I have reasons to believe whatever form a so-called fact may take, it cannot be declared such without accepting that information is incomplete and this the fact is subject to change depending upon a given observer's perspective. — Rich
"The kettle was boiling at 11:15pm on my stove". — Banno
Hm. This is more difficult.
I submit that some things must be taken as undoubted in order for discussion to take place.
Roughly, on can doubt anything, but not everything. — Banno
↪Rich Then we are using "fact" in different ways.
Without verification then one would have to claim infallibility.
— Rich
I don't see why. — Banno
Meaning is use.
A consequence of that view is that meaning is embedded in what we do.
It is tempting to say that language is both in us and in the world; but even that juxtaposes "us" and "the world" in an erroneous fashion. We are not separate from the world.
Hence, it would be a grievous error to suppose that all there is, is language. It would also be wrong to suppose that all there is, is things.
it i is your position that it is enough for an observation to be called a fact if the observer felt all of the facts were true as represented. — Rich
No, but this will take a longer post and I am off to lunch.
It is enough for an observation to be called a fact if it is true.
It is enough for an observation to be believed if... well, that depends. — Banno
There's a knot that philosophers sometimes get tangled in. They set themselves the task of explaining the stuff around them. They notice that both the thing being explained and the explanation or justification is presented in a language.
Through thinking about this, they reach the conclusion that all there is, is language.
Hence, they adopt some form or other of idealism. — Banno
For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.
that perception is an interaction with the environment, and not simply information about that environment being presented to us. — Michael
Would that we could avoid "...isms"; it's not clear what sort of nominalism Q. meant.
I don't think that Q's conclusion follows. As I mentioned before, Wittgenstein is setting out that the primary metaphysical consideration is not things, but predications to things. Now predicates include relations between things. It's not obvious that this is a rejection of holism.
Indeed it is arguable that the conclusion of the Tractatus is holistic. — Banno
What about when there's no observer at all? Tricky to test, but maybe we can at least form an hypothesis: if it doesn't matter which human makes the observation, then it doesn't matter whether any human actually does. — Srap Tasmaner
My conditional has a contrapositive, the conclusion of which I believe has been shown to be false: if it matters whether a human makes the observation, then it matters which human. — Srap Tasmaner
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