The split is determined by the definition used for the word. Every word in the definition that is not already clearly understood gives rise to a new branch leading to a node that is the definition of that word. — andrewk
I like your choices of other problematic words. All three of those are controversial, and have given rise to great debate over the years. — andrewk
The first part of Plato's Republic is devoted to debate over what Justice is. — andrewk
I find debate over such words as meaningless as debate over the use of 'exist', and I try to avoid use of those words as well. — andrewk
When I do use them, I use them with a meaning I prefer, to which I can give a definition, but it will be a meaning that many people would not accept. — andrewk
I'll add 'free will' as another example of something that people argue furiously over even though none of them know what they mean by the term. — andrewk
Why do you think that if someone uses a word it must have a meaning? — andrewk
This is not "the science of formal systems", this is philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
In philosophy we are concerned with understanding reality as a whole, so we cannot dismiss certain contradictions and inconsistencies as irrelevant to the field of study. — Metaphysician Undercover
If it is necessary that we take two distinct things, which have a very similar physical appearance (two distinct instances of a symbol), and assume that they are "the same", despite the fact that they are clearly not the same, in order to understand some aspect of reality, then as philosophers we ought to recognize and take interest in this, to determine what the implications of such a contradiction might be. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you recognize the difference between "the ideal", and "the notion of the ideal"? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why I used zero as the principle for ordering. Let's say someone claims that zero fulfills our notion of the ideal. The argument is that we haven't found any ideal, the category is an empty set, therefore zero is the ideal. However, zero allows for the possibility of ordering toward the negative or the positive, two distinct possibilities. So there is inherent within "zero" two distinct possibilities. Therefore it cannot be the ideal because the ideal must be one unique perfection. The ideal is like the empty set, but it cannot even be represented as zero, because we cannot put zero into that set, because this leaves it not empty. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes this is what Socrates is famous for demonstrating, many people know how to do things without really knowing exactly what they are doing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would not claim that we "don't really know anything", unless you define "know" as requiring absolute certainty. But I don't think that knowing requires absolute certainty, and this is evident from the fact that I proceed with my endeavours, knowing how to proceed, despite the fact that I know that I may not be successful with any particular attempt. And, I never know at what time something may interfere and prevent me from being successful. This fact, that I am not completely sure of my success, inspires me to seek possible avenues of failure, to eliminate them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Once something is deemed as certain, it is called upon, and used in our actions, without question, just like a habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose we have a failure, we need to determine the cause of the failure. If "x" has already been determined as certain, then "x" will not be considered as the cause of the failure. But we've already excluded the possibility that "x" is absolutely certain, so ought we not consider the possibility that "x" is the cause of the failure, despite the fact that "x" has been determined as certain? — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, that's exactly the point, we ought to demand such definitions, this is how we prevent misunderstanding and mistake. In daily usage, if we don't adequately understand, we simply ask the speaker to clarify what was meant. But in specialized fields of education, like medicine, and biology which deals with parts of animals, you cannot just point to your hand, and say this is a hand, because the extent of the object pointed to is vague. So we need to refer to things like fingers and the wrist, to create boundaries for that specific object, "the hand", and we do this with definitions. — Metaphysician Undercover
By observing life closely, we begin to understand it. The more we observe, the more skilled we become, and the more we understand. This is philosophy. — Rich
When we criticise the use of a certain word or phrase, we are not criticising the language as a whole, just that particular use of it. There's no inconsistency in regarding language use in general as a useful, meaningful activity while criticising the use of certain word or phrases as having no use or meaning. — andrewk
You asked whether 'hand', 'demand' or 'definition' are as problematic as 'exist'. Empirically they are not, as people tend not to disagree over what they mean, whereas they constantly disagree over what 'exist' means - including non-philosophers. — andrewk
I like to use ostension as the root of meaning - that if we can trace the meaning of a word through a tree whose nodes are various other words until we reach terminal leaves, each of which is given meaning by ostension, then we know what the word means. Otherwise not. — andrewk
A simpler approach though would be that if everybody agrees on what a word means, and that agreement is borne out by experiment (e.g. Simon says 'raise your hand' and everybody raises their hand), then we can consider that we know the meaning. — andrewk
When we try to say what it means to exist, all sorts of logical problems arise. How can one say without doubt, "my hands exist", when one cannot say without doubt what it means to "exist"? So it becomes evident that we use words within language-games without actually knowing what the words mean. — Metaphysician Undercover
Say object #1 and object #2 are seen to be different, but not identified as different. They are both identified as "dog". We know the objects are distinct, be we are identifying them as the same. You might say that this is just a categorization, but for the sake of the logical process which follows the identification, they are the same. So for the sake of the logical process they are said to be the same, when they are really different. — Metaphysician Undercover
The meaning of "less than" is not demonstrated, it is stipulated by definition, in reference to an order. I don't think "less than" can be judged without reference to the definition, and therefore the order. If you want to argue that a definition is an ideal, I don't think you could succeed because definitions are not perfect, due to the ambiguity of words. — Metaphysician Undercover
The future is seen as virtual (possible actions). Your choices are: when to get it (initiation of will), how to get it (directional action), what to do with it once you get it. — Rich
Yes I agree that logic is impossible without this fundamental first step. But if contradiction is inherent within the first step, don't you see this as a problem? — Metaphysician Undercover
The first law is the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
The second law is the law of non-contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aren't we obliged to either forfeit the law of non-contradiction, or go back to our mode of identification and rectify this problem of contradiction inherent within identification? — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm no mathematician, but I've noticed that set theory has contradiction inherent within it as well. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not believe that the resolution to the problem of contradiction being inherent within the first step, is to introduce other contradictions to cover it up. — Metaphysician Undercover
To demonstrate imperfections within something is to demonstrate that it is less than ideal. It is not necessary to show the ideal, in order to demonstrate that what we have is not ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
To demonstrate problems within a system does not require that one put forward resolutions to the problems. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the basis of freewill - that is intelligent, selfish and goal directed behaviour - is there right from the ground up. As soon as a molecule becomes a message, we are talking about life being freed from the kind of strict Newtonian determinism that causes all the metaphysical angst about human freewill. — apokrisis
It's not the future that is constrained by memory, it is the choices that we might make. — Rich
I think they only hope that the operation succeeds. Even if there is a right way to transplant a heart, doing it that way does not guarantee success, which is all the patient cares about. — andrewk
Instead we can just say that as humans we have evolved to instinctively trust what has worked in the past, so we trust surgeons, techniques and theories about how hearts function, that have worked in the past. — andrewk
The past constrains the future, but it doesn't absolutely determine the future. So the past leaves the future only relatively determined in terms of its propensities.
Physical models can of course simplify the situation and treat the dynamics of the world as mechanical and time-reversible. But that Newtonian view is known to be an over-simplification both due to the laws of thermodynamics and quantum theory.
If we put all our physical laws together, they tell us the world is a place where the past does constrain the future, but can't absolutely determine the future. — apokrisis
It uses a symbolic memory and code - like genes, neurons, words - to step back from the world so as to be able to control that world. — apokrisis
If we remember that the object of the exercise is the 'I am' bit, then the problem with saying: when you are acquainted with the thought "the bacon smells good", it makes no sense to doubt that you are thinking that thought is that it doesn't explain what is meant by that 'you'. Indeed, there is no need for a 'you' to be involved at all, that reaction to the bacon need be no different in kind to a chemical reaction, where we find no need to posit that there is a 'you' within each chemical that is 'having' that reaction. Or, if we did extend 'you' to such things, that is not the sort of 'you' we were trying to get to, the one with 'consciousness'.
I think it only works the other way round. We must start from 'I am'. How do I know I am? I just do; I have no choice. If I say things like 'I think' it is only because it is founded on an already existing sense of myself, as something that does things. As I say at the beginning; 'I think...' is predicated on that 'I', there can be no 'think' without an 'I', so the 'I' cannot be the conclusion. — Londoner
Thanks for the questions. Metaphor is a whole new subject; but I think it clear that the mind does not have places. — Banno
The brain, on the other hand, can provide some interesting material. One will not find a belief by dissecting a brain - but could it be found in an MRI? — Banno
Some people do, others don't, most couldn't care less. — Rich
My preference is recognizing it as just another human creation and then dealing with it for v what it is. U have no need to gain higher ground by claiming objectivity. — Rich
But we don't learn what's possible from the past, we make that up. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not really a case of the past constraining the future though. Our memories are selective, always incomplete, and sometimes wrong. So it's really a case of the person in the present attempting to use past experience to constrain the future, for the sake of some purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you think that a goal cannot be irrational? Irrational means unreasonable or illogical. Do you not think that a person may at sometime set as a goal something which cannot be obtained by that person? Wouldn't that goal be irrational? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not a function of the past, it's how we relate to the past. And those properties of memory which I mentioned, that 'it's selective and sometimes wrong, indicate that it's really not a function of the past, but a function of the living creature, now. — Metaphysician Undercover
It exists as a concept as opposed to subjective. Whether a human can be objective, I have yet to find the case. — Rich
Exactly. I am saying the concept cannot be applied to anything perceived by humans. Others have their own subjective opinions about objectivity. — Rich
Yes, people have their faith and their God and their idols. It just seems that it is part of the human character. — Rich
I suppose what I can't see is what philosophical work you see the notion of Objectivity doing. What do we get from calling mathematics Objective that we don't already have and that is available to someone that says mathematics is just a family of language games, with each language game being based on a set of rules agreed by a certain set of people, and that these language games sometimes seem useful in deciding what to do next? — andrewk
You may desire objectivity, but where humans are involved, there never is. What you have possibly it's some concensus within a consenting group - maybe. — Rich
Objective about what if they are meaningless. What is objective about this: _-++&__? — Rich
Rules are meaningless without a human interpreting them and applying then. — Rich
Absolutely meaningless until a human applies some subjective interpretation. Often there is all kinds of differences opinion about what math means because of some ambiguity and it ends up in court. I know this from working on insurance policies. — Rich
the criterion of objectivity is not necessarily applicable to mathematics (or logic for that matter), as the ‘objects’ of mathematics are only ‘objects’ in a metaphorical sense. — Wayfarer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objectivity_(philosophy)Objectivity is a central philosophical concept, related to reality and truth, which has been variously defined by sources. Generally, objectivity means the state or quality of being true even outside a subject's individual biases, interpretations, feelings, and imaginings. — Wiki
Constraints of the past restrict the reality of what one can get, or bring about, create, in the future, but they do not put restrictions on what one can want, or desire. — Metaphysician Undercover
In reality though, thinking is not necessarily clear, accurate, or correct. We often use thinking to rationalize goals which are really irrational. — Metaphysician Undercover
This implies that thinking is really a process whereby intentions for the future incline us to make a representation of the past (memory), and bring this representation to bear upon future possibilities. Therefore it is not the actual past which is doing the constraining in the act of thinking, it is really just the representation of the past (memory), and this is why we are prone to making mistakes. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when we make decisions concerning free will and determinism, we must be careful not to consider these representations (memories) as the past constraining the future in a determinist way, because the memories are produced and employed in a free way. The consequence, mistakes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Remember how "hard free will" appeared as complete randomness? Nobody wants that. — Metaphysician Undercover
And, it's quite evident in communication, and most social activity, we make an effort to be predictable. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics is not objective. They are meaningless symbols upon which humans apply meaning. — Rich
Whatever is outputted by a computer (a tool created by humans) must still be interpreted by humans with different opinions. Hence the phrase garbage in garbage out.
Objectivity cannot exist in a subjective human experience. — Rich
Yes - but then you’re in engineering, not philosophy as such. — Wayfarer
You’re still concerned with instrumental utility. — Wayfarer
I’m not trying to hijack the meaning of the word ‘objectivity’, but to draw attention to that as a criterion. — Wayfarer
This fundamental first step, to overlook the fact that two distinct instances of "a" are not identical in an absolute way and are therefore not actually "the same", for the sake of calling them "the same", is the basic incoherency of logic — Metaphysician Undercover
A similar incoherency is found in the first step of mathematics, relating to the nature of "unity". The numeral "1" signifies a basic unity. The numeral "2" signifies two distinct unities, but also one unity as "two", at the same time. In performing mathematical operations we must overlook the fundament fact that "2" signifies two distinct unities, (just like we must overlook the fact that two distinct instances of "a" are not the same), and treat it as if it represents one unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
These incoherencies are fundamental to the logical process. Nevertheless we must overlook them, ignore them, to proceed into the logical realm. However, they are significant, and these flaws indicate that mathematics and logic are less than ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point I would make is that mathematics is not necessarily objective, because it's purely inferential or logical - if this then that. — Wayfarer
Do you recognize that it is much more difficult to predict human behaviour in a particular situation then it is the behaviour of the inanimate object? — Metaphysician Undercover
One can believe the inanimate world to be deterministic without believing in determinism, which relates to human acts. This just requires that one accepts such a fundamental difference between human beings and inanimate things. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm still not seeing where you get this idea from. I think it's quite clear that we behave as if we believe in free will, not as if we believe in any type of determinism. When something is important we take our time to deliberate and make a responsible decision. — Metaphysician Undercover
Information doesn't comprehend. Mind comprehends information and uses it to create. — Rich
Humans makes choices and have will (energy applied in a specific direction) that they canexercise to effect that choice. The choices are constrained but unpredictable whichever creates the possibility of creative evolution. — Rich
I agree. There are habits everywhere in the universe, like a pendulum. — Rich
Indeed. Memory seems to be near the center of what it is to be human. The future is a cloud of desired and feared possibility that is shaped from the stuff of memory, one might say. Memory is (one might say) actuality chasing possibility and generating more actuality in this pursuit, and so more memory. Memory is the stain of the actual that has ceased to be actual, in this vocabulary. The memory is itself actual, as memory. The table will not fit in a closet. A memory of the table takes up far less space, and indeed lives in a virtual space that still (as we see it) constrains the future along with the conditions obtaining in physical space.Memory becomes an important concept in understanding actions and habits. — Rich
I agree. An equally unobservable and that is unsupportable by evidence and phenomenon. I just wonder why it is still discussed. — Rich
If the universe is not deterministic we have to figure out what it is. — Rich
Based upon my own observations, our actions are constrained. The future is simply a possibility in our minds. We take actions based upon the possibilities. — Rich