Fine. I'd say instead that it's a way of talking consistently about the stuff around us. That strikes me as less mystical. That is, maths fits the world becasue we built ( or chose, if you prefer) it to do so. Simple."Tegmark's MUH is the hypothesis that our external physical reality is a mathematical structure — frank
You want to say that all truth is constructed, but that we can't make claims about what it is constructed from. — Banno
Yes, only minds can know things. However, it doesn't seem to be a necessary truth that there can be knowledge without minds. The opposite - that there can't be any knoweldge without any minds - seems to be a necessary truth. By contrast, it does seem to be a necessary truth that if something exists, then it is true that it exists. It's that apparent self-evident truth of reason that seems inconsistent with the conclusion that truth depends on minds. And so it is that apparent self-evident truth of reason that ideally needs to be debunked, for otherwise the thesis that truth depends on minds at least appears to be false — Clearbury
You are not in freefall... that's were the argumentum ad lapidem fits. You can believe anything, but there are restrictions on what works.Fair. In Buddhist philosophy, it is not constructed from an underlying something. — Wayfarer
To shut up and calculate, then, recognises that there are limits to our pathways for understanding. Our only option as scientists is to look, predict and test. This might not be as glamorous an offering as the interpretations we can construct in our minds, but it is the royal road to real knowledge. — Timothy Andersen
I would say instead:If all life disappeared from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed, then there would still be gold in Boorara. — Janus
With your statement about the gold in Boorara you have with our condition "if everything else is undisturbed" guaranteed that it is true that there will be gold. — Janus
Apparently the relationship between truth and actuality is a weird and tricky business. — Janus
that much the same can be said in modern physics, which doesn't tell us about what nature is, but only how nature responds to our methods of questioning. — Wayfarer
...the mysterious, indeed inexplicable disappearance of the foxes. Hmm.This was of course pointed out to Banno. — Leontiskos
Yep. — Leontiskos
But isn't the fundamental problem or challenge that all of this speaks to the fact that it appears possible for propositions to be true in the absence of any minds, which is inconsistent with the idea that truth requires minds? — Clearbury
Do you think that, that there is gold in the ground at Boorara is dependent on there being someone around who knows or sees or believes that there is gold at Boorara? Or do you think that there will be gold in the ground at Boorara despite anyone knowing or seeing or believing it? — Banno
But in any case, our usual way of speaking about it suffices. So, pedantic concerns aside, does it really matter whether it is said that when humans disappear it will still be true that there is gold or that when humans disappear there will still be gold? Surely the salient point is that there will still be gold. — Janus
In all honesty, I don't see what it is you are attempting to say here. It just looks confused.This is basically the original error coming up again: conflating the presence of perceptions or beliefs with the existence of minds. One need not say that truth exists where there are no minds in order to say that a ball continues to roll when you look away from it. — Leontiskos
There may be gold in the hills, even if no one knows. — Banno
One need not say that truth exists where there are no minds in order to say that a ball continues to roll when you look away from it. — Leontiskos
This is the same point we debated in the mind-created world thread, about the objective properties of boulders. — Wayfarer
We can't really know whether an unseen object exists or not... — Wayfarer
The key issue is not whether unseen objects exist but whether their existence can be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind. That is where metaphysical realism and idealism differ. The former assumes that unseen objects exist in a way that is entirely independent of any observer or consciousness - although that is a presumption. Idealism emphasizes that to consider or speak of existence, we must already bring mind to bear on it. — Wayfarer
There is no meaningful way to discuss the reality of the unseen object without that framework. — Wayfarer
Imagine that all life has vanished from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed. Matter is scattered about in space in the same way as it is now, there is sunlight, there are stars, planets and galaxies—but all of it is unseen. There is no human or animal eye to cast a glance at objects, hence nothing is discerned, recognized or even noticed. Objects in the unobserved universe have no shape, color or individual appearance, because shape and appearance are created by minds. Nor do they have features, because features correspond to categories of animal sensation. This is the way the early universe was before the emergence of life—and the way the present universe is outside the view of any observer.
andSo the gold at the new Boorara gold project near Kalgoorlie in Western Australia was there before it was discovered. It did not come into existence at the discovery. — Banno
Imagine that all life has vanished from the universe, but everything else is undisturbed.
Then there would still be gold in Boorara. It would be true that there was gold in Boorara. — Banno
And here, we are discussing the reality of unseen objects, against the claim you made above.
I can't see how you could intelligibly disagree. — Banno
Objects in the unobserved universe have no shape, color or individual appearance, because shape and appearance are created by minds.
It strikes me as uncontroversial that existence cannot "be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind." — Leontiskos
It strikes me as uncontroversial that existence cannot "be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind."
— Leontiskos
That I take as the point at issue. — Wayfarer
You guys seem not to understand the difference between affirming that something is true and it's being true. — Banno
That I take as the point at issue. — Wayfarer
This is the bit where you fabricate rather than read.So you are saying that a world without any minds still has truths, just not affirmations? — Leontiskos
In that case you would claim that <existence cannot be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind>, which does not seem like something you would say. — Leontiskos
As a classical theist I don't think things do exist in the absence of any minds (and particularly in the absence of the mind of God). I think the truth of creation is bound up in its intelligibility, which flows from its creator.
The atheist perhaps wants to say that truth emerges with the emergence of minds and disappears with the disappearance of minds, such that mind is accidental vis-a-vis the natural, as is truth. — Leontiskos
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