You want (1) not to entail (3). — Banno
Did you ask? Seems pretty straight forward. It just says that something is the justification for P. If P is justified, then something is the justification for P.I don't even know what (3) is. You won't explain it. — Michael
Sure, something might be (as yet) unjustified and yet could be justified. In which case, since it could be justified, there is something which counts as it's justification.As it stands, my position is simple: (1) is true and (2) is false. And that's it. — Michael
So far so good. Then you go off on a mystical tangent, and try to drag physics along with you. For me that's an unjustified overextension.the mind is not yours or mine. We are all part of a community of minds - biological, cultural and linguistic. Consciousness in that sense is collective. — Wayfarer
Consciousness in that sense is collective. — Wayfarer
The fourth thing, albeit directed at Janus, is that it is not obviously wrong. — Michael
Then you go off on a mystical tangent, and try to drag physics along with you. For me that's an unjustified overextension. — Banno
A limping authority that derives from pop physics. — Banno
But one may be an empirical, without being a metaphysical, realist. — Wayfarer
I maintain that there is stuff that is true even if we don't know, believe, or whatever, that it is true. — Banno
But the instant I ask the question 'what stuff do you mean?' or 'what do you have in mind?' then your argument is lost... — Wayfarer
Plainly - I don't even know most of the people in my street. — Wayfarer
you already agreed that there is stuff you don't know — Banno
I am not arguing that it means that ‘the world is all in the mind’. It’s rather that, whatever judgements are made about the world, the mind provides the framework within which such judgements are meaningful. So though we know that prior to the evolution of life there must have been a Universe with no intelligent beings in it, or that there are empty rooms with no inhabitants, or objects unseen by any eye — the existence of all such supposedly unseen realities still relies on an implicit perspective. What their existence might be outside of any perspective is meaningless and unintelligible, as a matter of both fact and principle. — Wayfarer
Remember when we went for a walk?the existence of all such supposedly unseen realities still relies on an implicit perspective. — Wayfarer
It's not the existence of such "unseen realities" that relies on a perspective. — Banno
What their existence might be outside of any perspective is meaningless and unintelligible, as a matter of both fact and principle. — Wayfarer
Physics has demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that the purported fundamental constituents of material reality do not have a meaningful existence outside the act of measurement which specifies them. — Wayfarer
it certainly does not follow that they have no existence outside of our measurements — Janus
when it comes to the existence of any object, we will intuitively say, “well, the object is there, but we can’t know where it is, until we locate it or measure it. Isn’t that obvious?” But this is precisely what the pioneers of quantum physics called into question. And bear in mind, the objects in question had, up until then, been presumed to be the “fundamental building blocks of reality”! But in quantum physics, the answer to the question, “where is the object?” can only be given as an approximation, described by the wavefunction equation, ψ. There is no definite thing at a definite location until it hits the screen and leaves a mark —until that point, there is only a hazy range of possibilities. But as noted above, the act of observation seems to condense the hazy wave into a definite entity. This is the mysterious “wavefunction collapse”. What exists before, or apart from, that observation is the central mystery. It’s like Lewis Carroll’s Chesire Cat, which vanishes leaving only its grin.
Whatever 'particles' are, they are not defineable until they are measured. — Wayfarer
A little ambitious. You jump from that to there being a mind to do the "measurement", which is not justified. "Measurement" is a loaded term.Physics has demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that the purported fundamental constituents of material reality do not have a meaningful existence outside the act of measurement which specifies them. — Wayfarer
And yet they do not doubt that there are things that provide that data.Cognitive science understands that what we construe as objects comprise a synthesis of sensory data and judgement — Wayfarer
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