Before we go further with this, we should probably cement just how you're using "arbitrary." Are you using it with a connotation of "random"? — Terrapin Station
ou're not thinking that either either it's true that there are types that are (numerically) identically instantiated in multiple things or otherwise it's true that there are no degrees of similarity and everything is effectively a completely uniform soup, are you? — Terrapin Station
That's the basic idea. Nominalism isn't at all denying this. It's just saying that no two things are numerically identical in any respect. (So |..| isn't identical to |..|--they're just similar in some respects, and more similar than |....| is in some respects to either) — Terrapin Station
So that is what nominalists are denying. — Terrapin Station
Right, so when physicists say that every single electron in the universe has the exact same charge, isn't that like saying every single person shares exactly the same slice of pizza?
And if the physicists are wrong, then why do they measure electrons to have the same charge? — Marchesk
Or whether each electron has its own charge, and the charges are both −1.602×10^−19 coulomb. — Terrapin Station
How exactly it obtains is a different issue than saying that they each have their own charge versus saying that they literally share just one charge, which is the nominalism vs. realism (on types/universals) debate. — Terrapin Station
We have two languages - natural language and mathematics. You travel to a distant galaxy and find an alien civilization. Which language do you think would be shared by you and aliens? — TheMadFool
That's the case whether we're talking about paintings, natural language or mathematics. — Terrapin Station
That's a good way of explaining it. But that still leaves a question. How is it that separate properties have the same value? In virtue of what are they the same? You might respond that humans measured them to be the same, and that's the end of it.
But it's not really. The problem is how we recognize sameness. So then we ask what is it about the two properties that make them the same regarding electrons. And that will be numerical. And if anything in the world is identical, it would be numbers. So how is it that electrons have the same numbers while remaining distinct?
Or something along those lines. If the problem of universals were so easy to dismiss with, I'm guessing it wouldn't keep coming up. — Marchesk
To briefly summarize the restated problem concerning electron charge in my last post, the similarity between distinct properties is numeric, and numbers are universal concepts. That's a problem for nominalism, because it needs to be able to explain particulars without resorting to universals. — Marchesk
Nominalism doesn't have to explain anything while avoiding concepts/universals/types--and after all, language isn't possible without those things. It's just we're denying type realism. — Terrapin Station
What you'll find is that the science book, being mathematically based, matches number to number with what scientists in your world know of the universe. However this will not be the case with the history book. — TheMadFool
I get that, but if nominalism can't explain why we find it necessary to utilize universal types to make sense of particulars, then it hasn't resolved the universals issue. — Marchesk
Because it's just an example of fiction writing. — Terrapin Station
I'll have to challenge the basic premise as laid out in the OP — anonymous66
The Mind of God is a 1992 non-fiction book by Paul Davies. Subtitled The Scientific Basis for a Rational World, it is a whirlwind tour and explanation of theories, both physical and metaphysical, regarding ultimate causes. Its title comes from a quotation from Stephen Hawking: "If we do discover a theory of everything...it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason—for then we would truly know the mind of God."
In the preface, Davies explains that he has been interested in ultimate causes since childhood, having annoyed his parents with unending "why's" about everything, with each answer demanding another "why," and usually ending with the reply, "Because God made it that way, and that's that!" In the book proper, Davies briefly explores: the nature of reason, belief, and metaphysics; theories of the origin of the universe; the laws of nature; the relationship of mathematics to physics; a few arguments for the existence of God; the possibility that the universe shows evidence of intelligent design; and his opinion of the implications of Gödel's incompleteness theorem, that "the search for a closed logical scheme that provides a complete and self-consistent explanation is doomed to failure."
He concludes with a statement of his belief that, even though we may never attain a theory of everything, "the existence of mind in some organism on some planet in the universe is surely a fact of fundamental significance. Through conscious beings the universe has generated self-awareness. This can be no trivial detail, no minor byproduct of mindless, purposeless forces. We are truly meant to be here."
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