I think where a deflationist who also enjoys the functionalist paradigm above would disagree with a functionalist simpliciter is whether metaphysical {and maybe even epistemological} questions can only concern specific instances of the mapping between true behaviours and our descriptions. In effect, they disagree on whether the only salient questions about objects and concepts are of the modelling form. Which is roughly describing how things work, or describing {how describing things work} works. — fdrake
And sortals were my logico-linguistic way of getting at [being/essence]. — Srap Tasmaner
We don't talk this way much anymore. There was a time when "essence" was tidied up as "necessary and sufficient conditions" for ― for what? For truthfully applying a predicate, mostly. Being is scrunched down into the copula, and all that's left is being a value of a bound variable. — Srap Tasmaner
If your model quantifies over ducks, you're committed to ducks as entities, no cheating. — Srap Tasmaner
But the anti-metaphysics comes by flipping that around: ducks are entities just means you have a model in which you quantify over them. That implies "duck" has what amounts to a functionalist definition: what role ducks play in the model, how the duck nodes behave, interact with other nodes, and so on. — Srap Tasmaner
And if that's the case, it provides a kind of justification for functionalist philosophy: we know this will work because we're just doing the same sort of thing the world is already doing. — Srap Tasmaner
Oh yeah, really far. Most ordinary people aren't going to notice that the only consistent way to do this is, like Isaac, to treat the universe as behavior all the way down, never bottoming out at some thing it's the behavior of. — Srap Tasmaner
Ralph and Sam, striding through philosophy with their functionalist hammers for years, and one day Ralph says, "Hey Sam. You ever notice that the world is full of nails? That there's nothing but nails? That's funny, isn't it?"
That's the sentiment behind this thread. — Srap Tasmaner
The idea is that, contrary to "behaviorism," nouns are not dispensable. — Leontiskos
Reminds me of this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object-oriented_ontology#Withdrawal — schopenhauer1
First, going back to what I said to ↪fdrake, "But activity is only half the picture. The other half is receptivity..."
Will it be sufficient to know how ducks behave? I don't think so. I think one will also need to know how ducks respond to the behavior of other things, such as the fox that eats duck (including how it responds to having its neck broken and being digested). And one will also need to understand not only the internal proportion of duck "behaviors," but also the principles, causes, and explanations of the behaviors, which dictate the manner in which different kinds of behaviors interact (as well as the proportions and interactions between these powers).
I suppose if we stretch the word "behavior" quite far, such that it includes everything about a duck, then there can be no difference between behavior and being - no 'being' of the duck that is not captured by its behavior.
but those aren't waters I've swum in.
Say the scientist is talking about convergent evolution where mammals and fish
We don't talk this way much anymore. There was a time when "essence" was tidied up as "necessary and sufficient conditions" for ― for what? For truthfully applying a predicate, mostly. Being is scrunched down into the copula, and all that's left is being a value of a bound variable.
Supposing we want to play the game of finding the "next of kin" to the OP, I would look to metaphysical or mereological bundle theory, not process philosophy. Process thought does provide an alternative to substance metaphysics, but it is historically and metaphysically thick in a way that the modeling approach is not, and I don't think it has received much attention in the Anglophone world apart from religious philosophers.
Real objects withdraw for OOO, but sensual objects don't. Sensual objects, unlike real objects, have direct access to each other.
... and with that, I'm out of this Thread. — Arcane Sandwich
Well, you can talk about the "behavior" of the species' genes in response to various tests, etc. However, note that such a view will tend to dissolve any notion of species in the first place. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You seem to be saying that the deflationist and the functionalist (or "behaviorist") occupy the same position, but the former occupies it dogmatically and the latter occupies it tentatively. — Leontiskos
Right. For instance, when we see a sleeping tiger it is still "behaving" in how it interacts with the ambient environment, light bouncing off its body, etc. However, there is a serious problem for the functionalism mentioned by ↪fdrake and ↪Srap Tasmaner as a "universal solvent," how exactly do you decide where different being start and end? Everything is just a heap of behaviors. Are all our groupings of them into beings and entities ultimately arbitrary? They certainly don't seem arbitrary. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, this is the old problem of the One and the Many — Count Timothy von Icarus
You are probably correct here. I thought of process metaphysics because I like it much more. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Now, the deflationist might say: "hey, no worries, we just pragmatically decide where different substances start and end." Now, this might very well be what you do in some cases, based on practical concerns, but this seems pretty weak as a philosophy (not to mention totally at odds with common sense and how science, with all its focus on classifications, is actually done) . For one, it leaves you with no grounds for deciding how the sciences should be organized, because now there is no per se predication and no essential identities. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The idea is that, contrary to "behaviorism," nouns are not dispensable. — Leontiskos
Nah. I see myself in the functionalist camp, and see the modelling thing I mentioned as how I approach metaphysical stuff. Being able to talk about whether it's up to the task of metaphysics, I think, is something that distinguishes the thread's deflationist stereotype from non-deflationists.
It could very well be that there are ways of asking questions about being, or finding things out about it, or structures of knowledge, which don't resemble anything like the structure I've outlined. There might be questions which that schema can't handle even in principle. I suspect that there are, even. — fdrake
Near as I can tell, the point of all of this is to be able to say that everything is an assemblage; that is, to flatten the ontology of the world. Why do that? — Srap Tasmaner
that is, to flatten the ontology of the world. Why do that? — Srap Tasmaner
In particular, if you're committed to saving the appearances, what makes this an explanatory framework like science (which it really seems to want to be), rather than just a change in vocabulary? — Srap Tasmaner
like science (which it really seems to want to be) — Srap Tasmaner
What does it mean for two processes to together constitute a function? Versus what does it mean for two simples to constitute a whole? — fdrake
few people have gone down an assemblage theory rabbit hole — fdrake
Near as I can tell, the point of all of this is to be able to say that everything is an assemblage; that is, to flatten the ontology of the world. Why do that? — Srap Tasmaner
Why do that? — Srap Tasmaner
Everyone knows roughly what a process is — fdrake
Though I am biased, I absolutely love the filth of things. — fdrake
a flat ontology and its bizarre tangled networks starts to make more sense — fdrake
Cry havoc. — fdrake
I think the point of it is to promote some styles of description and disincentivise others. — fdrake
for a set of problems — fdrake
if we stretch the word "behavior" quite far — Leontiskos
Oh yeah, really far. — Srap Tasmaner
I imagine you don't need assemblages as a vocabulary to do work like the above. No physical scientist or mathematician I've met has cared about or even been aware of assemblage theory. Social scientists are sometimes though. So why use it? — fdrake
A pre-given whole necessarily subjects all agents and relationships to the effects of its unity. — Number2018
A pre-given whole necessarily subjects all agents and relationships to the effects of its unity.
— Number2018
What are the effects of its unity? — frank
There's an interesting idea that the relationship between the parts and whole can be an unfolding evolution, like the way each of the words in this sentence takes on meaning relative to the purpose of the whole, but the sentence rolls on without restrictions beyond the imperative to make some kind of sense, and even the author may not know how it ends until it does. Sentences that are used to try to convey this idea are usually long and drawn out — frank
Yes, it is interesting. Deleuze developed the concept of an open whole. It refers to a dynamic and ever-evolving whole, where the parts are interconnected in a "rhizomatic" manner. The free and continuous interaction of various processes drives the unfolding of their relationships. This approach eliminates the need for an external, transcendent organizing principle, suggesting that the system's organization emerges from within. — Number2018
The assemblage theory helps to emphasize a social entity's contingent and constructivist nature. It allows us to conceive of it not as a unified whole governed by a single determinative principle. — Number2018
I think classical approaches to this grant that there is a primary register of beings - like a substance, or god, or idea, and try to show how everything else is a mode of that's elements. Which for me is a similar move to the above, holding one entity set constant so another can emerge upon it. Only I think this applies to disparate entities of different types rather than whole regimes. Rather than all arising from one type of entity, consider something like: a body eating a cyanide pill erases a human mind from existence, causing grief in that person's loved ones, through inhibition of a cellular process. That's a death. It implicates natural, social, metaphysical and perhaps even spiritual orders in one event, in a manner which is not a raw juxtaposition of parts. Beings are not isolated, they clamour together. I think this speaks to @Srap Tasmaner's point about bundles of behaviour, that bundles in the map show up because the territory comes prepackaged.
This approach eliminates the need for an external, transcendent organizing principle, suggesting that the system's organization emerges from within.
Huh!? Flat ontologies are squeaky-clean. Diversity is what creates tangles. If there is only one thing "all the way down" then there are no tangles at all. — Leontiskos
The quoted bit sounds to me much more like the early-modern-period-and-on's focus on reductionism (also a trend in the pre-Socratics). I — Count Timothy von Icarus
An entity is an process with a slow rate of progression relative to a background.
Does this have to presuppose that all entities are mutable? That everything is mutable? — Count Timothy von Icarus
“say anything true about anything,” there must be at least something that “stays the same” across this ceaseless change. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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