The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy’sRussell’s Paradox entry has the following.
Russell’s paradox is the most famous of the logical or set-theoretical paradoxes. Also known as the Russell-Zermelo paradox, the paradox arises within naïve set theory by considering the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. Such a set appears to be a member of itself if and only if it is not a member of itself. Hence the paradox.
Some sets, such as the set of all teacups, are not members of themselves. Other sets, such as the set of all non-teacups, are members of themselves. Call the set of all sets that are not members of themselves “R.” If R is a member of itself, then by definition it must not be a member of itself. Similarly, if R is not a member of itself, then by definition it must be a member of itself.
Did Russell’s paradox exist before he . . . discovered it? Or . . . invented it? Which is it, discovered or invented? If discovered, then yes, the paradox was there since before the Big Bang, just waiting to be found. If invented, then no, the paradox came into existence the moment Russell first thought of it.
The paradox exists. For how much longer? Can an idea stop existing? That doesn’t seem right. It seems if all humanity vanished tomorrow, Russell’s paradox would still exist. But if an idea cannot cease to exist, then it obviously must exist for all eternity into the future. If Russell created the paradox, that would mean the idea is half-eternal, having a start time in the finite past but no end time in the future. It seems rather odd to say a mortal human being can create something which will exist for all eternity. It seems to make more sense to say that Russell’s paradox was discovered, not invented; that it has always existed.
Existed where? One answer is: in the mind of God. But this answer assumes an all-good, all-powerful, all-knowing being, which are more assumptions than we need. The minimum is merely to stipulate a place where all thoughts exist, without saying anything more about the place. I call the place the “mindscape.” [reference to this thread omitted]
I don’t claim the above is a proof; any of the steps in thinking can probably be disputed. But it’s a train of thought—an interesting train, at least, for me—that leads to the idea of the mindscape. — Art48
The paradox exists. For how much longer? Can an idea stop existing? That doesn’t seem right. It seems if all humanity vanished tomorrow, Russell’s paradox would still exist — Art48
Russell, apparently, regards thoughts differently, as acts. He writes: “One man's act of thought is necessarily a different thing from another man's.” — Art48
You're just misusing the word "exists".
You've taken the way we talk about the common stuff around us existing in a place and a time and applied it unjustifiably to Russell's paradox.
Paradoxes are not just like trees and rocks. — Banno
I perceive thoughts, ideas, and emotions directly in consciousness. I perceive the external world indirectly, via the five physical senses. The ideas I perceive definitely exist. The water I perceive may be a mirage, or I may be a brain in a vat. It seems odd (and wrong) therefore to say tables and trees have more reality than thoughts, ideas, and emotions, although I admit it's a widespread and understandable view.You're dealing with the reality of abstract objects, such as ideas, numbers, universals, and so on. I agree with you that it's a valid question and an important question, and I also agree that such things as ideas, numbers, universals, and the like, are real. But they're not existent as phenomena, they are not real in the sense that tables and chairs and trees are real. That's the conundrum you're outlining - how can these ideas be real if they don't actually exist? It is a metaphysical question par excellence. — Wayfarer
So, universals pre-exist in what is called the mindscape? It's a short step to say all thoughts exist there, although, of course, the step has to be justified.He distinguishes thoughts from universals, because he says that universals (such as whiteness) must be the same for all. Which is just the same for mathematical and geometrical proofs! They too are the same for all who can grasp them. So they can only be grasped by thought, but they're not the product of thought. — Wayfarer
It's a short step to say all thoughts exist there, although, of course, the step has to be justified. — Art48
The trouble is you haven't set out what it is you are asking; how you are using the word "exist".Do ideas exist or not? Would you rather the world "subsist"? Or some other word? — Art48
Now I am curious, what is an example of something that is conceptually unreal? — Richard B
The trouble is you haven't set out what it is you are asking; how you are using the word "exist". — Banno
So my argument is that they're real, because they're the same for all who think, but they're not strictly speaking existent. — Wayfarer
I'm familiar with equivalences classes. The same idea can be expressed in different ways (for instance, in different languages). But I'd give logical priority to the idea itself so defining the idea in terms of its expressions seems backwards.Good post ! Rucker is great. Let me throw a wrench into the machine. What is an idea ? One approach, that might save us some trouble, is that it's an equivalence class of expressions. — green flag
Can you describe how and when an idea goes out of existence. For example, 2+2=4 is an idea. Will it ever cease to exist.In short, I don't think ideas always existed. Or always will exist. — green flag
Ideas exist. Tell me if there's a sense of "exist" where you think the statement is true and maybe we can go from there.Do ideas exist or not? Would you rather the world "subsist"? Or some other word? — Art48
The trouble is you haven't set out what it is you are asking; how you are using the word "exist". — Banno
Ideas exist. — Art48
But I'd give logical priority to the idea itself so defining the idea in terms of its expressions seems backwards. — Art48
Can you describe how and when an idea goes out of existence. For example, 2+2=4 is an idea. Will it ever cease to exist. — Art48
"There are ideas" just places ideas in the domain of the dicusion. But you erroneously take this to mean that they have a place or a time or some such. — Banno
I'd say the sense data is not in the mindscape, but the idea of shit is. — Art48
When I say the mindscape is the place where ideas exist, "place" is a spatial metaphor, not to be take too literally.You take "P exists" to imply that P has a spatial location — Banno
I'm asking how exactly does an idea like 2+2=4 cease to exist. You seem to say it dies when the last representative in its equivalence class dies, but don't address how the last idea (or any idea) could cease to exist.If we stick with the equivalence class metaphor (with a blurry substitute for the mathematical version), then the idea dies with its last representative, just as it was born with its first. — green flag
True, but isn't that obvious? I'm puzzled why there have been so many posts about the word "exist". The definition of mindscape would be essentially unchanged if "subsist" or some other word were used.Maybe I can go along with an ontological pluralism in which ideas can be said to exist in their own domain, but they would exist in a different way from stars and brains — Jamal
Mindscape says ideas exist in their own domain and, as you point out later your paragraph, that ideas are eternal.So ideas exist in their own domain. Very well. But what is happening to this concept when it turns into the mindscape? What justifies this leap? — Jamal
I think the reification accusation can be avoided if for "exist" people substitute "subsist" or whatever word they like that allows ideas to be.it's a wildly speculative reification t — Jamal
Yes! I read the mindscape as applying Mathematical Platonism to all ideas, not just mathematical ideas, which is my opinion of what Rucker, a Ph.D. mathematician, has done. Before I posted, I would have thought it uncontroversial that 2+2=4 is an idea which has existed from all eternity, just as the square root of 2 has been an irrational number from all eternity, and always will be.I was surprised that some people took issue with the word "existed."So you end up with something like Platonism — Jamal
I agree, and never intended for mindscape to denote a literal place in spacetime.On the other hand, the idea of a shared landscape of ideas is an attractive one, but only as at least part-analogical — Jamal
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