I've seen the word "subsist" to refer to the referent of the first statement. So, chairs exists and numbers subsist? Is that a common understanding? — Art48
So, then, if the first even prime greater than 100 didn't exist I couldn't be writing about it? — Art48
(First) the number 2 (Second) the first even prime greater than 100...The second statement refers to something which, I think we all agree, doesn't exist. — Art48
Yeah "common" for philosophers, iirc, since A. Meinong¹. Simply put: existents are causally relatable to each other and subsistents (which are only instantiable via existents) are logically / grammatically relatable but are not causally related at all.So, chairs exist and numbers subsist? Is that a common understanding? — Art48
I have to try to find a way to word this...If numbers didn't exist, then you couldn't be writing about them, so they must exist somewhere.
— RussellA
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So, then, if the first even prime greater than 100 didn't exist I couldn't be writing about it? — Art48
I Googled "exist vs subsist" and got this link*1 to a philosophical definition. According to that authority, both "exist" and "subsist" are "modes", or mental models. But "exist" applies to our model of presumably real material objects, while ""subsist" applies to universal concepts, which are not real but ideal. For example, the Chair you are sitting in exists, but the notion of chairness, which is a mental definition of a kind of object, is merely a conventional model or "common understanding". The computer screen picture of a chair {image below}, subsists in an abstract artificial sense, but another realer mode of it may unfortunately exist in your child's room.The first statement refers to something which exists in some sense or other, even if we don't use the word "exist." I've seen the word "subsist" to refer to the referent of the first statement. So, chairs exists and numbers subsist? Is that a common understanding? — Art48
So, chairs exists and numbers subsist? Is that a common understanding? — Art48
You mean all the science fiction books are real stories? Or merely exist in the authors' minds. — jgill
So, chairs exists and numbers subsist? Is that a common understanding? — Art48
That sounds like a categorical mistake. It is not matter of real or unreal. It is matter of knowing or not knowing — Corvus
Thoughts exist, otherwise you couldn't have written your post. — RussellA
I had thoughts, but I wouldn't say the thought existed. You cannot use "exist" on the abstract concepts. — Corvus
You apply the thoughts onto the physical world i.e. typing, measuring, hammering, drilling, and driving ... etc. You have ideas how to use and manipulate the physical objects. But the ideas are in your head, not in the world.If thoughts didn't exist, then how can a thought affect the physical world, — RussellA
Folks learn to type from the early age, and typing becomes their 2nd nature.the thought of pressing the "t" key on the keyboard turns into actually pressing the "t" key on the keyboard. — RussellA
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