You don't think concepts are determinate? How is the concept of a circle not determinate? — Bob Ross
But you haven't defined what it means to exist — Bob Ross
I accept that the space and time which are our forms of experience are a priori, but not that space and time do not exist beyond that in reality. — Bob Ross
"To be or not to be" means "should something exist, or should it not?" — 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
I didn’t understand this question: can you re-phrase it? — Bob Ross
To use a concept, is to deploy it; and to presuppose a concept is to use a concept in a manner whereof one does not explicate its meaning (but, rather, uses it implicitly in their analysis). — Bob Ross
Oh, I think I understand where your are heading; so let me clarify: by claiming ‘being’, or any absolutely simple concept, is unanalyzable and primitive, I DO NOT mean to convey that we cannot come to know what they are. I mean that we can’t come to know them through conceptual analysis: they remain forever notions, which are acquired via pure intuitions (about reality). — Bob Ross
This pecularity indicates, by my lights, that ‘being’ is a primitive concept and, as such, is absolutely simple, unanalyzable, and (yet) still perfectly valid. — Bob Ross
You posts often do not come up in mentions and are not flagged. Something to do with the way you are editing them, at a guess.
the "is" of existential quantification ∃(x)f(x), "there is something that is green".
We can have an idea of what it is to be, but we can't say exactly what is its essence. But there is one thing we know about it: it is counterfactual to any action or state of a subject.
I'd very much like to see an example of this. I'm not saying I don't understand or have any idea of what you mean, I'd just like to see where you're coming from with this distinction between deploying a concept and explicating its meaning.
I can imagine a world in which deploying a concept is an instance of explicating a meaning, regardless of whether a definition is offered.
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But you do pick up and refine concepts just by listening and chatting.
I think we know exactly what being is: I just don't think we can properly explicate it. Knowledge isn't just the sphere if explicable information. — Bob Ross
But this seems like you are agreeing now with me that you cannot define being. — Bob Ross
I would say the property is less fundamental than the concept it refers to; because it presupposes it. — Bob Ross
The interesting thing with 'being', is that it isn't really a property: that opens up the discussion to absurd ideas, like beings which themselves contain being in their essence and other beings which do not (e.g., Spinoza's view). — Bob Ross
Concepts have their own meaning despite how they relate to concepts. The concept of the number 3 is obviously distinct from the number 2, and they don't rely on how they relate to each other to be defined. — Bob Ross
I don't think that space and time are proper substances…. — Bob Ross
I think physics demonstrates quite sufficiently that space and time are valid 'entities' in our calculations….. — Bob Ross
……and not in the sense that they are merely our modes of intuition. — Bob Ross
So you think that the concept 'triangle' doesn't make any sense in itself? — Bob Ross
That would just be ungrammatical. I am unsure, then, what contention you are making with the OP: I am not claiming that ungrammatical sentences make sense. — Bob Ross
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