A word like “baby” doesn’t have intrinsic meaning just as a collection of four letters. It gains meaning as a communal habit of interpretation. — apokrisis
So how do you use “baby” in a sentence? Do you always have your own completely private meaning in mind? Is that a useful habit do you find? — apokrisis
The usefulness of a theory certainly is a better indicator of truthfulness than of falsity. — Pantagruel
Oh, and just saying that you have refuted my examples, doesn't make it so. — Pantagruel
The very idea that, just because metaphysics is 'beyond physics', it somehow implies that physics (science in general) is invalid or untrue is ludicrous and laughable. That is a patent non-sequitur. I know of no serious philosopher who ever held such a view. — Pantagruel
A sign intrinsically refers to nothing. — apokrisis
Now you crossed a line. That's unwarranted and insulting. — Pantagruel
Clearly you understand neither the meaning of pragmatism, nor scientism. — Pantagruel
Roughly a semitone too high. — bongo fury
Two semitones too high — bongo fury
A car is in fact the worst kind of example as a car is a machine and not an organism. — apokrisis
So, when there's a whole car there are no parts and when there are parts there's no car? — TheMadFool
So, when the car is being assembled piece by piece the souls of the parts conveniently vanish and the soul of the car comes into existence when the car is being disassembled, the souls of the parts magically reappear and the soul of the car vanishes? Is this what you're saying? — TheMadFool
If you are then everything doesn't have a soul for the simple reason that the parts are still things even when they're all assembled together into a car and, according to you, they don't have souls when they are so. — TheMadFool
Premise 1: Everything has a soul (panpsychism)
Premise 2: Everything about a car (its parts and the car whole) is a thing
Conclusion: The parts of a car have souls. The car, as a whole, has a (one) soul. The car has many souls (parts) and the car has one soul (the car as a whole) [CONTRADICTION!!] — TheMadFool
So, since, as per panpsychism, only things have mind/souls, a part can't have one since, after all, it isn't even a thing to begin with. — TheMadFool
Sorry but I can't see your point. Begin from any point in an organized system - bottom-up or top-down, you're eventually going to have to make a jump from a whole to its parts and wherever, whenever, this happens, you're at risk of commiting the fallacy of composition/division. — TheMadFool
They are simply based on a systems-aware perspective. — Pantagruel
The only difference is, the systems-centric perspective tends to solve problems rather than generate aporias. — Pantagruel
There is no "misinterpretation," just an alternate interpretation. One which can be meaningfully applied across many, many different domains. And that meaningful applicability is itself the best gauge of the power of a theory. — Pantagruel
So yes, in a cooked up, abstract sort of way your notion of ontological singularity makes sense. In a much more robust and edifying way, the notion of systemic entities makes better sense, facilitating, as it does, a practical and universally inclusive model of reality. — Pantagruel
A thing is just a thing, anything, and there are no necessary relationships in being a thing. Ergo, a part is just as much a thing as a whole is a thing. I agree with you so far. — TheMadFool
So, once I talk about things I can't talk about parts. How come then that you talk about the car having a soul then? After all, the car is, essentially, the whole consisting of parts and you said, in your own words, "....to make a part into a proper object, the whole needs to be divided. When the whole is divided, it is annihilated" (in the second paragraph of your post) and this is exactly what you've done when you made the claim that "...not only do the parts of the car (if each can exist as an individual), have a soul/mind..." — TheMadFool
To make things easier, let's continue with the example of a car. At one point, you're saying that the parts of a car are things and ergo have souls/minds (accepted) and that you can't view them as parts to do that (accepted). Then you go on to say the car is also a thing and so has a soul/mind but the problem is you can't talk of a car anymore because when you took the parts of the car as individual things, you, by your own admission, believe that"...the whole (the car) needs to be divided. When the whole (the car) is divided, it (the car) is annihilated". — TheMadFool
The question is, does a 4 meter long wooden plank have one soul or an infinite number of souls (assuming halving ad infinitum)? — TheMadFool
On the other hand, Clowes (though he argues that HEC may prove more useful than HEMC in investigating the effects of our increasing reliance on novel forms of external memory) points out that, given a case of putatively extended cognition, a theorist committed to one or another alternative view can always redescribe it so that it is consistent with his view. Thus it is at this point unclear whether empirical evidence can help to resolve the debate among the varieties of distributed theory.
Transmission is emission + absorption. — Kenosha Kid
Distributed cognition has been studied extensively and experimentally. Hence it can be said to have empirical evidence. — Pantagruel
Anyway, yes, distributed cognition, environmental and social, is very much a real thing. — Pantagruel
Outgrowing this individual-centric (selfish) paradigm will be key to the future of our society I believe. — Pantagruel
You are free to explore these or not. It seems these domains of study are not familiar to you. — Pantagruel
Another tack on this issue is the theory of embedded or distributed cognition:
Cognitive processes may be distributed across the members of a social group.
Cognitive processes may be distributed in the sense that the operation of the cognitive system involves coordination between internal and external (material or environmental) structure. — Pantagruel
Cultural artefacts for me are exactly the sedimentation of human actions and concepts. I do take sociology to be an empirical science, as do sociologists. It sounds to me as though you believe you live in a nominalist-idealist world. Charming, but really not reflective of the total gamut of modern understanding. — Pantagruel
I think we should be careful in assuming that we know what Trump is up to. Trump himself may not know. He's a very instinctive and spontaneous player. And using that method he succeeded in defeating the entire political establishment at their own game, until very recently. — Hippyhead
Now, take the panpsychist assertion that everything has a soul/mind in the context of a car. The car has parts. Every part is a thing and since everything has a soul/mind, every part must have a soul/mind but to draw the conclusion that the car itself, the whole, has a soul/mind is the fallacy of composition. — TheMadFool
more conservative out in the middle of nowhere. — TiredThinker
I guess I was looking for a walk through that logic (if you have time). — frank
Monistic idealists have been known to suggest that matter is an emergent property if mind, so perhaps this is again a mistake of logic? — frank
Why do you say emergence is illogical? — frank
It seems to me that his argument is concerned with creating a conceptual space for 'experience' (I would use the term 'being') in the objective domain - to say that, because he can't doubt the reality of experience, and because he's committed to the view that every real phenomenon is physical, then the physical must also be experiential. 'That is what I believe: experiential phenomena cannot be emergent from wholly non-experiential phenomena... Assuming, then, that there is a plurality of physical ultimates, some of them at least must be intrinsically experiential, intrinsically experience-involving....Given that everything concrete is physical, and that everything physical is constituted out of physical ultimates, and that experience is part of concrete reality, it seems the only reasonable position, more than just an ‘inference to the best explanation’. — Wayfarer
If concepts arose as the result of the interaction of individuals A and B, then the concepts are a function of those two organic beings. Since concepts arose as a result of the cumulative interaction of all organic beings (people) then the concepts are a function of the interaction of all those organic beings, aka...the collection known as...the species! It isn't something that has to be proven, it is simply an empirical fact. — Pantagruel
So while we may not seem to differ that much on this, I do think you are clutching at something more illusory, since you seem to believe that the individual has some kind of privileged, context-free status. Language is one giant set of inter-relations, where the meaning of anything is conditioned by its context, both present and historical. It's central to hermeneutics. And the same is true of people, qua language users. I don't necessarily ascribe an emergent-ontological status to the collective; however nor do I see any particular reason to deny it. — Pantagruel
In other words, it's an easy way out of the problem, which avoids dealing with emergence. — Olivier5
I see analogues of musical concepts in all manner of time-based phenomena, and I think the first hypothesis about predictability was on the right track. — Pfhorrest
Sound is all about patterns of changes over time (pitch is just frequency), and all kinds of musical concepts are further refinements upon that (harmony is when multiple frequencies share certain relationships, rhythm and tempo are also all about frequency of notes). Musical ups and downs, breaks and shifts, all all about establishing and then changing patterns over time. — Pfhorrest
I think we’re wired to have emotional responses to patterns like that more generally, to get bored of repetition but also to fear unpredictable change, to get intrigued by noticing patterns and the relationships between patterns, etc, and music just directly pushes all those emotional buttons in the most straightforward way divorced from any broader real-world context. — Pfhorrest
That is not a false premise, but an established scientific fact. Aggregates of human behaviours have been proven to be amenable to systems theoretical analysis. That is good science.
Rather, what you are doing is attempting to utilize the gloss of scientism to foster your own metaphysical agenda, which is bad philosophy, since it is pure prejudice. — Pantagruel
The premise that concepts arose through interaction is pretty fundamental. Think of the genealogy of the mind. Individuals did not evolve in a vacuum, create a set of concepts, then proceed to try them out on each other. All of our concepts, including the concept of the individual self, obviously evolved through the normal, pragmatic, day-to-day interactions through which (the individuals of) our species survived and developed. If we are speculating, that speculation certainly makes more sense than the opposite (that we create our own concepts in vacuo, as it were). — Pantagruel
It's fun watching him lose the election every day. — Michael
That is a complete mischaracterization. Scientism claims that scientific certainty is exclusively authoritative, even in domains that are beyond that of its inquiry.
Science obviously provides an accurate understanding of the phenomena it examines, that is the whole point of science. — Pantagruel
(Unless holes and/or emission events conspire to construct the distribution that we expect to see.) — SophistiCat
Are you implying that science is the same thing as scientism? If so, you are operating under a massive misconception and a prejudice. — Pantagruel
Systems theoretic analysis has a proven track record across a broad range of empirical fields, including sociological ones. — Pantagruel
I've spent the last six months reading material which entirely contradicts your position. Mead, Parsons, Habermas. Of course, you are entitled to your opinion. Just be aware, there is an opposing viewpoint, and it is cogent and coherent. Viewing collectives of biological entities as complex systems in their own right perhaps is just too "modern" a perspective for you. — Pantagruel
It may indeed be a scientific term, nevertheless, the species is also the sum total of its organic constituent entities on the planet. And we are not in a science class, nor are we using the term for classificatory purposes. — Pantagruel
If you really think that the term "species" has no organic extension then that would be an end of fruitful discussion I fear. — Pantagruel
