato tried to breath animating fire into his ideal forms.
And perhaps making the same mistakes, except I don't actually see Plato contributing to the dialog.But the point is even Plato was wrestling with the issue that I take Hawking as pointing towards.
I don't need that since I'm not positing the necessity of this fire breathing. The form is enough.But you still need a khôra to supply whatever then breaths the animating fire into the structural forms.
Measurement is meaningful between two systems, and thus is a relation between them. — noAxioms
A rock measures the temperature (physics definition), but doesn't know that it's cold out (epistemic definition). But it being cold out at a particular location is true in this world and not others, so it isn't an objective measurement. — noAxioms
Let's go with the question "does a triangle have three corners?". — noAxioms
But what if I don't see the necessity to attempt that? Said ideal forms are no less forms without fire breathed into them. — noAxioms
Plato seems to just record all this and doesn't contribute — noAxioms
You seem to not be able to describe my point in your own words, — noAxioms
Measurement isn't even defined objectively. It only seems relevant to certain kinds of structures like the one we live in. You asked about objective measurement. I don't see how that is meaningful. I'm not making an argument here, I'm just trying to answer your question.There is no problem measuring different states of the one system at different stages of its development. — apokrisis
Probably so, but what you're saying is mostly addressing the wrong point.You’re pissing around with quibbles because you haven’t understood what I’ve said.
I suspect such an anchor is unnecessary. 5 is less than 7 (right??). That's a relation, neither especially anchored. Maybe you cannot accept that without an asterisk.Something must always anchor the two ends of a relation it would seem.
Example please. So much clarity can be added with examples. Most of the ideas I've actually researched seem to not address my concern.That is why you need to take the next step to a triadic metaphysics that can give you the threeness of relata in relations. And a developmental triadic metaphysics at that. You want to have a general logic of how relata in relations could arise out of a foundation of logical vagueness.
Not all polygons have as few as three corners. A dented triangle isn't a triangle. This initial reply isn't an answer.Let's go with the question "does a triangle have three corners?".
— noAxioms
Does a polygon have three corners? Did you notice that one corner of the triangle is very slightly dented so we could argue it has four corners. Etc.
This is the first mention of 'material principle' which seems to have religious connotations when I google it, but perhaps it implies that the actualized triangle needs to be made of something (like three line segments). Does it count if the line segments themselves are not further actualized into say a set of points? Is there a more fundamental material for geometric points? I mean, our triangle isn't even assigned a coordinate system.We are always working within an ontology where formal descriptions and material measurements go hand in hand.
...
The potential to actualise particular forms is where the material principle comes in.
Isn't that enough to give it 3 corners?The necessary form of a triangle is in its structural definition.
OK. I didn't specify an actualized triangle, since the point of this whole topic is that the triangle doesn't seem to need to be actualized in order to have 3 corners. The form is enough, although it will need to be a less general form if it's to be a right triangle or not.The substantial existence of a triangle is dependent on that form being actually actualised.
That seems to be the wrong question though, similar to asking if 221 is prime.The query would be more interesting if you asked the general question of is there a minimal polygon.
This doesn't tell me if the triangle gets actualized in the process of this emergence. I don't see why it should any more than 221 gets actualized because it divides by 13.The triangle could then emerge as a development of an inquiry seeking its maximal simplicity. It’s limit condition.
Kind of the opposite. No particulars, and no reality of universals. Everything could be a universal, some more minimal than others, but none to the point of the actualization required for it to be designated a particular.But you just want to talk in particulars and bypass the reality of universals.
I'm probably not interested in Timaeus then since I'm not talking about an approximately triangular shaped object in our universe. It seems that Timaeus defines actual things as those that are in this universe, meaning only our universe is preferred. Maybe I'm wrong about that, but it's how you're framing it. It doesn't explain why our universe is actualized, and not say the universe of Euclidean geometry. It's using a relational definition, which is fine, but no fire breathing is needed for that. It seems to require a god to do the actualization.Plato’s Timaeus arrives at triangles as the basic form of actualised reality - the kind that lives in time and thus fixes an energy - by applying a least action principle.
I've not had the problem pointed out, so I see no problem.But what if I don't see the necessity to attempt that? Said ideal forms are no less forms without fire breathed into them.
— noAxioms
If even Plato couldn’t actually go that far with Platonism, why do you think there is no problem at all for you?
Seems so. OK, It's a conversation between fictional characters taking different sides of a debate. Again, I've not taken any classes in ancient philosophy. Plato requires a god to do the magic parts. I'm hoping for something a little more modern than that.Plato seems to just record all this and doesn't contribute
— noAxioms
Is the Platonic dialogue an unfamiliar format to you?
You asked about objective measurement. I don't see how that is meaningful. I'm not making an argument here, I'm just trying to answer your question. — noAxioms
OK. I didn't specify an actualized triangle, since the point of this whole topic is that the triangle doesn't seem to need to be actualized in order to have 3 corners. The form is enough, although it will need to be a less general form if it's to be a right triangle or not. — noAxioms
This doesn't tell me if the triangle gets actualized in the process of this emergence. I don't see why it should any more than 221 gets actualized because it divides by 13. — noAxioms
Everything could be a universal, some more minimal than others, but none to the point of the actualization required for it to be designated a particular. — noAxioms
Again, I've not taken any classes in ancient philosophy. Plato requires a god to do the magic parts. I'm hoping for something a little more modern than that. — noAxioms
It is a polygon, thus it exists as a member of the set of polygons, among other things.In what sense does your triangle exist? — apokrisis
That’s the point right there, as clear as I can make it. Your extra questions all seem to drive away from this point. Further details about a generic triangle are irrelevant to how many corners it has.OK. I didn't specify an actualized triangle, since the point of this whole topic is that the triangle doesn't seem to need to be actualized in order to have 3 corners.
— noAxioms
Will you ever clarify your point then?
It's a triangle, not a triangle in nature. There's no nature in geometry, despite there being geometry in nature. Despite your choice of epistemic/semiotic philosophy, I happen to be talking about the triangle itself and not a mental abstraction of it. I use symbols and a mental abstraction to refer to it, but I’m not talking about how we consider it. I’m talking about the triangle itself. It is not very particular. I’ve only specified that it is a triangle.Where in nature does the abstraction reside?
Of course not, but said count is all we need to answer the question asked.Does a count of corners say everything that could be said about triangularity?
Measurement doesn’t seem to be part of geometry. It only seems applicable to applied geometry in a universe where measurement is meaningful. You seem very reluctant to concede that it has 3 corners, or 3 sides for that matter. Something measuring it would be a very complicated addition. Trying to keep it simple.How many different kinds of measurements distinguish triangles from one another yet are also differences that don’t make a difference to you proclaiming you see a triangle … in your mind or somewhere?
I don’t know Plato’s terminology. From what I’ve read, ‘form’ seems to fit. So does ‘universal’, but that’s probably different than form.You seem to want to claim a triangle as a Platonic form, yet have no proper theory of what that means.
Don’t follow this, probably because you’re still talking about our abstraction, measuring, and not the triangle itself. A system of multiple triangles sharing a plane is no longer a polygon. It’s a more complex thing, a collection of polygons say.How are you imagining triangularity in terms of its measured essentials, and thus able to disregard differences that you consider accidental, or only essential now to some subclass of triangles.
Not sure what that is, but idealism suggests to me that mind is fundamental, which is exactly the opposite of what I’m trying to convey, per the disclaimer.Even if you go full Platonic idealism
Then illustrate it with the triangle, and without introducing an observer/measurer.Naming distinctions that break symmetries is how it works.
That sounds pretty correct. The question only asked the number of corners. The point of the topic was about a denial of the assertion that only actual triangles have three corners, and having 3 corners is not a property of triangles that are not actual.Your simple notion of a triangle as a three corner object arises in the limit of the sum of all the differences in triangularity that don’t make a difference.
I’m actually denying the hierarchy. I said I disagreed with Plato, and I think the hierarchy comes from him. How are you using the term counterfactuals? Being in denial of any meaningful objective actuality, mathematics (or maybe law of form) is fundamental and its turtles all the way up from there. Actuality wouldn’t emerge somewhere along the way.Fine. You can make a hierarchy of distinctions and claim it is counterfactuals all the way down. Everything rests on its stack of turtles.
I don’t see how measurement can be meaningful in geometry. It’s only meaningful to something like us utilizing geometry.But where do you finally exhaust this process and find the bottom of this chain of measurement?
What I’m doing to my concept of the triangle is irrelevant. I don’t think you can conceive of the triangle itself. Sure, the other features are essential to geometry, but they’re irrelevant to the trivial question asked.Or do you instead simply subdivide your general notion of triangularity to the limit of what seems pragmatically useful and interesting to you
It must be, but it also cannot be. There is no material cause accounted for, hence my proposal to leave out the requirement of actuality, resolving this contradiction.Well this is the Platonic issue. This is the problem that exists even in Platonia. The accidental must exist for the necessary to claim its existence. It is the same metaphysical argument by which we say that formal cause must be matched by material cause in a theory of substantial or actual being.
That’s right. It’s why I opened this topic, to explore and learn. But I didn’t do so to hear an ancient rationalization. I mentioned Plato only because he pondered the reality of things (like our triangle) that are not part of our universe. What I want in this topic is to know why my proposal is wrong, not why some different rationalization might work. But you seem to be stuck in one idea and seem incapable of actually considering a different one long enough to critique it on its own terms.Listen to yourself. You admit your understanding is superficial.
I’m talking about the triangle itself. It is not very particular. I’ve only specified that it is a triangle. — noAxioms
It is a polygon, thus it exists as a member of the set of polygons, among other things. It’s why I brought up the prime number thing in the OP. 221 is not prime because there exist factors (13 & 17) that divide it. The triangle exists in the same sense as that usage of the word. — noAxioms
Free of all meaningful ontological commitments perhaps. I've never seen a geometry book talk about the difference between a triangle and an actualized triangle. If relations (like 'is a member of' or 'is larger than') count as ontological commitments, then we're not free of them, and we very much use the word 'exists' to mean such relations, such as my prime number example.So a triangle as something free of all possible ontological commitments? — apokrisis
I'm not saying it doesn't exist (which would be an ontological commitment). I'm saying there's no distinction between the two objects differing only in this actualization property. Given that, the statement of 'no need for ontology' is an ontological statement, but maybe you should elaborate in what way you see it to be a commitment.That is itself another ontological commitment even if you believe you have safely placed yourself beyond ontological questions.
Exactly! It solves the problem of why anything is actualized in the first place, all without the need to invoke magic. And since there's nothing further to engage on (no contradictions result), the question of 'why there is something and not nothing' goes away. All that remains is relations. The moon exists to me. It doesn't exist to the triangle. But to suggest that either 'is' or 'is not' becomes meaningless as does the something/nothing conundrum.I mean I can’t stop you picking such a position. There just ain’t nothing to engage on if that is the case.
I think it does, but it becomes a relation then. I can measure this. A rock can equally measure it since I don't define measurement as a conscious act. As for the view of a conscious being, I can knowingly interact with X. I can abstract Y. So X and Y exist as those relations. A unicorn (not the abstraction) cannot be measured by you or the rock in your presence, but it can be measured by the rock in the unicorn's presence. So the unicorn exists to the latter rock and you don't. Most people don't think that far and only worry about what they can see in order to sort things into exists (moon) and not-exists (unicorn) The list never changes for them, so it's natural to assume it's a property, but it becomes a bias, preventing open-mindedness to an alternate view, that this division into exists/not-exists is all just relations, not actuality. The property view seems unable to answer how this property comes about without invoking magic.I was going to leave it there but then thought worth dealing with this from the epistemological angle that speaks to the need for ontological commitments in anyone's view. — apokrisis
That it is. No argument. But I'm not talking about the word, the symbol, or the abstraction. I can't interact with geometry without those things (words, concepts, symbols) either, but I can talk about the triangle itself just like I can talk about a proton despite never having seen one, my only interactions being through words, symbols, concepts and abstractions.And so what I would point out is how "triangle" is a word that functions as a sign – a symbol – that anchors a modelling relation between mind and world.
None of them are triangles of course. I like the pictures. Technically, not even the clean triangle draws with a straight edge is a triangle since it has lines of finite width and is composed of matter which doesn't even have an exact location. That nit aside, all of your pictures probably invoke the concept of triangularness in people. The rock is more triangular than the typical rock. The Wankel part has three corners but like the first three, still isn't a polygon. Neither physical object is planar. A triangle cannot be part of our world.Is this a triangle....
No argument. I just wasn't talking about our nature world with my question. I was deliberately avoiding it in fact.So the point is that the word is a sign by which we navigate reality via some habit of interpretation. We have a working sense of what it would mean for nature to be triangular in form in a materially instantiated fashion.
Which is why I qualified my description with more words than just the one. I was quite explicit about it being a triangle as defined by planar geometry and not a physical one. I don't deny that the concept of triangle is invoked by each of your pictures, but I wasn't talking about the concept. I was talking about the triangle, just like I talk about the integer itself and not the symbol ('scribble' as H-H would put it) or the mental abstraction that we use to represent/manipulate it.The meaning of the word "triangle" is the sum of all the possible ways we could stretch and yet not break the sense of what is essential.
I think you finally answered my question.More exactly, it is three edges with three vertexes.
This defines actuality in terms of minds and symbols, which is a form of idealism, and it doesn't explain the actuality of the fundamental minds. Per my disclaimer, I'm not looking for such anthropocentric views. I don't question what's real to me, I question what's real, and conclude the meaningless of that phrasing of the question.What breathes fire is the fact that there are minds making use of some set of symbols to make change in the world.
No!So you seem to be saying that a sign like "triangle" just exists,
As I said, we have no access to a geometric world and hence no physical access to one. — noAxioms
but I wasn't talking about the concept. I was talking about the triangle, — noAxioms
I know you think in semiotics, but when pondering the fundamentals of the the universe, one must be able to step outside that philosophy unless you want to suggest that the semiotics are fundamental, which is a form of idealism. — noAxioms
Your philosophy seemingly bars your from discussing anything except the symbols, preventing discussion of the referent. Your inability to do this doesn't mean I have such an inability. — noAxioms
I don't find distinction between something existing and not existing (being actual or not being actual), so I find any statement of something existing to be meaningless. — noAxioms
There's are mathematical structures where geometry is valid. There are mathematical structures where our physics is valid. There is a world where a unicorn exists (same structure, different world).So there is a world where geometry exist and another where physics exists? — apokrisis
I don't know how the relation of 'There is no material access but there is a relation?
Talking about the mathematical triangle yes, but the concept no.You mean you were talking about the mathematician’s concept and not the physicalist’s concept?
I don't disagree with this, but it doesn't explain the actuality of the rational thing causing the necessity of the rest of the universe.Well Peirce called it objective idealism. And I like it because it is indeed epistemology become ontology. Pansemiosis would be the position that the Cosmos develops into being as a rational structure. The logic of structure itself causes the Universe to come to have a necessary existence.
First of all, the chair being there is a relation with me, not a property of the chair.But that is an eliminative assertion which you betray every time you in practice sit down without looking backwards to check the “chair” is still “there”.
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