If the "primary condition" of your definition of "present" is to make reference "solely to conscious experience", then how can "present" refer to anything outside of conscious experience? — Luke
If the present is not limited to conscious experience, and if the past is not limited to what is actually remembered and if the future is not limited to what is actually anticipated, then there must be something outside of conscious experience or these mental events that determines and helps to define what you mean by "past", "present" and "future". What is it? — Luke
If your definition of "sound" allows "that there are things of that type which have not necessarily been perceived, judged, and categorized as being that type", then your definition of "sound" allows for "what might not be heard". Your definition of "sound" is basically "what might be heard or what might not be heard". — Luke
It indicates that "sound" refers to something external to conscious experience. If (a) sound is something that might not be heard, then it must exist independently of anyone's conscious experience. — Luke
Therefore, I don't see how you can maintain that your definitions of "past", "present" and "future" make reference solely to conscious experience, while you also speak about "the reality of things of that type" which do not make reference solely to conscious experience (i.e. which are not remembered or not anticipated). — Luke
My choice is beside the point. I have already stated my view that these terms are conventionally defined with reference to time, It is your view and your unconventional definitions of these terms that is presently under discussion. Your view - that these terms are defined solely in terms of conscious experience - clearly implies the radical skeptic position which must lead you to "deny the reality of anything independent". Otherwise, I fail to understand how these terms can be defined solely in terms of conscious experience. — Luke
If the present is not limited to conscious experience, and if the past is not limited to what is actually remembered and if the future is not limited to what is actually anticipated, then there must be something outside of conscious experience or these mental events that determines and helps to define what you mean by "past", "present" and "future". What is it?
— Luke
I don't know. That is perhaps the greatest problem of philosophy, described by Kant as the thing-in-itself. Kant claimed we cannot know what it is. — Metaphysician Undercover
That it might or might not actually be heard is irrelevant, as what is relevant is description of the type. — Metaphysician Undercover
It indicates that "sound" refers to something external to conscious experience. If (a) sound is something that might not be heard, then it must exist independently of anyone's conscious experience. — Luke
Yes, that is the extrapolation which I used to take "the past" outside of personal experience, giving it a position of objectivity, allowing it to be effectively employed as demonstrated with "sound". — Metaphysician Undercover
It was "the present" which I claimed ought to be defined solely with reference to conscious experience. This was "what is happening". Then we moved to "past" and "future" which I said ought to be defined in reference to the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears like you are conflating the definitions with their meaning, or interpretation. These are separate. We refer to things, like examples, to understand meaning, while the definition does not explicitly refer to those examples. So, for example "human being" might be defined as "rational animal". Then we could point to a number of people, as examples, to demonstrate the meaning of "rational animal". Or, we could give examples of what it means to be "animal" and what it means to be "rational". In both of these cases, the examples are referred to in demonstrating or interpreting the meaning, they are not referred to by the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
Defining terms while remaining entirely within a logical structure, does not make the terms inapplicable to things outside the logical system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since you seem intent on insisting that there is no difference between a definition (what the defined word means), and its meaning (what the defining words mean) — Metaphysician Undercover
you seem intent on insisting that there is no difference between a definition (what the defined word means), and its meaning (what the defining words mean) — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears like you are conflating the definitions with their meaning, or interpretation. These are separate. We refer to things, like examples, to understand meaning, while the definition does not explicitly refer to those examples. So, for example "human being" might be defined as "rational animal". Then we could point to a number of people, as examples, to demonstrate the meaning of "rational animal". Or, we could give examples of what it means to be "animal" and what it means to be "rational". In both of these cases, the examples are referred to in demonstrating or interpreting the meaning, they are not referred to by the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your misrepresentation, "the difference between “what the defined word means” and “its meaning”" is nothing but a straw man. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your initial distinction was between a definition and its meaning: — Luke
Yes, I made a distinction between the meaning of a word, (its definition), and the meaning of the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
If there was not a difference between these two, the definition would mean the exact same thing as the word itself means. — Metaphysician Undercover
Definitions, if they were actually like this, would do nothing yo help us understand the meaning of the word. — Metaphysician Undercover
What’s the difference between a definition and its meaning? In other words, what is the difference between the definition of a word and the meaning of a word? You are speaking of a definition as though it has no meaning. How can a definition have no meaning? — Luke
If definitions were as you imagine them to be, they would have no meaning at all.
Let's define a "bachelor" as "an unmarried man".
The definition of "bachelor" is "an unmarried man".
The meaning of "bachelor" is "an unmarried man".
The problem (your confusion) here is that you seem to think that nobody is allowed to now ask what "unmarried" means. — Luke
Luke, the definition of a word is the meaning of the word defined. — Metaphysician Undercover
Luke, the definition of a word is the meaning of the word defined. The definition itself , also has meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
The definition itself , also has meaning. Therefore, there is a difference between "the definition", which is the meaning of the word defined, and the definition's meaning, which is the meaning of the definition, and something other than the meaning of the word defined. — Metaphysician Undercover
The definition of a word is the meaning of the word. Then of course, the definition itself has meaning. And, the meaning of the definition is not the same as the meaning of the word defined. Why is this so difficult for you? — Metaphysician Undercover
If definitions were as you imagine them to be, they would have no meaning at all.
Let's define a "bachelor" as "an unmarried man".
The definition of "bachelor" is "an unmarried man".
The meaning of "bachelor" is "an unmarried man".
The problem (your confusion) here is that you seem to think that nobody is allowed to now ask what "unmarried" means.
— Luke
Why are you now trying to turn the table? This is what you insisted, That the meaning of the word, its definition, and the meaning of the definition must be one and the same. I'm the one one trying to talk sense into you. and it appears like you are now coming to respect the difference between the definition "unmarried man", in your example, and the meaning of that definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to be saying that the definition of a word has two different meanings:
(i) the meaning of the word defined, and
(ii) the definition's meaning. — Luke
The definition of the word is the meaning of the word. The meaning of the definition is something different from the meaning of the word.
If the meaning of the word, and the meaning of the definition of the word, were both exactly the same, then the definition would tell us nothing meaningful, and it would be absolutely useless. The meaning of the word would be the definition [of the word]... — Metaphysician Undercover
I asked what the phrases "has happened" and "to happen" mean. It is unclear whether you are providing the meanings of these phrases - what you think they mean - or whether you are telling me "what gives meaning to" these phrases. I don't think these are the same. — Luke
I've always said that the meaning of the word is the definition of the word. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears like you are conflating the definitions with their meaning, or interpretation. These are separate. We refer to things, like examples, to understand meaning, while the definition does not explicitly refer to those examples. So, for example "human being" might be defined as "rational animal". Then we could point to a number of people, as examples, to demonstrate the meaning of "rational animal". Or, we could give examples of what it means to be "animal" and what it means to be "rational". In both of these cases, the examples are referred to in demonstrating or interpreting the meaning, they are not referred to by the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've also maintained that there is a difference between the meaning of the word defined, and the meaning of the phrase which is the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then you would not respect the fact that there is a difference between what the word means, i.e. its definition, ("what has happened") , and what the definition means (the type of thing that might be remembered). — Metaphysician Undercover
After you reread, and recognize that there is a difference between the meaning of "past", as "what has happened", and the meaning of that phrase, the definition, which I explained as the type of thing which might be remembered, then we might be prepared to proceed with the discussion. — Metaphysician Undercover
You have not always said that the meaning of the word is the definition of the word. Our disagreement over this matter began when you accused me of "conflating the definitions with their meaning, or interpretation". You asserted that meanings and definitions "are separate", with the distinction between them being that meanings are always understood by a reference to examples while definitions are not. — Luke
You strongly imply here that "the meaning of the phrase" is the definition, and you have already said that the meaning of the definition is the meaning of the word. — Luke
I disagree that "past" means "the type of thing which might be remembered". It's not a different "type" of meaning (i.e. the meaning of a phrase that is the definition) or whatever you are arguing; it just simply doesn't mean that. — Luke
Your childish behaviour is very frustrating Luke. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let's start from the top, and see if we can get some agreement. Do you agree that there is a difference between a word, and the meaning of a word? — Metaphysician Undercover
If so, do you also agree that there is a difference between a definition, which is a group of words, and the meaning of the definition? — Metaphysician Undercover
I strongly disagree that there is a distinction between a definition and its meaning. — Luke
And, if we were to state the meaning of the definition, we ought not state the original word as that meaning, or else we'd have a vicious circle which would get us nowhere fast. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the meaning is the definition, then the meaning of the definition is what? - the meaning of the meaning? — Luke
I would agree that a definition is (typically) a phrase, but the meaning of that phrase is not distinct from the definition. There is not the definition on one hand and the meaning of the definition on the other. As I said in my first response to your accusation of conflation that started all this: — Luke
If the meaning is the definition, then the meaning of the definition is what? - the meaning of the meaning?
— Luke
Yes, that's quite obvious and I don't see why you can't agree. — Metaphysician Undercover
How can you say that the meaning of a word is different from the word. And, that the definition is a "phrase", which is a group of words, yet you claim that the meaning of the phrase is not different from the phrase? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you think that the meaning of a word is different from the word, yet the meaning of a group of words is not different from the group of words? — Metaphysician Undercover
See, you separate the word from its meaning, as two distinct things, yet you combine the phrase, which is the definition, with its meaning, as one and the same thing. You are not consistent. Do you honestly believe that the phrase, which is a group of words, and the meaning of that group of words is one and the same thing, yet also believe that the meaning of a single word is distinct from that word? What is it about a group of words which makes it the same as its meaning? — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's a suggestion, a way which we might be able to get past this problem. Maybe we should consider that the definition is not really the meaning, even though we've both already agreed that it is. The definition is just a group of words, the phrase, and the meaning of the word is something completely different from this group of words, which is the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't agree because I don't know what "the meaning of the meaning" means. You did not explain it. — Luke
I can't agree because I don't know what "the meaning of the meaning" means. You did not explain it.
— Luke
And the last week or so of discussion was not absorbed by you at all? — Metaphysician Undercover
Did you explain what "the meaning of the meaning" means during the last week or so of discussion? If so, I must have missed it. Please provide a quote. — Luke
I am now fully convinced that trying to explain anything to you will always be a hopeless effort. — Metaphysician Undercover
I write in the present moment. The past is thoughts and memories. The future is memories. The present is real. It’s tangible. It’s here and now. It’s reality. The past doesn’t exist at the moment. Neither does the future. Only the present is here and now. Only the present is real. — Art48
If God is real, I can only experience God in the present. Excessive thought and concern about past and future takes me away from where I really am, takes me out of reality, takes me away from God. — Art48
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