It is the most famous and quoted phrase in English language.:brow: — Bob Ross
What would be your valid analysis of "To be or not to be"? Why is it ungrammatical? What do you suggest for grammatically correct sentence for it?This is not an example of a valid analysis of 'to be': 'to be or not to be?' ungrammatical, old english for "should something exist, or not?". — Bob Ross
Would you include the so-called 'primary intuitions' of time and space? (It might be their very 'primitiveness' that makes them so hard to explain!)
My preferred example is 'the principle of noncontradiction' (PNC).
To exist is to be the subject of a predicate.
I hold that some concepts are primitive and absolutely simple, and as such cannot be defined without circular reference (to itself). I am curious as to how many people hold a similar view, and how many completely reject such an idea. — Bob Ross
I will give the best example I have: being (viz., ‘to be’, ‘existence’, ‘to exist’, etc.). When trying to define or describe being, it is impossible not to use it—and I don’t mean just in the sense of a linguistic limitation: it is impossible to give a conceptual account without presupposing its meaning in the first place.
So, do you agree that some concepts are absolutely simple, and thusly unanalyzable and incapable of non-circular definitions, but yet still valid; or do these so-called, alleged, primitive concepts need to be either (1) capable of non-circular definition or (2) thrown out?
To be could be defined as that which is necessary for any subject to undertake an action.
I do consider the concept of space and time, in a phenomenal sense, to be primitive. — Bob Ross
How do you define 'true' (and NOT 'truth')? — Bob Ross
So, do you agree that some concepts are absolutely simple, and thusly unanalyzable and incapable of non-circular definitions, but yet still valid; or do these so-called, alleged, primitive concepts need to be either (1) capable of non-circular definition or (2) thrown out? — Bob Ross
First of all, all definitions are essentially circular, as evidence by somebody not being able to immediately glean a language simply by by being handed a dictionary. But with some ideas, the circularity of the definition becomes very short, such as in your example. — noAxioms
I don't think concepts are culturally relative. — Bob Ross
So 'that thing exists' = 'that thing is necessary for any subject to undertake an action'? — Bob Ross
which is true, but not a valid definition of what it means to exist — Bob Ross
Every object can be defined with its relations to all other objects.
I think there are a lot of concepts that are not decomposable, that is, you cannot break them down into component parts without losing something. Perception might be one of these things. It's easy enough to describe perception. E.g., "you see a beautiful sunset over Death Valley."
If you try to decompose the experience into what causes it though, you end up losing elements. No amount of talk of neurons or light waves, B-minimal properties, etc., no matter how informative, seems to avoid losing something. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Right, there are some pretty good arguments out of the Thomist camp that all properties of things have to involve how they relate to other things or parts of themselves. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But then what does it mean for something to simple? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Under what conditions do you believe a concept presupposed in an act of speech?
Can you distinguish presupposing a concept from using a concept?
Or needing to learn a concept before deploying it?
How could you come to understand what a bike is without understanding what "is" means?
To exist is to be the subject of a predicate.
This doesn’t refer to being at all.
If ‘to exist’ is ‘to be the subject of a predicate, then Unicorns exist because “Unicorns are red”. This obviously doesn’t work.
You aren’t capturing what it means ‘to be’ or ‘to exist’ itself in your definition. Likewise, it is circular, as indicated with the underlines. — Bob Ross
Actually, what is happening is that you are not recognising that there are at least three differing senses of "to be". It doesn't follow from "the unicorn has four legs" that there are unicorns.You aren’t capturing what it means ‘to be’ or ‘to exist’ itself in your definition. — Bob Ross
Look again.Likewise, it is circular, as indicated with the underlines. — Bob Ross
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