I don’t have a problem with this view, but I am surprised you don’t...
Also, Aristotle’s description, like mine, has an interdependency on the community and the individual such that there is a need for “redress in private transactions” and “the distribution of honor, wealth, etc.” — Bob Ross
...which was my point before: — Bob Ross
Here's what I am thinking. Justice is about, fundamentally, respecting other members of the community (or social structure in which one is a member, such as a family for example) such that each member is getting what they rightly deserve and not getting what they do not deserve. — Bob Ross
This definition is also not found in the Webster dictionary, which you used as a critique of mine. — Bob Ross
However, in terms of what you would call “distributive justice”, it seems like if the community, e.g., has an abundance of water then they shouldn’t hoard it for the ruling elite—that would be unjust.
Moreover, this “distributive justice” seems connected still to what one is ‘owed’. Viz., it is only unjust for the community to hoard the abundance of water because they have duties, as the community, which include properly distributing resources—so that is owed to the individual in a sense. — Bob Ross
That’s fair: negative rights a lot easier to uphold than positive ones; but I think we both agree we have positive rights. Take the water example: if you were denied any water simply because the government didn’t want to give it to you (perhaps they want to use that water for a water slide party for the ruling elites) even though you are doing your duly fair share of work in society—which we could think of it in terms of you having the money to pay for the water bill—then that is unjust because you have a positive right to the water. — Bob Ross
I think the trouble comes in, as you rightly pointed out, when we think of positive rights just like negative ones. E.g., when we think of our right life like our right to have water when it isn’t being distributed fairly. This ends up conflating the right which can never be breached with a straw man version of the “water right” such that one thinks that the government is required to give them water simpliciter. That’s not what we are saying here. — Bob Ross
Yes, it's not a very exciting result when applied to things like rabbits, because, as has been said, we can be pretty damn confident. — J
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
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
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. Which is why you might be right, @Count Timothy von Icarus, that this falls into the tradition of process philosophy. — Srap Tasmaner
A second important issue in contemporary discussions of substance is whether substances are in some sense reducible to their properties, or whether there exists some further component, such as Locke’s notion of a substratum discussed in section 2.5. Both views have been defended in recent discussions. — Bundle theories versus substrata and “thin particulars” | SEP
And note that the impeachment charge was of lying under oath, not being unfaithful in marriage. — ssu
I dunno about that one. — Darkneos
One of the differences is the very fact that the philosophy of language does not represent the first philosophy of Aristotle. In fact, it doesn’t even come close. Language is, first and foremost, a tool for understanding. Our philosophy of language is always going to be secondary to the metaphysical, logical, and epistemological perspectives that underlie it. The philosophy of language will presuppose the purpose of language itself. Rather than constituting the raw material of thought, language is both separable from thought and separable from corresponding entities. The proper use of language consists of using it to get things right about the world as it exists independently of us and our attempts to describe it. — What did Aristotle say about Meaning and Language?
A small nitpick; individualism inherently is about the relation between states and citizens. In my view, the type of problems in the OP have more to do with a cultural trend of extreme liberalism, perhaps even nihilism, and the resulting atomization. — Tzeentch
While individualism seduces us with promises of freedom and self-definition, it often breeds insecurity in a world stripped of clear anchors. — Benkei
I got those from After Virtue by MacIntyre — Bob Ross
I find it plausible that justice requires a balance between A and B types of justice because they are the two extremes in a community: the one, to wit, the proper assessment of individual merit and the other, to wit, the proper assessment of natures (of members). One focuses only on the individual in terms of agency, and the other solely on the needs of each member. — Bob Ross
How would you define justice, then? — Bob Ross
But of justice as a part of virtue, and of that which is just in the corresponding sense, one kind is that which has to do with the distribution of honour, wealth, and the other things that are divided among the members of the body politic (for in these circumstances it is possible for one man’s share to be unfair or fair as compared with another’s); and another kind is that which has to give redress in private transactions. — Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, V.2
if the community has the resources to suffice the basic needs of each member than it should — Bob Ross
This is probably the kernel of the strangeness in your thought. This conception of justice finds no basis anywhere in the Merriam Webster definitions above. "If you can do X then you are required to do so in justice." That is a very strange claim to my ears. — Leontiskos
Do you deny any circumstantial aspects to justice? — Bob Ross
...and this is why justice was classically concerned primarily with "negative rights." — Leontiskos
If you were too young to remember, the Clinton administration looked to go from scandal to scandal, had even an impeachment, and had dedicated Clinton-haters in the GOP (just as people in the dems really don't like Trump). Only on a broader perspective what the actions, policies and achievements of the Clinton administration can be seen, apart from sperm on Monica's dress. — ssu
According to Laclau, collective political identities are forged through particular discursive articulation. Under normal conditions, social demands take the form of rational, contextually situated requests, implicitly assuming the legitimacy of governing institutions and their capacity to address them. However, when a plurality of isolated demands goes unmet, they can coalesce into a unified opposition to power, rejecting its authority. — Number2018
What do models model exactly? It's not a hard question; the answer is behavior. — Srap Tasmaner
Much as I've enjoyed building models over the years, I'm a little uncomfortable that the approach I'm describing has a sort of blindness. Whenever a question is raised about what something is, it is immediately rewritten as a question about how that thing behaves, so that we can get started modelling that bundle of behavior.
Maybe that's genuinely the best way to go, and good riddance to questions of being, as the deflationist would have it. — Srap Tasmaner
This is a spin-off from the anti-realism thread — Srap Tasmaner
For the deflationary style, this is the point. In the model-building style, being just disappears, and whenever you reach for it you find more behavior to incorporate into the model. But for the deflationist, ruling out the issue of being is the first move. Model-builders lose track of being; deflationists flee it and end up with behavior. — Srap Tasmaner
Much as I've enjoyed building models over the years, I'm a little uncomfortable that the approach I'm describing has a sort of blindness. Whenever a question is raised about what something is, it is immediately rewritten as a question about how that thing behaves, so that we can get started modelling that bundle of behavior. — Srap Tasmaner
Yes, truth in the intellect is most properly truth. How does it follow then that truth in arrangements of stipulated signs or formal systems, which are artifacts is also primarily truth? Aquinas speaks specifically of truth in the sense that people's words (or products of the productive arts) are adequate to their intellect for instance. This is not the same thing as truth-as-adequacy-of-intellect-to-being. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Whence I say that “true” is said primarily of the truth of the intellect, and of the statement insofar as it is a sign of that truth, whereas it is said of the real thing insofar as it is the cause of truth. — Aquinas, I Sent. d. 19, q. 5, a. 1
I don't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Truth is predicated analogously when we are moving in and out of the intellect, from the intellect to things — Count Timothy von Icarus
...from the intellect to stipulated sign systems, etc. The ambiguity surrounding the truth value propositions such as: "the room is dark" is a result of the fact that the truth of a utterance is not the same as the truth of the intellect.
...
our words are merely signs of truth in the intellect — Count Timothy von Icarus
Spoken words then are symbols of affections of the soul, and written words are symbols of spoken words. And just as written letters are not the same for all humans, neither are spoken words. But what these primarily are, are signs of the affections of the soul, are the same for all, as also are those things of which our affections are likenesses. — Aristotle, Beginning of De Interpretatione
I've said that one might predicate "health" of different species univocally. I said the relationship is analogical. If it weren't, then there must be a single measure by which all healthy things are healthy. Yet the measure of a healthy flower is a healthy flower, and the measure of a healthy tiger a healthy tiger, not a sort of Platonic health participated in by all healthy things. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Is your contention that beauty is said univocally of Beethoven and horses? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Analogy isn't only involved in theology, except in later deflations of the notion. But I think the larger issue is that truth is predicated primarily of the divine intellect, not of all intellects. The proper measure of the human intellect is things. Thomas explains what it would mean to deny this; we end up with Protagoras, the human intellect becomes the measure of truth. — Count Timothy von Icarus
IMO, if one cuts out the divine intellect it would be better to describe truth as existing first in things virtually, as time exists in nature fundamentally but not actually for Aristotle and St. Thomas. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I answer that, of the things that are signified by names, one finds three differences. For there are some that are outside the soul according to their whole complete existence; and things of this sort are complete beings, like a man and a stone. But there are some that have nothing outside the soul, like dreams and the imagining of a chimera. However, there are some that have a foundation in a real thing outside the soul, but the completion of their account, as regards that which is formal, is through the activity of the soul, as is clear in the universal. For humanity is something in reality, yet there it does not have the account of the universal, since there is not any humanity common to many outside the soul. Rather, insofar as it is received in the intellect, there is joined to it, through the activity of the intellect, an intention according to which it is called a “species.” And the like is so for time, which has a foundation in motion—that is, the prior and the posterior of the motion itself—but as regards what is formal in time—that is, the numbering—it is completed through the activity of the intellect numbering it. — Aquinas, I Sent. d. 19, q. 5, a. 1
Indeed, it moves towards knowledge (and so truth) by moving from the multiplicity in the senses towards unity. — Count Timothy von Icarus
No it does not, since my table is arguable a rigid designator in the Kripean sense. I don't think it is, but you could in principle argue... — Arcane Sandwich
These are all options, mate. — Arcane Sandwich
And the Merriam Webster Dictionary definition of the common noun "table" makes no reference to my table, the one in my living room, so how could it describe it? — Arcane Sandwich
Or you can just quote the definition of the word "indescribable", as the Merriam Webster Dictionary defines that word. — Arcane Sandwich
Let's revisit both A and B conceptions of Justice — Bob Ross
Here's what I am thinking. Justice is about, fundamentally, respecting other members of the community (or social structure in which one is a member, such as a family for example) such that each member is getting what they rightly deserve and not getting what they do not deserve. — Bob Ross
if the community has the resources to suffice the basic needs of each member than it should — Bob Ross
In terms of my example of the self-sufficient man, I think you are right: it would be a matter of beneficence and benevolence and not justice. — Bob Ross
Same thing, I think, with things like animal cruelty. Beyond the injustice which would arise from violating a person's property by torturing or killing their pet, it is not something, even outside the purview of justice, that a virtuous person would do because they need to be benevolent and beneficent. — Bob Ross
My table is in some way indescribable or inexpressible, because I cannot describe it forever. At some point, I will die. The table will still exist. At some point, humanity will become extinct. Tables will still exist, at least for some time. No one will be alive to describe them. — Arcane Sandwich
And the noun "table" does not literally describe my table — Arcane Sandwich
And the Merriam Webster Dictionary definition of the common noun "table" makes no reference to my table, the one in my living room, so how could it describe it? — Arcane Sandwich
It can't, therefore my table, the one that's in my living room, is indescribable by definition — Arcane Sandwich
"Indescribable". I claim that my table is "indescribable", and by that I mean, whatever the Merriam Webster Dictionary defines as "indescribable".
The example of my table still stands, Leontiskos — Arcane Sandwich
If you disagree with me on these two points, then I kindly ask you to define, for the purpose of this conversation, what the word "inexpressible" literally means, and I would like a credible source for the definition of that word. — Arcane Sandwich
not capable of being expressed : indescribable — Inexpressible Definition | Merriam Webster
my table is not expressible. It's literally inexpressible. It cannot express anything by itself (because it's an inorganic object), and I cannot express it (because I cannot speak for it, since it's an inorganic object). — Arcane Sandwich
OK, the challenge is to come up with something that is both a) inexpressible, and b) whose inexpressibility can be explained. — J
But if something can't be said, it might be important to say why and surely philosophy has a role to play there. — Wayfarer
If something is inexpressible, then by that very fact one cannot say why... Doing so would be to give expression to the inexpressible. — Banno
What can't be said can't be said, and it can't be whistled either. — Frank Ramsey as quoted in Nagel's The Last Word
Arguments [...] based on personal experience are arguments to the best hypothesis. — J
I think I avoided this. I claimed that we assess mind independence - it is something we can establish. Like we'd establish that there are eggs in my supermarket. I'm claiming it's the same flavour of fact as the others. You can tell if something will be there when humanity won't be, or alternatively when its nature is not exhausted by our collective norms. — fdrake
So I actually agree with this. But in a manner where I think perception is implicated in custom and vice versa. — fdrake
I don't quite agree with this. Because I don't think any of the languages we care about and use are inattentive to perception and the nature of the world. — fdrake
Perception's a constructive endeavour, so's language use, and "giving and receiving" {if I've read you right} get their distinction undermined. Like in the dance example, every giving is a receiving and vice versa, and "what is given" and "what is received" are the same flavour of thing. Acts and events. — fdrake
Edit: I now see that I am oversimplifying your position a bit, but even the phrase that "Correctness leverages," strikes me as overly activistic in a metaphorical sense. To say that we leverage mind independence feels strange to me. Or is it "correctness" that leverages it? Either way, to recognize, accept, or receive the fact of mind independence is different than leveraging. It can be leveraged, but that is only one approach. — Leontiskos
If you're interested in the myth of the given, it's a notoriously difficult argument, and would probably be worth its own thread. — fdrake
As a summary before I respond in detail: the world isn't true or false, it's just the world. Which means that true or false concerns our statements about it, and the world. Claiming that something is true correctly is just to correctly claim that something is true. That's about how I see it. — fdrake
We're in a really odd position with the truth... — fdrake
I claim that this is only a puzzle if you come at it from the perspective that people cannot and do not assess mind-independence as part of what we do. But we do that all the time. The acts of assertion and assessment which are implicated in the norms of correct assertion don't change the state of the world, and the knowledge that it doesn't - and that we treat the world as if it doesn't - is leveraged in the execution of those norms. Correctness leverages mind independence and intersubjectivity as concepts, and it does those things because the state of things and the community at large do not depend upon any individuals' views of it. And the norms do not depend decisively upon any individuals use or views of them. — fdrake
When I was a kid, we used to set the table for dinner, always the same way: on the left, fork, sitting on a paper napkin, on the right, knife and spoon, in that order, dinner plate in between, and all on a placemat. That was our custom. There's logic to it, but it could clearly be done other ways, and was done differently in other homes. There's also a more general norm here, of which we had a specific version, of having silverware for everyone on the table. That too has a logic to it, but needn't be done, much less done this way.
And we could keep going, with more and more general norms that underlie specific ones. But is eating -- rather than eating specific things in specific ways at specific times of day -- is that "just" a norm? — Srap Tasmaner
I think a weakness in my view above concerns the content of acts of language. Because I've spent a long time talking about norms and correct assertion without engaging in a perhaps necessary metaphysical task. Trying to account for the commonality in our truth-speaking practices, and indeed in our acts. People eat. People entering a home agree upon object locations and object boundaries. There's a stability of content in the world itself which is somehow aperspectival. People can only disagree so much when we inhabit the same system of norms and environments - things fall down when dropped. — fdrake
How do environmental developments place constraints on norms of language use? I think the only answer I've got available for that is that event sequences can already be patterns. But that doesn't specify the relationship of pattern content with coordinating norms regarding that pattern. — fdrake
I got to set up the underlying pattern because it was just maths. The world's far more unwieldy. — fdrake
I claim that this is only a puzzle if you come at it from the perspective that people cannot and do not assess mind-independence as part of what we do. — fdrake
(1) The first being that justice can be viewed in two seemingly irreconcilable ways (and this reminded me of After Virue by MacIntyre, as he outlined in well in there): (A) in terms of some account of what and how a given person is entitled to in virtue of what they have legitimately acquired and earned, or (B) in terms of some account of the equality of the claims of each person in respect of basic needs and of the means to meet such needs. (2) The second being that moral naturalism doesn't seem to afford any notion of selfless justice whatsoever; instead, the only kind of naturalistic justice seems to be the need to socialize. — Bob Ross
But of justice as a part of virtue, and of that which is just in the corresponding sense, one kind is that which has to do with the distribution of honour, wealth, and the other things that are divided among the members of the body politic (for in these circumstances it is possible for one man’s share to be unfair or fair as compared with another’s); and another kind is that which has to give redress in private transactions. — Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, V.2
With respect to #1, it seems like your view of justice is squarely, although I don't want to put words in your mouth, A. Whereas, my attempted rebuttals invoke a sense of B; hence the disagreement. I am not so sure now if Justice is like A, B, or some sublated version I haven't thought of yet. — Bob Ross
Let me outline a basic example so that we are all on the same page. Imagine you are completely self-sufficient living up in the mountains; viz., you are able to live off of the land, which is no one else's property, and need absolutely no social interactions between people to realize your own good (e.g., perhaps you are a bit anti-social). You come across an injured person in the woods, in need of desperate help. The question is twofold:
(C) Do you have any natural duty to help them?
(D) Would not helping them be an act of natural injustice?
As it stands now, I can think of no reason why one would have a natural duty to them at all; nor why it would be unjust. I feel like it is unjust, but I am starting to think that is the mere result of the Christian conscience in me from my forebearers. — Bob Ross
You could reason that I've dodged the question, and substituted a particular case of counting as for the general case - but I don't know why this wouldn't be an available move to me? — fdrake
It's a giant hall of mirrors. Every time someone is going to say "true", I'm going to replace it with a behavioural concept that's jury rigged to fit just how we use the word. And then I'm going to argue that the jury rigging is also in the territory. Irritatingly for everyone involved, self included, the jury rigging will actually tend to be there, and that can restart our conflict. — fdrake
The moral of the story, I think, is that counting as a duck is neither necessary nor sufficient for being a duck. Being a duck is also not a necessary or sufficient condition for counting as a duck. But if something quacks like a duck, looks like a duck, smells like a duck... it probably is a duck. And I imagine it counts as one too. — fdrake
I realise this could have been unclear earlier. Ordinarily the conditions under which someone correctly identifies X as a duck immediately count X as a duck too. I see that {and I think Sellars sees that} as a behavioural connection rather than a logical one. If something is identified as X, it counts as X. — fdrake
The tension which I think you're picking up on is the weirdness that comes with treating counting-as as distinct from identity, even though identifying correctly is norm and theory ladened, involving standards of correctness for counting-as. I agree that this is weird. — fdrake
Is the idea here: "either something is predicated univocally 'we're up a creek without a paddle?'" — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yet, "the truths which are in things are as many as the entities of things" and "the truths said of things in comparison to the human intellect is in a certain way accidental to them because [on the supposition that there were no men] things in their essences would still remain" (Disputed Questions, Q1, A3, R) — Count Timothy von Icarus
I answer that, In one sense truth, whereby all things are true, is one, and in another sense it is not. In proof of which we must consider that when anything is predicated of many things univocally, it is found in each of them according to its proper nature; as animal is found in each species of animal.
...
If therefore we speak of truth, as it exists in the intellect, according to its proper nature, then are there many truths in many created intellects; and even in one and the same intellect, according to the number of things known. — Aquinas, ST I-16 Article 6. Whether there is only one truth, according to which all things are true?
Of course health can be predicated univocaly of all healthy organisms. However, health in each does not have the same measure. It's a One unequally realized in a Many. Just as beauty might be predicated of many beautiful things, but the beauty of Beethoven is not the beauty of a beautiful horse (this is an analogy of proper proportionality not attribution). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Note that in the passage you are quoting Thomas is referencing univocal predication as respects the way which all truth is one (in the Divine intellect) as opposed to many (unequally realized in a multitude, in Avicenna as per prior and posterior). — Count Timothy von Icarus
That varies by the proper measure. The measure of a man is man, the measure of horse is horse. A sentence is not the proper measure of truth for everything. There is not one measure for all "created truth," except in the sense that all ultimately share an ultimate principle and cause.
Having the truth of sentences (their measure) be the same as the truth of anything and everything seems like the exact opposite of the idea in play. IMO, beliefs are not reducible to collections of sentences, but they can certainly be true or false, and seemingly more or less adequate. Models and imitations are not composed of sentences, but they can be more or less "true to life" or "true to form," etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
E.g., Q. 16 of ST
"For a house is said to be true that expresses the likeness of the form in the architect's mind; and words are said to be true so far as they are the signs of truth in the intellect." Urine and blood-work are healthy as signs, but then words are true as the intellect is true? I don't think so.
Is a house true to the architect's intent in a manner that is binary? No doubt, the sentence: "This house was built to your specifications" will be either true or false as a sentence, although obviously it can also admit of many qualifications. "Yes, the house is mostly how I planned it, but we had difficulty with the intricate skylights in the entry hall and had to simplify them." But the idea here is not that it is only sentences about the house that can be true or false. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And even if we are talking about truth as conformity to an ideal, this does introduce degrees of truth but it does not necessarily introduce equivocity. — Leontiskos
..."truth in things.")
E.g., — Count Timothy von Icarus
By contrast, there is Wittgenstein's On Certainty, which has generally be read as arguing to deflationary (and been widely influential in this direction). There, truth just is part of a language game. But this comes out of the idea that propositions are the bearers of truth. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In the Questions for instance, he inverts the entire order of things, putting the truth of things as respects their conformity to the divine intellect as secondary, and the truth of the intellect composing and dividing as primary, even though in the same text he has the former as the principle of the latter. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Objection 3. Further, "that, on account of which a thing is so, is itself more so," as is evident from the Philosopher (Poster. i). But it is from the fact that a thing is or is not, that our thought or word is true or false, as the Philosopher teaches (Praedicam. iii). Therefore truth resides rather in things than in the intellect.
Reply to Objection 3. Although the truth of our intellect is caused by the thing, yet it is not necessary that truth should be there primarily, any more than that health should be primarily in medicine, rather than in the animal: for the virtue of medicine, and not its health, is the cause of health, for here the agent is not univocal. In the same way, the being of the thing, not its truth, is the cause of truth in the intellect. Hence the Philosopher says that a thought or a word is true "from the fact that a thing is, not because a thing is true." — Aquinas, ST I.16.1.ad3
(this is an analogy of proper proportionality not attribution) — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, it seems obvious that this is at least somewhat true in sensation as well, since the sight of an apple is not the same thing as its being. But I have long been suspicious of the general scholastic tendency to suppose that only conscious judgement can be in error, never the senses, because this seems to be a rather artificial separation of how consciousness actually works, and conditions like agnosia seem to involve error at the pre-conscious level. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Anyhow, he has a better answer in ST; truth is primarily spoken of in terms of judgement (composing and dividing) because this is where we know truth as truth, and the knowledge of truth as truth is a perfection. I can live with that. Yet: 'Truth therefore may be in the senses, or in the intellect knowing "what a thing is," as in anything that is true; yet not as the thing known in the knower," (Q16 A2). — Count Timothy von Icarus
unless the idea is that the order of judging and the order of being are inversions of each other. — Count Timothy von Icarus
That's to say that recognising a duck requires there to be a duck and recognitions. — fdrake
When we pretend, assume, suppose, hypothesize, and so on, we agree to treat something as something knowing that it isn't. But sometimes we do it differently... — Srap Tasmaner
People count stuff as stuff all the time, and that's a practice. And kids do it before they learn what "is" means. — fdrake
It might surprise you, but I agree with this and find it a bad trend. I see all of those as irritating reductionisms. I'm equally irritated by a reduction of our being to ideas/thoughts. — fdrake
Though I imagine I fall into your condemnation bucket here, since I definitely don't see humans as doing "truth stuff" primarily, we do however do it. — fdrake
There's an order of being, which concerns what is, and an order of knowing, which concerns our learning. — fdrake
"counts as" is prior to "is" in the order of knowing, but "is" is prior to "counts as" in the order of being.
That's to say that recognising a duck requires there to be a duck and recognitions. — fdrake
So with regard to "all the way down" - that's an intuition based on there being one hierarchy of concepts. Some things are prior to other things. And "prior" in the former sentence means one thing. That thing is: X is unthinkable without Y. — fdrake
I don't think that follows. Can you show me how it does? I'm suspicious because the premises are "if counting as a duck...", and "the duck counts as as a duck". — fdrake
This isn't to say that a duck is a social construction, even though counting as a duck is. — fdrake
It's butchered from Sellars. — fdrake
It's conceptual priority again. It's not obvious that our concepts can be "counts as" all the way down. — Srap Tasmaner
This isn't to say that a duck is a social construction, even though counting as a duck is. — fdrake
Which I think he also considered as falling somewhere within the pragmatist tradition, much as Quine thought of himself. And he was deeply engaged, as they say, with Kant. So everything Leontiskos finds suspicious in one package. — Srap Tasmaner
You wouldn't refer to it as a straw or as tinder though, as the object isn't baptised that way. Things tend to keep their name from their primary context of use in the broader society - like my plastic crate keeps being called my plastic crate despite its primary use in my home being as a calf raise platform. Which it absolutely counts as for appropriate exercises. — fdrake
So if something counts as the ingestion of food, it counts as eating. — fdrake
You wouldn't refer to it as a straw or as tinder though, as the object isn't baptised that way. Things tend to keep their name from their primary context of use in the broader society — fdrake
The duck counts as a duck. — fdrake
One must help others, in general, ceteris paribus, because they are supposed to be just; and justice requires, as mentioned above, assigning merit and demerit impartially and objectively. Therefore, a just person should care, in general, about other people (and living things) in virtue that they are people (and are living things); because there nature sets them as worthy of protection. — Bob Ross
The fact that they have a rational will marks them out as the most valuable; and the fact they are alive, can feel pain, etc. makes them more valuable than non-life (like a yacht). — Bob Ross
The easiest way to demonstrate this is to think about the contrary: to believe that one shouldn’t help a person when they could at no or little cost to themselves, is to squarely value a non-person over persons; which misses, at best, the nature of a person vs. a non-person. — Bob Ross
Like I said before, this equally applies to all of life. Nature is one inter-connected body. We cannot survive and realize our good without the good of Nature herself. E.g., that’s why we hunt certain numbers of certain species to ensure the balance is stable. This equally applies to humanity as a whole, including itself in the whole of Nature. If I must care about mercury pollution in the water supply because my good is bound up with my community’s good (and vice-versa); then I should care about it because my good is bound up with Nature’s good (and vice-versa). — Bob Ross
I cannot be just and value a non-living-thing over a living-thing — Bob Ross
If a nation was super-abundant and rich and could give their excesses to helping an extremely poor nation—and at no risk of nuclear war or something like—in principle—I would say they have a duty to do so. — Bob Ross
But that duty does not supercede their more local duties.
This is no different than how, e.g., a father has a duty to take care of his kids and to care about water pollution for his community, but if the two conflict then he must uphold the former over the latter. Since father’s do not tend to have a super-abundance of resources and time, we do not generally advocate that fathers should spend an enormous amount of time solving water pollution: they don’t have the time or resources. They fit into society with certain more immediate roles that they must focus on.
There’s a hierarchy to duties. — Bob Ross
That’s fair: I guess I would agree with that; as, by my own logic, a nation is not obligated to go to war with another nation to stop them from doing something egregious if it poses a significant risk to the integrity of their own prosperity. However, I can reword this to get at the main point: would you say that it is not obligatory for a nation who could stop Nazi Germany without any risk to their own prosperity, if that were possible, to do so? I think it would be, in principle. — Bob Ross
So, to be clear, you are saying that I do not actually have a duty to care about water pollution in a state of the US which I do not live because the US is not a proper community? — Bob Ross
This is a slippery slope. I can make the same argument for my local county vs. my state. — Bob Ross
Duties arise out of roles one has; and one has roles for themselves—no? E.g., one of my roles to myself is that I need to just with myself—no? — Bob Ross
I am asking: what if a woman takes care of her young merely in virtue of an unbearable, primal, and motherly urge to do it? — Bob Ross
I agree that they don’t engage in volition in accordance with reason; but there’s also volition in accordance with conative dispositions. I can will as an upshot of my passions, or my reasons for doing so. Animals have volition in the lesser sense; and knowledge in the sense that they also formulate beliefs about their environment (to some degree). Have you seen how smart some birds are? Belgian Malinois are way too smart to believe that they have no knowledge; unless by knowledge you mean something oddly specific. — Bob Ross
I thought moral relativism meant something else: nevermind. — Bob Ross
Peter Redpath makes a pretty convincing argument that it is never our terms that are (properly) analogical for St. Thomas (obviously when we equivocate we do have ambiguous terms). It is rather the predication of the term that is analagous. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Indeed, if God is “Goodness itself,” (i.e. that by which all things are good— https://www.newadvent.org/summa/1006.htm) it is unclear what it would mean for "our concept of goodness" to be an “analogy” of true goodness. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So when we say, "God is good," the meaning is not, "God is the cause of goodness," or "God is not evil"; but the meaning is, "Whatever good we attribute to creatures, pre-exists in God," and in a more excellent and higher way. — Aquinas ST, I.13 Article 2. Whether any name can be applied to God substantially?
So, my contention would be that truth doesn't need to become analogical, merely our predication of it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The question is how the propositions relates to the adequacy of thought (and language) to being, or language to thought. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, he often seems to follow the Neoplatonic camp in elevating the primacy of simple apprehension of wholes as wholes. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Right, yet "health" for a kangaroo is analogically related to "health" for a daffodil. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Here is one based on a class I had on the philosophy of AI:
Truth is something that applies to propositions (and only propositions). All propositions are either true or false. If this causes issues (which it seems it will), this is no problem. All propositions are decomposable into atomic propositions, which are true or false. Knowledge is just affirming more true atomic propositions as respects some subject and fewer false ones. Thus, knowledge can accurately be modeled as a "user" database of atomic propositions as compared to the set of all true atomic propositions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
When, however, it judges that a thing corresponds to the form which it apprehends about that thing, then first it knows and expresses truth. This it does by composing and dividing: for in every proposition it either applies to, or removes from the thing signified by the subject, some form signified by the predicate... — Aquinas, ST I.16 Article 2. Whether truth resides only in the intellect composing and dividing?
I answer that, In one sense truth, whereby all things are true, is one, and in another sense it is not. In proof of which we must consider that when anything is predicated of many things univocally, it is found in each of them according to its proper nature; as animal is found in each species of animal.
...
If therefore we speak of truth, as it exists in the intellect, according to its proper nature, then are there many truths in many created intellects; and even in one and the same intellect, according to the number of things known. — Aquinas, ST I-16 Article 6. Whether there is only one truth, according to which all things are true?