So for physicalists, facts are physical or there are no facts — Lionino
It seems like some form of superstition. A couple of days ago in one of the new thread here, the OP was claiming that he witnessed the actual wave of gravity with telescope, and it must be the physical existence of spacetime. It sounded like some religious beliefs of some cult folks claiming the earthquakes and hurricanes are act of the angry God or something.But a physicalist will say that there is only the ink down on the paper, and that any content represented by it exists as chemical reactions in our mind. — Lionino
We are not denying the existence of physicals or substances, but they themselves are not facts or minds.So for physicalists, facts are physical or there are no facts; — Lionino
Wittgenstein said in TLP "The world is the totality of facts.", and it sounds interesting. It also sounds a kind of Solypsism. It cannot be said, but it presents itself. One's perception of the world is limited by one's knowledge of the facts of the world that one knows. The facts includes certain possibilities, impossibilities and logic that operates in the world. Could the facts one knows about the world he faces, and lives in, be the ultimate reason to believe in the existence of the world?otherwise it would depend on whether you are talking about the type or the token, or whether the guy you are asking is an idealist, or what the fact is talking about. — Lionino
So the physicalist has to claim that in a mindless -sorry!- brainless universe, facts still exist. That, to me, seems absurd, but the physicalist can say that an old Encyclopedia Brittanica book still contains facts, even if all the brains in the universe suddenly ceased to exist. — RogueAI
I think there's an element of ambiguity here. For some, the word "fact" means "true sentence". For others the word "fact" refers to the aspect of the world that true sentences correspond to.
So for some "it is raining" is a fact if it is true.
For others "it is raining" is true if it refers to a fact.
The physicalist who says that there are facts in a brainless universe is just saying that the world exists and has certain features even if there's nobody around to see them or talk about them.
And I'll add, arguing over whether or not a fact is a true sentence or the thing that true sentences refer to is a meaningless argument. Just so long as you make explicit what you mean by "fact", use it however you want. — Michael
The physicalist says an encyclopedia volume is full of facts, right? — RogueAI
Did the facts in the book disappear? — RogueAI
They can say that a science textbook is full of true sentences that refer to facts. — Michael
That seems a little wordy. Why wouldn't they just say that a science textbook has a lot of facts about the world? — RogueAI
The encyclopedia is full of true sentences, even if all brains disappear, right? Is the randomly produced encyclopedia volume in the brainless universe also full of true sentences? — RogueAI
So let's imagine a hypothetical physicalist:
1. In a brainless universe there are no true sentences; the book simply contains ink printed on a page
2. Everything that exists in a brainless universe is a physical object (or process)
Is there a problem with this position? — Michael
At time T1 the ink markings are a true sentence. At T2 everybody dies. Nothing physical has changed about the ink markings, but they are no longer a true sentence. — Michael
So for physicalists, facts are physical or there are no facts; otherwise it would depend on whether you are talking about the type or the token, or whether the guy you are asking is an idealist, or what the fact is talking about. — Lionino
Mount Everest is the highest mountain. K2 is the second highest mountain. Mount Everest is destroyed. K2 is now the highest mountain. Something about K2 has changed even though nothing about K2 has physically changed.
Why? Is the below a big problem for materialism?
At T1 the ball is someone's property. At T2 everybody dies. Nothing physical has changed about the ball but it is no longer someone's property. — Michael
A couple of days ago in one of the new thread here, the OP was claiming that he witnessed the actual wave of gravity with telescope, and it must be the physical existence of spacetime. — Corvus
We are not denying the existence of physicals or substances, but they themselves are not facts or minds. — Corvus
Could the facts one knows about the world he faces, and lives in, be the ultimate reason to believe in the existence of the world? — Corvus
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