What is it like to be a bat? I suppose this line from Nagel, as much as any other in our tradition, directs us to the heart of the matter in these discourses, the thing I've been calling subjective experience with phenomenal character.I prefer asking what it's like to be a bat, or whether a computer simulated world could have conscious inhabitants. — Marchesk
I see no reason to speak as if "existence" were purposive. A carbon molecule, a stone, a thunderbolt, a galaxy... may be said to "exist", but not by the same token to be purposive.I am certain many of you here have thought about why you exist at one point in your life. Is it to pig out and resemble an animal than a human being? Is it to pretend this life is paradise and try to make it as enjoyable as possible? Is it to blur and dull your consciousness through drugs? We all have our personal beliefs. Contribute and tell us why you exist. — jorgealarcon
What's the difference between socialism and communism according to you and Marx?Marx outlined two phases of progress that must be completed before communism can prevail. Essentially, he outlined the reason why we should move from capitalism to socialism, and finally from socialism to communism.
However, I don't believe we will ever be able to make the leap from socialism to communism. — Wallows
What, according to you, are "the benefits of progress and prosperity" entailed by capitalist competition?Here's why... Socialism is the golden mean between the benefits of progress and prosperity that competition entails under capitalism, — Wallows
What are the "benefits" of the proto-communist state? Why proto- here, and not all the way?whilst preserving the benefits of the proto-communist state through high taxation and redistributive policies. — Wallows
I suppose that's one way things could go.However, given my understanding of the issue, when no more progress can be instilled through capitalism, such as machines replacing the labor force (which will happen soon), then there is a shift in the balance towards the appeal of communism. — Wallows
I'm not sure these three items are mutually exclusive alternatives, at least the way you've framed them here.What are you? A body made up of cells that is somehow able to 'think' ?
A mind that creates the illusion of a body, and everything around it, which raises a lot of questions of course.
Or a body with a mind?
The third one seems the most compelling to most people, but is it true? — Anirudh Sharma
What is the scary thought here? That it may take more than a few decades to explain some things?Neuroscience has been trying to work out the intricate mechanism of thinking, but we haven't quite grasped it, not to say that it won't be explained in the next few decades.This to many, is a scary thought. — Anirudh Sharma
How does a delay in pending empirical knowledge imply anything about what sort of thing you are? I suppose it implies you are thing complex enough to require more than a few decades to sort out.It means that I am just a collection of cells, and nothing more, which means I am insignificant! — Anirudh Sharma
I admire your courage. Nevertheless, I hope you'll agree, there's nothing here to fear.This does not scare me though, because if we are a collection of cells, and nothing matters, then how does this matter? — Anirudh Sharma
Perhaps you anticipate that I see no problem here. For on the sort of account I favor, the mind of the animal is rooted in the body.Another thing that pushes me towards thinking we are, indeed just a body is things like OCD (Obsessive compulsive disorder), where one isn't in complete control of their thoughts, due to some difference in the structure of the brain. — Anirudh Sharma
What do you mean by "the divine"? Does this phrase indicate anything different from the "theos" in "theology"?Hi, CurlyHairedCobbler here. I'm a member of an interfaith family containing Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Jews, Atheists, Agnostics, and Christians. Having been exposed to so many interesting and conflicting views, I've developed an interest in theology. I believe that reason is the best tool for answering questions about the being and the nature of the divine. I am a rationalist not only in the common language sense of believing in the power of reason to uncover truths, but also in the philosophical sense of believing that some truths can be known a priori, regardless of sense experience. — CurlyHairedCobbler
I don't recall anyone arguing about it, but on my read it's been tough to ferret what consensus there may be about the definition we're trying here; and occasionally an interlocutor's remark has led me to wonder if we have different conceptions in mind.I haven't read every post and I didn't see people arguing with you about that, but yes. That's what a p-zombie is. — Terrapin Station
I'm not sure I follow. What does it mean to say the receiver is blindsided?The receiver of said creative product comes to be blindsided by their social contract with the creator, who no longer has interest in upholding their part of the implicit social contract. The receiver is now coming to the table with the intention of paying to receive that media that the creator has only offered with an intention to subsist his/herself — kudos
It seems to me I have it the right way, and go a bit further than you allow. I trace the phenomena to the places they seem to appear, even when they appear outside heads.This has it backwards. Our color concepts come from experience prior to any scientific understanding of optics, and then they were mapped onto the science as a correlation with our color experiences. — Marchesk
I would reject the claim that the story I tell about color "explains away the phenomenal"; and I believe that story is in line with a contemporary scientific account of color.This is where the scientific explaining away of the phenomenal goes wrong. It assumes science is apriori and experience comes after. But it's the other way around. Science comes from experience. Its basis is empiricism. — Marchesk
The two idioms you gesture at here, which I might distinguish as ordinary language and scientific language, are both cultural products of human animals, cumulatively informed by experience of the empirical world as it appears to us.P-zombies would use language in a way that would never refer to colors or sounds or feelings. They would use language in a way that refers to the causes of colors and sounds and feelings. They wouldn't use terms like, "red", "loud" or "painful". They would use terms like "680 nanometers" (the wavelength of EM energy that is registered as "red" in the mind), "amplitude", or "injury". In a sense they would use language as if they had a view from no where. They would never say that an apple is red. They could only say that the apple is ripe. — Harry Hindu
I haven't read enough Dennett to answer for him, and I don't believe I'm acquainted with Graziano.The question I have is how does a 680 nanometer wavelength of EM energy convert into the color red? I can imagine wavelengths as black wavy lines and then I can imagine a blotch of the color red as two separate things. Are Graziano and Dennett both saying that there are no wavelengths of EM energy and that red exists out in the world which we access directly? — Harry Hindu
This sounds about right to me.It’s entirely possible for me as a creator to endow an artwork or software program with creativity and exhibit it to an audience without anyone’s assistance besides large web hosting middlemen. It could be a complete blast and it could stay within those pleasure constraints to maintain reason for continuing the project. In this sense I meant it is different from ‘work’ as selling my labour or time to a company in exchange for means of subsistence. Because then I would not have complete freedom only to enjoy the process. The idea is in agreeing to the power structure of essentially working for these companies we implicitly disallow work, or else become a sort of slave. That is, unless the act had some other significance like what we’ve been discussing. — kudos
I'll say it has no "subjective experience with phenomenal character"; but allow that it does have simulated subjectivity. It has features we ordinarily associate with subjectivity: It seems to have a point of view; it seems to observe and report reliably; it seems to act rationally with respect to a priority of values and purposes; it acquires, organizes, reports on, and otherwise acts on "information" about its environment, including the part of its environment we identify with the thing in question.A p-zombie is missing the experience of color, sound, taste, smell, feels. Thus it has no subjectivity. The zombie is identical in every other way. — Marchesk
Arguably the p-zombies, as well as some sorts of advanced AI, would each have a sort of first-person point of view. I mean, we can say they make reliable introspective reports analogous to ours. For instance about states of appetite and emotion, about goals and plans and intentions, pains, sense-perceptions, memories, daydreams....There are some interesting consequences for this argument. An identical p-zombie universe would still have all the same stories we have. But many stories have first person points of view. So how do p-zombies understand reading or watching someone's thoughts or dreams? How do they make sense of a character undergoing intense emotion not apparent to other characters? — Marchesk
Do you mean, what's the difference between the imitation and the genuine article? As I've noted, this seems to me a definitional question, at least in part.Can we posit any cogent distinctions between these "simulations" and reflexive awareness, cognitive equipment, knowledge of self and introspective bases of non-inferential knowledge acquisition? — Janus
I haven't read much Chalmers.What motivates p-zombie Chalmers to make arguments for the hard problem, since the hard problem cannot exist by definition in the p-zombie universe? — Marchesk
Evidently some of the professionals paid to philosophize and to instruct students in their art seem to think it's a pretty big deal. Me personally, I'm not sure there's any deal here at all. It may yet turn out to have been another of those pseudoproblems on which philosophers squander social resources, misleading and confusing each other along with the laity, leaving their own special mess in the literature for two or three generations until academic fashions shift professional attention to some new fantastic output of the rational imagination.That's correct, but it'd kind of a big deal to deny the phenomenal aspect, yes? — Marchesk
Even in cases of pain, the subjective experience is correlated with and directs us to objective states of affairs inside and outside the sentient animal's body.I understand the argument to be a denial of experiencing pain, pleasure, heat, cold, music, bitter, sweet, joy, anger, indigo, pink.
Of course the objective correlation to those experiences remain for the illusionist. I kick a rock and and act as if I have a pain in my foot and my neural activity agrees with my behavior (I'm not faking it), then, that's all there is to the pain. With the addition of some mechanism that creates an illusion of feeling the pain. — Marchesk
It seems we'll have clear up our terms before we make much progress in this conversation. What you've said so far confuses me. Here's a first pass:I'd like to take the opportunity here to discuss the philosophy of creativity. No, I don't mean whether something classifies as art or not, but rather what constitutes the creative animal, as it were, of todays modern age. What are it's qualities? We have opened the door to new forms of creativity, creating works without use-value. The creativity of today is both against monetization, but also ascribes virulently to a lottery system of value. Large web-front companies make money of the creative labours of the masses, but what drives us to do it? Are we still driven to do it? Is it a form of slavery to put creative work into something to the benefit of someone else? Does this mean that creativity must be devoid of 'work'? I ask for your thoughts... — kudos
I'm still not clear whether there is a consensus view in this conversation with respect to what counts as a zombie, and what features of consciousness the zombie is said not to possess. So far I have the impression that many of us are speaking at cross-purposes, with different conceptions of p-zombie in mind. Is there perhaps an authoritative source in the literature we might turn to for a concise characterization we might use as a guide in this discussion?Nor am I. A p-zombie could not act exactly like a conscious human being because it is by definition not conscious. Even if consciousness were an illusion, we act in many of the ways we do, and say many of the things we do, because we think of ourselves as being conscious, and the p-zombie could not have such a self-reflexive self-understanding. — Janus
Is it consciousness they call an illusion? Or only the so-called phenomenal character, or qualia, or subjective experience... or some such putative feature contentiously associated with consciousness in philosophical discourses?Yes, that's what saying consciousness is an illusion amounts to. — Marchesk
Do you suggest that consciousness is bad for survival? Negative survival value is not the same as zero survival value.Is it just an accident of evolution that ended up having no negative survival value? A fluke? — Unseen
I'm willing to grant, at least for the sake of argument, that the bogey in question does act exactly like a human, according to genuine human observers. Along these lines, my point is basically a rehearsal of the physicalist's maxim: No difference without a physical difference. If it acts just the same, and it's made just the same, then it is just the same, and would be conscious like the genuine article -- would be an instance of the genuine article, and no zombie at all. The fact that we -- with our poor knowledge of the relevant empirical facts -- can imagine things otherwise seems no help at all in this matter.Nor am I. A p-zombie could not act exactly like a conscious human being because it is by definition not conscious. Even if consciousness were an illusion, we act in many of the ways we do, and say many of the things we do, because we think of ourselves as being conscious, and the p-zombie could not have such a self-reflexive self-understanding. — Janus
I wonder if that fight isn't just another circus sideshow, albeit an especially repugnant and dangerous one. It seems to me those nationalists are by and large just so many more unwitting pawns of the oligarchs. The trend of globalization continues as the powerful few marshal discord among the people of Earth, even promoting antiglobalist rhetoric as cover for their self-serving operations. The current rise of right-wing nationalism does not put that trend in check, but only helps ensure that wealth and power remain in the hands of the few.I agree and doubt that it can be stopped even though the right wing nationalists are putting up a good fight. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I expect most eliminativists or illusionists about the phenomenal character of consciousness will insist the path from perception to perceptual object remains open. They won't deny the existence of intermediate perceptual objects like light, sound, and odor, but only aim to characterize such phenomena in maximally objective terms -- terms that typically embrace the perceptual object construed as a physical system, and the perceiving object, construed as a physical or information-processing system in touch with the perceptual object by way of sensory contacts, while denying that there is a genuine "phenomenal character" or "subjective character" to perception.Of course not, but that's what I think the logical conclusion is if you say colors, sounds, etc. are illusions, since that's how we know about apples and everything else. — Marchesk
I take it by the phrase "philosophical zombie", you mean a creature exactly like a human being in every physical detail, that behaves exactly like a conscious human being, but that somehow lacks sentience, or the phenomenal character of conscious experience, or something along these lines. Is that about right?Maybe you can formulate the p-zombie argument for epistemology? — Marchesk
I've never quite understood romantic talk of "absurdity" along such lines. I might agree that each of us is more or less out of tune -- with the truth, with the facts, with his own good, with other sentient beings, and so on. Life is dukkha. Is there something more -- apart from this sort of generic conception of disharmony, misalignment, conflict, ignorance, and confusion -- to existentialist talk of "absurdity in our way of being"?In a roundabout way, this has to do with pessimism. Pessimism posits that the world has an inherently negative value due to structural and contingent sufferings. There is an absurdity in our way of being that has evolved, whereby we have a whole variety of choices- what Sartre appropriately called "radical freedom", but we choose to put weight on various focuses to keep the absurdity constrained into discrete goals. — schopenhauer1
Again, I'm perplexed by this framework of "inherent value".Some of those from the intelligentsia community (specifically mathematico-scientific-technological) would argue that they are a source of positive value. Why? Though not articulated in this manner expressly, the argument is that since they have the capacity/propensity to calculate advanced mathematical concepts, and since they are able to apply them to an empirically verifiable outcome in science and technology, that this is meaningful and counteracts a negative evaluation of the world, or its intendant absurdity. Rather, they might argue, the fact that we can "mine" consistently verifiable/falsifiable information about the world, that "cashes out" in the outcome of more accurate explanation and technology, that this is inherently something of value. — schopenhauer1
A work of fiction, carpentry, or empirical investigation may be simple or complex in comparison to other works of its kind; I see no reason to suppose that in general the more complex work is the more valuable. One might argue the simplest work, achieving the greatest results in exchange for the least resources, is the most valuable.Further, people might feel that simply the sheer complexity of new technologies makes them meaningful. The fact that there is so much minutia to monger to understand a process, maintain it, and further its development into more areas of minutia, is somehow inherently good. In other words, somehow, complexity of subject-matter bestows it value. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure you have drawn a relevant "logical conclusion": I expect that being an "illusionist" about the putative phenomenon of conscious experience does not entail being an "illusionist" about apples, sensorimotor systems, and perception.The goal is to dissolve the hard problem without just handwaving it away or giving into some form of dualism. But taken illusionism to its logical conclusion has serious ramifications for knowledge. When I perceive an apple, I'm not just aware of the apple's color or its taste, I'm also aware of it's shape and weight. Some qualities of human experience are the basis for science. But if color and taste are illusions, what reason would we have for supposing that shape and weight are not? After-all, we know about apples by experiencing them via our sensations of color, taste, etc. — Marchesk
The concept of number is a human concept, but human judgments of number have an objective character in matters of fact. The concept of existence is a human concept, but human judgments of existence -- for instance about what is said to exist and what is said not to exist -- have an objective character in matters of fact.'Existence' is a human concept, and like all concepts requires context in which it is meaningful. The issue was perhaps highlighted my Niels Bohr's argument with Einstein about the existence of 'electrons'.
Bohr argued that there were no 'things in their own right' we call 'electrons', only consistent human 'interactions' with an aspect of the world it was convenient to explain by the word 'electron'. Einstein, perhaps in line with his role in establishing 'the reality of atoms', disagreed.
A current book by Rovelli (the Order of Time) underscores Bohr's view with the phrase 'things are just repetitive events.
This proposed 'relativity of existence' seems to me to render most philosophical discussion of 'ontology' to be what Wittgenstein called Geschwätz (idle chatter).
Any thoughts ? — fresco
Isn't it meaningful? Or how isn't it? I'm still unsure what tree you're barking up.Yes, I agree, but thread was about how mongering minutia about a subject matter doesn't make life more meaningful because we have "mined" this information and can use it. In other words, "Look at all this stuff we have figured out! Look how adept some of us are at building immense equations that translate to technological output! This is meaningful!". — schopenhauer1
I'll agreethe assumption that there is a mind-independent objective reality arguably entails that there are objective limits to the freedom of individual sentient agents. But I see no reason to suppose that freedom must be somehow absolute or in every conceivable respect unlimited in order to count as freedom.Isn't it the case that as soon as we assume there is such a thing as an objective reality, a mind-independent world we are a part of, then we are necessarily assuming the absence of free will already?
Because if we assume we belong to a mind-independent world, then that world doesn't depend on our minds, so our minds don't have an influence on it, and so we don't have free will.
Is there anything wrong in this reasoning? — leo
I suppose I'd prefer to distinguish the number of proper names in a given universe from the number of proper names indicated by, say, a formal notational system of predicate logic. I'm not sure which of these you're question is aimed at. I suspect it may be a question about the notational system.Jim, Jeff, Jenny... that's three.
1 is the proper name for that number; 2 , for the next number. and on it goes. So there are at least countably infinite proper names.
Suppose I take the set of infinite lists of ones and zeros. I know from Cantor's diagonal that this is uncountable. So I give each its own name; are there then uncountably many proper names?
First-order predicate logic apparently assumes only a countable number of proper names: a,b,c...
How would it change if there were an uncountable number of proper names? — Banno
A good cook, painter, or martial artist might, but need not, use tools designed by engineers to facilitate the labor of these specialists. Their excellence in their respective arts does not tend to depend on a narrow range of tools, but rather transfers readily enough to any of a wide range of tools that may efficiently serve the same or similar ends, regardless of whether the tools were designed and produced by way of primitive or advanced technological practice. Moreover, these artists might, but generally do not, stoop to rigorous arithmetical calculation and rigorous experimental method in the practice of their craft. Nevertheless, they may be said to attend to minutiae, to get shit done, and to do real work, little or none of which work -- far less than the scientist's or the mathematician's -- comes down to jabbering.The minutia is where the job gets done. Those who know how to monger minutia to get shit done, can claim they are doing the real work. Everyone else is just jabbering. Thus, the meaning of life for them is the ability to compute minutia to get shit done. This is de facto justified by our very use of the things that are the outcome from the minutia mongerers. — schopenhauer1
It seems reasonable to expect the trend toward multinational and global organization will continue, given the persistence of technological culture along something like its current trajectory.True, but ours can be manipulated by the U.N., for instance, if the majority of other countries and their coalitions are powerful enough.
There is also the U.N. court that has teeth. Little one. yes, but they can still bite. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Of course each one of us is "participating in something grander" just by being alive. Each one of us is a member of multiple communities whether he wants to be or not. Each of us is a member of a family and lineage, a citizen of a nation-state, a resident in a municipality, for instance. Each of us is a member of the community of living things, of sentient animals, of human beings, of sentient beings wherever and whenever they may be.Are there people on this forum who believe they are participating in something "grander" by: — schopenhauer1
I agree that it's going too far to say that any person who acknowledges spiritual experience, or claims to engage in spiritual practices, or is a member of a religious organization, must be "crazy".According to the logic of the so-called “skeptics,” spirituality and religion is craziness.
By that definition, the bulk of humanity is mentally ill, as the bulk of humanity has one or another form of spirituality. This leaves these people thinking that they are the only sane people out there.
If there is such a thing as narcissism, I can think of no more glaring narcissism than that. — Ilya B Shambat
Perhaps most skeptics are not scientists. But it may yet be that most scientists are skeptics. You may want to check the way the logic of these claims pans out into your argument.Most “skeptics” are not even scientists. Real scientists are curious, and many are as curious about spirituality as they are about everything else. — Ilya B Shambat
Do such anecdotes help our conversation here? We all know all sorts of people.I am good friends with a distinguished scientist who openly talks about having had very real spiritual experiences. He has a vast body of academic knowledge, is very well-reasoned and uses scientific method to excellent standard. That has not prevented him from having a spiritual life. — Ilya B Shambat
To say nothing of the tricks performed by charlatans who pretend to have spiritual powers they don't have. Or even the tricks performed by well-meaning dupes who don't understand the ordinary powers they have, and assume that something supernatural must be the source of their skill. Shall we set about listing the devices of deceivers and fools on both sides of this controversy, to see who has more?Spiritual experiences happen all the time, at least they do in my life. I've had many experiences with less than a billionth chance of happening; and I am nowhere close to being the only one. Many people either forget the experiences that they have or deny them; but if you dig enough you will find in many cases that they have in fact had very real spiritual experiences. The problem is that they do not know how to make them parse with what they know about the world from science and mathematics. This results in many of them denying these experiences; and toward that effect any number of people have come up with any number of tricks. — Ilya B Shambat
I'm not sure I get your meaning here: Whose dishonesty and whose discordance? Do you mean the critic is dishonest to make his charge the way he does? Or do you mean the critic charges the believer with some form of dishonesty?Some want to say that experience is “anecdotal” and does not count as valid evidence. Others want to ascribe it to being on drugs, or being depressed or anorexic, or being otherwise non compos mentis during the time of the experience. Others still start going into beliefs such as that truth itself is relative. In all cases we find dishonesty. It is dishonesty that comes from dischordance between the logical implications of the experience and the worldview. — Ilya B Shambat
Some of the critics you have argued against here would say the same of themselves: they also seek an explanation that does justice to facts of the experience without running afoul of scientific method.Is science wrong? No, it isn't. Materialist fundamentalism however is completely wrong. I seek an explanation that will be consistent with both scientific fact and the facts of my and other people's spiritual experiences; and I am continuing to look for this explanation in any number of paths. — Ilya B Shambat
Of course it's an ideal that can and should be pursued at the national level. At every level, but I suppose at the national level first and foremost, since the nation-state is still the primary political unit.I agree. Neither of us will get our wish list until universal government becomes a reality. That applies to the whole world but u see no reason why individual countries could not target their own oligarch and super rich. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I have no idea what the total cost would be, and what the total disposable income of the 0.1% comes out to nowadays.If governments controlled disposable income of the .1 %, would poverty end? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The fact that someone says "I am telling the truth" does not entail that they are telling the truth.If I say that I would never not tell the truth, would you believe me? Just because someone says they are telling the truth does not necessarily mean what they say is truth — OpinionsMatter
The fact that someone agrees (or disagrees) with a statement does not entail that the statement is true (or false)."I never lie." is untrue, because there will always be someone who doesn't agree with you(Not to mention that white lie you told). — OpinionsMatter
I'll assume that your botany is correct: In that case, I should say the statement "Plants need soil to survive" is inaccurate and incomplete. If it means "All plants need soil to survive", then it is false. If it means "Some plants need soil to survive" then it is true.When you tell the 'truth' it is more of a percentage of truth, rather than the whole truth. An example would be: Plants need soil to survive. Is that true? No, not completely. Rather it is about 90% true, because some plants grow in amongst rocks or in the sand. This discourse in its self is only a percentage of truth. — OpinionsMatter
It seems to me as though you are absolutely conflating the concept of truth and the concept of agreement.If the world could all agree (on everything) there would be what I would call 'absolute truth'. This would be the climax of truth, a world that it based upon and is nothing, but truth. However, this is merely a fantasy. Disagreement leads to everything being only partially true, and over all I think that finding someone, or something that holds an absolute value of truth is impossible, unless you believe in the Christian God, who is supposedly 'perfect'. — OpinionsMatter
I don't say that anything "is truth", only that well-formed assertions are true or false.Truth, in reality, is more of a concept. It's a way of trying to simplify the age old, what's wrong and what's right? Saying that something is truth, however, does not make it right, neither does it make it actual truth. — OpinionsMatter
I agree that it's reasonable to use the terms belief and faith as synonyms, and that in this sense everyone "has faith" in something or other.Do you believe everyone has faith or am I just being ridiculous? — OpinionsMatter
I don't believe in reincarnation. But I don't think the idea of personal identity that you've sketched poses any problem for the concept of reincarnation.Here's what I think. The whole notion of reincarnation is bogus because it's your childhood environment that shapes your identity as a person, and unless reincarnation can replicate your childhood experiences that shapes your personality as you grow up, the whole idea is hopeless. The personality that derives from the mold of childhood is part of your identity. So a different childhood equals a different personality, which in turn equals a different person. I don't think that reincarnation is impossible, I just think that it is severely limited by personal identity to the point that would make it impractical, even for a god.
What do you think? Does the idea of personal identity impose any problem on the concept of reincarnation? — Purple Pond
It's not clear in this story what sort of question is being asked, and what sort of justification is being provided.1. It claims that to question logic is, itself, to be logical and therefore all criticisms of logic already subsume the principles of logic - we are looking for reasons to justify our doubts about logical authority.
2. Others claim that to justify logic is to, again, assume logic's authority. This, they allege, is a circularity and therefore logic has no justification.
So, it appears that we can neither justify nor critique logic. Both are circular. — TheMadFool
What is "our own sphere"? What is an "hyletic nucleus"?Regardless of whether or not there is a soul or whatever one wants to call the ego or the I, it seems that within our own sphere, our 'hyletic nucleus,' we are absolutely incapable of expressing to anyone else, specifically and superlatively, meaning. — Blue Lux
I don't think so. To me it seems like a dubious claim motivated by inflated and ambiguous conceptions of "meaning" and of the individual's understanding of his own experience.Is this the case? — Blue Lux
I see no reason to speak that way.Am I thus alone to my own experiences after all? — Blue Lux
I see no reason to speak this way either. And I'm not sure how these questions are related to your initial comments.Is language a game of mere abstraction? Is knowledge too this? — Blue Lux
I'm inclined to agree that disputes about ontology, especially in the academy, often seem to be mere disputes about logical preferences, about the way we ought to organize our grammar into things we agree to call "entities" and things we agree not to call "entities".Dummett made the argument that progress in metaphysics could be made by recognizing that the difference between realists and anti-realists on a subject was the kind of logic they preferred. A realist accepted the principles of bivalence in logic and verification transcendent statements, while an anti-realist rejected both. — Marchesk
Can you provide examples of the sorts of statements and arguments that your "idealist" rejects here?In the case of realism versus idealism regarding physical objects, an idealist will reject bivalence and verification transcendent statements about physical objects. — Marchesk
What kinds of "statement about the physical"?They will instead have to present an alternative logic which determines what counts as sufficient evidence for making a statement about the physical true or false. — Marchesk
I'm not sure what to make of this conclusion.The debate then turns into how justify either the realist or the anti-realist's logic for that domain. This means justifying the rules of inference used by one side or the other. If one can provide a justification proof for a logic, then the debate is resolved in it's favor, since the structure of the statements for the realist or the anti-realist have been proven to generate true statements, for that domain. — Marchesk
I agree, it's important in philosophical conversation to clear up our terms.Being relatively new on this forum, it surprised me that many discussions start with a well formulated question, but without defining the words used in the question even when it's not clear wich definition applies. Wich could (and in many cases does) result in confusion about what is being discussed. — Tomseltje
⊢∀y.∀x.p(y,x) ↔∀x.∀y.p(y,x) — andrewk