Long ago philosophy perceived the essence of our process of thought to lie in the fact that we attach to the various real objects around us particular physical attributes – our concepts – and by means of these try to represent the objects to our minds ~ Boltzmann — 013zen
We cannot conceive a corporeal substance without a determinate figure, size, position, motion/rest, and number; nor can we imagine bodies separated from any of these attributes. Galileo calls them “primary affections” of matter.'
....He argues that the appearance of a body corresponds to the properties of the body that are its cause. It is not up to philosophy to say how various apearances are related to the affections of the objects we perceive; rather it requires the technical methods of natural philosophy. For example, to avoid being deceived by the broken visual appearance of an oar half in water, we need to find the physical cause of the appearance. This will show that the visual appearance is correct. — SEP, Primary and Secondary Qualities
On this view our thoughts stand to things in the same relation as models to the objects they represent ~ Bolzmann. — 013zen
Witt himself says: — 013zen
“... I think there is some truth in my idea that I really only think reproductively. I don’t believe I have ever invented a line of thinking, I have always taken one over from someone else.........................What I invent are new similes”.
So there must be more to Wittgenstein than he says of himself — RussellA
Monet's originality was not in the marks he made but in the relationship between the marks he made. Similarly, as with a simile, the originality is in the comparison between two things, not the things themselves. — RussellA
So we know Wittgenstein may well have borrowed ideas from both the empiricist and metaphysician, but where in the Tractatus is hidden his unique insight into the relationship between the empiricist and the metaphysical? — RussellA
I do wonder what if anything Witt can tell us today - even if I am correct that he did have something relevant to say to his contemporaries. — 013zen
Once I am able to metaphorically picture a voltage as a pressure, the metaphor becomes redundant. in that I now understand voltage as pressure. Not that voltage is like a pressure but rather voltage is a pressure. For Wittgenstein, the ladder is the metaphor, and can be thrown away as redundant once it has enabled understanding.My propositions serve as elucidations in the following way: anyone who understands me eventually recognize them as nonsensical, when he has used them - as steps - to climb up beyond them (He must, so to speak, throw away the ladder after he has climbed p it)
Once I am able to metaphorically picture a voltage as a pressure, the metaphor becomes redundant. in that I now understand voltage as pressure. Not that voltage is like a pressure but rather voltage is a pressure. — RussellA
Isn't this proposal subject to criticisms of 'correspondence theory of truth'? — Wayfarer
Taking the above into account, certain concepts may be helpful in working through the Tractatus. — RussellA
"Voltage is the pressure from an electrical circuit's power source that pushes charged electrons (current) through a conducting loop, enabling them to do work such as illuminating a light. In brief, voltage = pressure, and it is measured in volts" (www.fluke.com) - in what sense does voltage = pressure. — RussellA
In the Merriam Webster dictionary, the word "pressure" has several meanings, including "the action of a force against an opposing force" and "voltage" as "potential difference expressed in volts". — RussellA
However, this then takes us to Donald Davidson and his article What Metaphors Mean, where he argues that metaphors mean what their words literally mean and that there is no hidden metaphorical meaning. — RussellA
I want to talk about the mechanist, picture theory of meaning. — Shawn
This is where the picture theory of meaning, simply can't zoom out and broaden its scope to account for new parts of the whole to describe. — Shawn
Could you be more clear? :sweat: I am only somewhat familiar with the mechanist theory as it pertains to folks like Descartes and the revival of early atomism...but you say picture theory of meaning. — 013zen
In what sense? — 013zen
1) (Donald Davidson and his article What Metaphors Mean)...........I take it he means only in scientific applications, yes? Either way, I personally find this view unintelligible at face value. 2) A voltage is quite literally, not a pressure. 3) We seem to have a simile of sorts, based on the definition; but the definition merely reports usage. — 013zen
2.12 "A picture is a model of reality"
3 "A logical picture of facts is a thought."
4.12 "Propositions can represent the whole of reality, but they cannot represent what they must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it – logical form"
4.001 - "The totality of propositions is language."
4 "A thought is a proposition with a sense."
2.021 "Objects make up the substance of the world".
7 "What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence".
4.1272 The same applies to the words complex, fact, function, number, etc. They all signify formal concepts.
4.126 ..............I introduce this expression in order to exhibit the source of the confusion between formal concepts and concepts proper.............
2.12 "A picture is a model of reality"
Yes, if the modeling, which logical positivists were interested in, is about a true state of affairs (facts), then how can they account for complex relationships where differing parts of mechanisms render a theory or scientific discovery as true? — Shawn
I believe, in the sense that if one were to try (like many scientists do) and encompass a theory to be explanatory for the whole frame, then I believe that picturing relations in the atomistic sense is something that can't attempt to do. — Shawn
I don't see the problem. A reality made up of objects is always already a linguistically mediated or interpreted reality. — Janus
But was that even addressed by Witt? — schopenhauer1
No, because that was not the purpose the Tractatus. The Tractatus was addressing a specific problem, not trying to explain every aspect of language. — RussellA
But was that even addressed by Witt? — schopenhauer1
Well, he did say that the world is the totality of facts not of things. — Janus
Facts are not debatable, whether or not something is a fact may be debatable. — Janus
Let me ask you, are there many philosophies that would advocate that the world is composed of false states of affairs? — schopenhauer1
There are no "false states of affairs", there are only states of affairs. — Janus
I think Wittgenstein's statement shows a kind of relational 'process' view of the nature of the world rather than a 'substance' or essentialist view. — Janus
I am wondering if this is just Janustein or Wittgenstein though.. — schopenhauer1
It was not addressed by Witt, but it SHOULD HAVE if his goal was to show how propositional logic allows for mapping onto reality due to selecting out true states of affairs; the MECHANISM for doing so must be EXPLAINED. — schopenhauer1
Scientific modelling, the generation of a physical, conceptual, or mathematical representation of a real phenomenon that is difficult to observe directly. Scientific models are used to explain and predict the behaviour of real objects or systems and are used in a variety of scientific disciplines, ranging from physics and chemistry to ecology and the Earth sciences.
and as a model the Picture Theory does not need to be justified by a mechanism.2.12 "A picture is a model of reality"
6.3751 For example, the simultaneous of two colours at the same place in the visual field is impossible, in fact logically impossible, since it is ruled out by the logical structure of colour.
4.1212 What can be shown cannot be said
There is nothing wrong in making an assertion and not justifying it by a mechanism, which, after all, is the basis of scientific modelling. From Britannica Scientific Modelling — RussellA
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