It's the world that quantum field theory describes. — Michael
So it seems you now have two worlds, one described by quantum, the other by everyday language:If so then either a) cups can be described by quantum field theory, or b) cups aren't objects in that external world. — Michael
I don't think we should be happy with that. Seems to me better to say that we have two ways of talking about the exact same world. Multiple ways of using language, to talk in different ways about the same thing.Quantum field theory describes the external world, everyday languages describes a non-external world. — Michael
I hope I made it clear that given that the terms are undefined in the PhilPapers survey, continuity mitigated against my offering a definition. I presumed folk would use whatever definition suited their purposes.You haven't defined "external world" or "realism" in your question. — Michael
Multiple ways of using language, to talk in different ways about the same thing. — Banno
Ok. I don't understand what it is "external" to, but let it pass. — Banno
Then how do you distinguish realism from idealism? — Michael
I took you to be claiming that the cup was actually quantum in some way, from this:multiple languages being used to talk about different things — Michael
...it seemed that you thought we had a choice between describing the cup in everyday terms and describing it in quantum terms, but that quantum terms were "proper". Presumably the quantum stuff is not irrelevant nor incommensurate with the everyday stuff - as evidenced by the device on which you are reading this....there is an external world but that it is properly described by something like quantum field theory and not by our everyday talk of cups and chairs — Michael
Roughly, realism holds that some things are as they are, without regard to their relation to us, while idealism holds that things are otherwise; that they are as they are only in relation to us, or some mind of some sort - the details are sketchy.
I don't see that phrasing this in terms of "internal" and "external" helps much. It's got something to do with the world being internal to the mind, I suppose, but what and how... — Banno
I took you to be claiming that the cup was actually quantum in some way, from this:
...it seemed that you thought we had a choice between describing the cup in everyday terms and describing it in quantum terms, but that quantum terms were "proper". — Banno
What else is there? — Mww
What else is there?
— Mww
Probably nothing. The mistake is in thinking that a statement's truth depends on the existence of something. — Michael
….there is a square root of 2. Its truth just has nothing to do with anything that exists. — Michael
And as a related point, (…) idealism doesn't entail solipsism. — Michael
But it does seem as though truth must depend on something — Mww
Truth, here, just indicates there is no inherent self-contradiction in the proposition, which, again, requires a mind, does it not? — Mww
That the truth depends on something isn’t that it depends on the existence of something. — Michael
I suppose you could argue for mathematical realism and claim that mathematical entities exist as abstract objects, but that seems both unnecessary and fantastical. — Michael
Be that as it may, isn’t the prerogative of intelligence, insofar as it deems truth to be a valid idea, to determine what it does depends on, from whence does truth receive its justification? — Mww
Just as for truth, there must be something by which the comprehending the appearance of natural relations, becomes possible. — Mww
Maybe you can succinctly explain to me, Janus – what Wayfarer obviously can't (re: ↪180 Proof
) – the function of "transcendental idealism" in contrast to "empirical realism". — 180 Proof
Objects in the external world are correctly described by quantum fields.
Cups aren't correctly described by quantum fields.
Therefore, cups aren't objects in the external world. — Michael
So if the external is just material stuff, why use the word "external"? It adds nothing.If substance/property dualism is true then the "external" world is the material stuff, and the "internal" world is the immaterial stuff. — Michael
But then if nothing is external, the difference between internal and external dissipates.If idealism is true then everything is "internal" and nothing is "external". — Michael
And there being no difference between the mater of mind and the other stuff, there would again be no difference between internal and external.If materialism is true then the "internal" world is the matter that constitutes our minds and the "external" world is everything else. — Michael
In terms of "internal" and "external", there are a few ways of considering it. If substance/property dualism is true then the "external" world is the material stuff, and the "internal" world is the immaterial stuff. If idealism is true then everything is "internal" and nothing is "external". If materialism is true then the "internal" world is the matter that constitutes our minds and the "external" world is everything else. — Michael
It seems that the notion of external and internal derives form the idea of things being internal or external to the body. — Janus
So your liver is internal?
That just doesn't seem to be how it is being used. — Banno
So idealism holds that everything is inside one's body, while realism holds that everything is outside one's body.
How odd. — Banno
If idealism were true that would not change; the experience would remain exactly the same even if the understanding changed. Unless you are speaking of solipsism, If the world were thought to be fundamentally mind our minds would still be understood to be in that universal mind, and yet that whole mind (which would include, but would not be limited to, the minds of others) would not be understood to be in my mind, — Janus
It seems that the notion of external and internal derives form the idea of things being internal or external to the body. — Janus
Oh, you are just after an etymology. It's just "in", from PIE "en", I think.
Hence my puzzling as to what is "in", when used in the context of idealism and realism. — Banno
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