I think this direction of entailment is necessary but not sufficient for supervenience. This is because A can entail B without "exact similarity with respect to B-properties guarantee[ing] exact similarity with respect to A-properties." — Leontiskos
Let me just repeat my claim now that you see that the definition is accurate: — Leontiskos
This is because A can entail B without "exact similarity with respect to B-properties guarantee[ing] exact similarity with respect to A-properties." — Leontiskos
Well, not to quibble, but because you left the IFF off of the beginning of the sentence, your quote from the SEP didn't make any sense. — frank
But I think the reason "entail" isn't exactly equivalent to "supervene" is because the latter is proprietary wording and the former isn't. — frank
It would only fail to make sense if someone did not understand that we are considering the possibility of A supervening on B, but this should be apparent both because it is the standard usage which was present even in your OP, and because A and B were introduced explicitly via the entailment relation that you put forward. — Leontiskos
Hmm. Both terms have technical and non-technical senses. I don't think any mixture of those senses would support your idea that, "You could also say the music entails these actions." The SEP article covers the difference between supervenience and entailment in some detail. — Leontiskos
...note that a single action can be described in various ways. Is he moving his arm up and down? Pumping water? Doing his job? Clicking out a steady rhythm? Making a funny shadow on the rock behind him? Well, it could be that all of these descriptions are true. — SEP: Anscombe
I did not receive a notification that you mentioned me, — Leontiskos
That attitude, our intent towards each list, supervenes on the list. — Banno
The Nomological Net: The nomological net is the background of general knowledge, laws, and regularities that provide the necessary context for interpreting and understanding specific linguistic expressions and mental states. It encompasses our understanding of the physical world, the principles of causation, and the norms of rationality that govern human thought and communication. — Davidson, Mental Events, op cit
No, it fails to make sense because you left out an important part of the sentence, namely the leading IFF. — frank
Entailment and supervenience aren't identical, but supervenience can overlap entailment, causality, and dependence. — frank
But in fact you knew exactly what I meant, and you responded by claiming that the "quoted words do not describe supervenience." — Leontiskos
Subtle, ain't it? — Banno
In his book Physicalism, or Something Near Enough, Jaegwon Kim puts forward the following characterization of the materialist supervenience thesis:
I take supervenience as an ontological thesis involving the idea of dependence – a sense of dependence that justifies saying that a mental property is instantiated in a given organism at a time because, or in virtue of the fact that, one of its physical “base” properties is instantiated by the organism at that time. Supervenience, therefore, is not a mere claim of covariation between mental and physical properties; it includes a claim of existential dependence of the mental on the physical. (p. 34) — Edward Feser | Supervenience on the hands of an angry God
The notion seems to rest on a category mistake, a failure to understand that the network of rationally-cum-semantically interrelated mental states is no more susceptible of a smooth correlation with a particular network of causally interrelated physical states than the content of a book can be smoothly correlated with a certain kind of physical format — Edward Feser
The second part starting with "equivalently," is saying that the only way to have an exact duplicate of a musical production would be to exactly duplicate the actions of the orchestra playing it. That's a convoluted way to get the idea across, but it's true. That does describe the kind of relation we're specifying with supervenience. It's definitely an IFF kind of relation. — frank
I take supervenience as an ontological thesis involving the idea of dependence – a sense of dependence that justifies saying that a mental property is instantiated in a given organism at a time because, or in virtue of the fact that, one of its physical “base” properties is instantiated by the organism at that time. Supervenience, therefore, is not a mere claim of covariation between mental and physical properties; it includes a claim of existential dependence of the mental on the physical. — Edward Feser | Supervenience on the hands of an angry God
This is almost exactly what you were worried about, no? — Leontiskos
The notion seems to rest on a category mistake, a failure to understand that the network of rationally-cum-semantically interrelated mental states is no more susceptible of a smooth correlation with a particular network of causally interrelated physical states than the content of a book can be smoothly correlated with a certain kind of physical format (a modern printed book, say, as opposed to a scroll, wax tablet, or electronic book). As Wilfrid Sellars might put it, the “space of reasons” and the “space of causes” are simply incommensurable.') — Wayfarer
That's pretty well it. — Wayfarer
...I think the case can be made that Aristotelian Thomism is a Western form of perennialism... — Wayfarer
On the other hand, I do recognise that space needs to be given for discussion of the modern mainstream... — Wayfarer
(BTW that last quote attributed to me is from Ed Feser, although I'm in furious agreement with the thrust of it.) — Wayfarer
But Davidson says there are no psycho-physical laws, which I take to mean that there are no laws which detemine mental acts analogous to the laws which govern physical events... — Wayfarer
There can be no "psychophysical law" in the form of a biconditional, ' (x) (x is true-in-L if and only if x is Φ) ' where, ' Φ ' is replaced by a "physical" predicate (a predicate of L). Similarly, we can pick out each mental event using the physical vocabulary alone, but no purely physical predicate, no matter how complex, has, as a matter of law, the same extension as a mental predicate. — Davidson, Mental Events, p. 141
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