We proceed on the assumption that we can analyze "naked" propositions with no speaker; — Srap Tasmaner
Yes, those possibilities are how we think "about" the future, just like we can say something "about" the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps the reason you do not share my optimism regarding avoiding anthropomorphism is because you have difficulty yourself in understanding what sorts of thought and belief are exclusive to humans and what sorts are not. — creativesoul
Is it the same to say logical rules are useful in support of the attainment of personal goals? — Mww
If the most personal one can be, is demonstrated by his moral convictions, and if logical rules are the ground for particular personal goals, then it follows that logical rules are not so much merely consistent with, as in fact necessary for, the dispensation of him toward his moral activities. — Mww
All rules developed and used by us, in private, rational decision-making, re: judgment, without exception, are reducible to logical rules. — Mww
I'm pointing at that phenomenon so that I can block it from undermining our claim that actuality entails possibility. If it's only a conversational implicature, it has no bearing on the relevant entailments. — Srap Tasmaner
Are they real possibilities which each have a genuine chance of being the actual outcome, or are they merely a function of our knowledge/ignorance and there is only ever one real possibility? — Luke
If the former, then what is actual is/was not necessary. If the latter, then we have no free will. — Luke
Gettier is hard. It seems clear there is no general way to block Gettier cases, because whatever you come up with will generate a revenge case purpose built to block your solution. — Srap Tasmaner
All our understandings are, strictly speaking, anthropomorphic, or human-shaped, because we are human; so, leaving aside any imputation of what should be understood to be exclusively human qualities and capacities to animals, I think the question of anthropomorphism is beside the point. Do you have anything substantive to add to that or disagreement to express? — Janus
Animals without linguistic capabilities obviously do not think in linguistic terms, so presumably they think in sensorimotor ways; whereas we think in both sensorimotor and linguistic ways... — Janus
Seems straight forward to me. — creativesoul
Are they real possibilities which each have a genuine chance of being the actual outcome, or are they merely a function of our knowledge/ignorance and there is only ever one real possibility?
— Luke
As I said, they are a feature of one's knowledge. However, this does not mean that they are not real or genuine. Knowledge is real and genuine. The realness, or genuineness of the possibilities which one considers is dependent on the scope of one's knowledge of the situation. Sometimes a person will fail in an effort to do something, and sometimes a person might not grasp a possibility which is obvious to someone else. That the possibilities are in one's mind, and are features of how one understands one's current situation, does not mean that they are not real. Nor does it mean that the person has no real choice. — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, if I had a real choice of whether to have toast or cereal for breakfast this morning, then it was not necessary that I had toast (as I did) because I could have had cereal instead. — Luke
If the former, then what is actual is/was not necessary. — Luke
You refuse to acknowledge this argument against the necessity of actuality. — Luke
If the former, then what is actual is/was not necessary.
— Luke
See, you explicitly conflate "is" and "was". There is a reason why we have different tenses for verbs, if you insist on ignoring this, then this discussion is pointless. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've responded to your supposed argument. It is simply based in a failure to recognize the difference in temporal perspectives. Looking ahead in time at future acts, is not the same as looking backward in time at past acts. Therefore, within the minds of human beings, future acts have a different status from past acts. — Metaphysician Undercover
I propose that we look at future acts as "possible", and past acts as "necessary". You are resisting this. Can you explain why? Your argument so far seems to be that if we name past acts as "necessary", then future acts must also be called "necessary". But as I've explained, that is to ignore the difference between how we look at the past and how we look at the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
.....obtain that status of being the conventional rules, because they are useful. — Metaphysician Undercover
—————......the particular rules which become accepted by people — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue being a question of what a particular set of rules is useful for. — Metaphysician Undercover
We need to follow the rules of logic to understand, or for any other purpose we might use logic for. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the most personal one can be, is demonstrated by his moral convictions, and if logical rules are the ground for particular goals.......
— Mww
Yes, but this assumes that there is no immorality inherent within the logical principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
The aftermath of my coffee falling lasts from B to C, at which it is undone; before B, and after C, the coffee has not fallen. — Srap Tasmaner
In what, then, does the immutability of the past consist? Is it brute fact? Could it conceivably not be? — Srap Tasmaner
I do not share your pessimism. It's not fait accompli, regardless of whether or not you poison the well. It does not follow from the fact that we are human that all our understandings are anthropomorphic. I sense a bit of chippiness from you. I added quite a bit of substantive examples to discuss earlier. You quoted the first statement of the post and ignored the rest. We can agree to disagree, but it would be far better for us to at least come to clear understanding of what the disagreement is about, and/or where it lies. — creativesoul
Well, that's a fine place to start. I agree. Although, the "think in sensorimotor ways" would be best fleshed out. — creativesoul
once they have occurred they are in the past. Your example does not appear to indicate otherwise; the cup falls and then “unfalls”. — Luke
I mean, it's not possible. You're substituting another impossibility for the one I was entertaining: your question (if you were inclined to ask) would be, why don't cups unfall? — Srap Tasmaner
Of course, that's not "possible," given thermodynamics and whatnot, but is it logically impossible? — Srap Tasmaner
All in hopes, if it wasn't clear, of understanding how temporality relates to alethic modality. Is one logically prior to the other? Which one? — Srap Tasmaner
I personally consider them to be somewhat independent — Luke
That does not explain why present/past situations are necessary; or why it is necessary that I had to have toast instead of cereal for breakfast this morning. — Luke
I am resisting your "proposal" because if we have a real choice in the matter, like you say we do, then it was not necessary that I had toast instead of cereal for breakfast this morning. I had a real choice to have had cereal instead of toast. That is, the past situation of me having toast for breakfast this morning was not necessary. I am using "necessary" here in the sense of "inevitable" or "predetermined", as opposed to having a "real choice" in the matter — Luke
We believe we can make a distinction between events that were bound to happen, and events that were not; in which case, there must be a difference between (1) saying, at a time B or later, that nothing can happen that will make it so that the coffee has not fallen, and (2) saying at a time A or earlier, nothing can happen that will make it so that the coffee does not fall. To say that an event in the past was not inevitable, is to say that (1) is true of it but (2) false. — Srap Tasmaner
Is there any non-question-begging way to deny this is possible? We cannot, ex hypothesi, object that an event in the past at time X is in the past for any time after X; the hypothesis is exactly that this is not so. In what, then, does the immutability of the past consist? Is it brute fact? Could it conceivably not be? — Srap Tasmaner
f it was ever possible to prevent the cup of coffee from falling off the car, then at no time is it, was it, or will it be necessary or inevitable that it did fall. — Luke
That being said, I agree moral rules are much more important than conventional rules, but that alone says nothing with respect to their logical ground..... — Mww
If it should be the case that the human intellectual system, in whichever metaphysical form deemed sufficient for it, is entirely predicated on relations, it should then be tacitly understands that system is a logically grounded system, insofar as logic itself is the fundamental procedure for the determination of relations. Hence it follows, it being given that all rules are schemata of the human intellectual system, and the human intellect is relational, then all rules are relational constructs. From there, it’s a short hop to the truth that, if all rules are relational, and all relations are logically constructed, and all logical constructs themselves are determinations of a fundamental procedure, then all rules are logical rules. — Mww
Logical principles are neither moral nor immoral. Morality is an innate human condition, determinable by logical principles which relate a purely subjective desire to an equally subjective inclination. In other words, this feels right, therefore it is the right thing to do and I shall will an act in accordance with it. — Mww
The immutability of the past is just a brute fact, which is upheld by empirical evidence, like gravity, the freezing point of water, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
...If you believed that you had come to some understanding which you believed was completely free from any anthropomorphism whatever, how would you demonstrate that to be so? — Janus
Would there be a fact of the matter, or does it just come down to definitions or personal opinion?
Anthropomorphism is, like many other human characteristics, on a spectrum from the inescapable to the egregious. — Janus
...the past is the paradigmatic realm of truth, eternal and unchanging, while there is no truth about the future and for that reason no knowledge but only belief. — Srap Tasmaner
now the issue is how are logical rules grounded. — Metaphysician Undercover
logic itself is the fundamental procedure for the determination of relations......
— Mww
I think you have this backward. Logic is a highly specialized, formal way of thinking. — Metaphysician Undercover
What would be the point of moral training if morality is innate? — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe it is very clear that morality is not based in what feels right. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suppose these opinions are outside the scope of this thread. — Metaphysician Undercover
Or, consider this: we don't actually act upon the future directly either; that too, we are incapable of doing. We can only act in the present to select which possible future is realized. But every time we do that, we are also, immediately, filling the past with events of our choosing. The past is what we have some say-so in, never the future. — Srap Tasmaner
Now you also agree that it's only events of the past that are immutable in this way, right? Events in the future are not only not immutable, they're not even fully determined; and the present, well, the present is presumably the moment of an event being fully determined and thereby becoming immutable. — Srap Tasmaner
And all of this is still circling around the problem of truth, because the past is the paradigmatic realm of truth, eternal and unchanging, while there is no truth about the future and for that reason no knowledge but only belief. — Srap Tasmaner
Seems an awful lot like the same thing, doesn’t it? — Mww
Same point as just the innate capacity for empirical knowledge doesn’t contain any. — Mww
Truth, as such, is every bit as subjective as one’s moral disposition and experiences. — Mww
So instead of claiming that all decision making uses logic, I say it uses something else, which logic also uses, but we do not really understand what it is. — Metaphysician Undercover
you seem to think that moral knowledge is itself innate, what one feels is right, is right. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see the starting point as honesty, because this is a common use of "truth". — Metaphysician Undercover
But what about the events that have happened in the past? Is it inherent to the past that an event which occurs at a past time cannot change? Or is that something *else* we know about the past only a posteriori? — Srap Tasmaner
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