I think @jkg20's point is that whilst you might disagree with it, neither you nor Steve Klinko have given an argument that he/she is wrong about this. We might be able to get an argument on the basis of @jkg20's reply to my last question about whether he thinks there is representation going on in the case of veridical vision, but we'll have to wait and see. Just saying that it is wrong and that physics proves it won't cut the mustard because as far as I understand it, @jkg20's position is that modern physics is contaminated by conceptual confusion about what colour is and so proves nothing.Ah. <light-bulb emoji> You are trying to make the point that colour is a property of an object out there in the world, and not a consequence of looking at that object with human eyes. With that I must disagree.
But when you observe that something is red, you are talking about the frequency of electromagnetic radiation.
Yes, with God in the picture, Berkeley's idealism becomes a kind of realism, at least insofar as bivalence can hold of propositions that human beings could not even in principle come to know the truth of. It has the merit, then, of allowing for a reality independent of what you or I or our pets might think about it.He at least had God keeping things in the quad when nobody was around
You are kind of missing jkg20's point I think. You seem to imply that in all three cases that there is an instance of redness that we are aware of. That might be the case for (3), but is it for (2) and (1)? What are you going to say to someone like jkg20 who denies (or at least appears to be denying) that any instance of redness is involved in cases of (1) and (2), and that it is only in case (3) that we have a genuine instance of redness, and it is the redness of the snooker ball?Since the Red we experience with all 3 of these things is the same or at least similar, it is completely sensible to think that there has to be something common in the production of all three.
Not quite sure what you are getting at here. Anti-realism does allow for there to be sensible questions that we do not know the answer to - at least, it ought to, otherwise it runs not just counter to common sense but to any sense whatsoever. So, to use your example: Is there life on Mars? Now, we could turn this into the form: Is it true that there is life on Mars? Here we seem to have a propositionDoes that mean there's (1) no such thing as a proposition whose truth is unknown? Or just propositions where (2) we don't know how figure out whether they're true or false?
I was aiming for the deputy but the sheriff got in the way.Why did you shot the sherif?
Let me ask you a question: when I recognise intelligent behaviour, what are the intentional conscious activities I engage in to determine the extent, dimensions or quantity of intelligence? I certainly do not administer any kind of written IQ test.
tell me about someone able to recognize wich letter is wich without engaging into the intentional activity of reading the letters. — Tomseltje
I think @Posty McPostface touches on what I'm about to say in his last post. Do we need to be careful about introducing talk about predicates when expounding W's arguments in this part of the Tractatus? 2.0231 says that we do not get material properties until we already have configurations of objects, and predicates are generally used to signify material properties. Unlike Frege who had a basic ontology of concept and object, and a corresponding predicate/name distinction, W in the Tractatus seems to be burrowing down deeper and has only objects and names. Of course, these are issues we'll be digging into in more depth when we start dealing with W's theory of symbolism. I get, though, that you are just giving an analogy of how one might argue for some kind of foundationalism, but we might need to come back to W's argument for foundationalism once we've dealt a little more with his ideas about depiction (somewhere he gives the metaphor of depiction involving putting out feelers, and there needs to be something that feelers can grab hold of - if everything they grab hold of dissipates when grabbed, then they never end up touching reality).It seems clear that any predicate will have such a smallest unit of applicability, and then the smallest unit of difference in the world we can imagine is such a predicate applying or not applying to one such a unit.
Anyway, I think states of affairs are more or less by definition possibilities, and a fact is such a possibility obtaining. Thus the world (i.e., the actual world) is fully determined by which possibilities happen to obtain.
You can imagine a collection of things, but even if you imagined a collection of everything, you would not be imagining a world.
1) A collection of things;
(2) A collection of things arranged into states of affairs;
Wrong, the Deutsche principle applies explicitly to two things and two things only, finitely realizable physical systems and universal model computing machines, neither of which in isolation nor in conjunction can be claimed to constitute all of reality without further argument. But I've had enough now, I'll go and join @Noble Dust in the dunce's corner.The Deutsch Principle applies to all of Reality, even humans.
Take it up with Akl and co. - the paper I linked to draws a parallel between Godel's work on completeness and consistency in arithmetic and the impossibility of acheiving a universal computer. I have not read Rosen, but given what @StreetlightX says, it seems he (Rosen) also thinks there is an implication of that work on the Turing-Church thesis. Curious that Deutsche did not make any reference to Rosen's work.What has Godel got to do with any of this?
You don't seem to understand that in the Deutsche principle which you presume to be relevant to this thread, the universal model computing machine he is referring to is an abstract model, he is not using the term to refer to actual nuts and bolts and silcon-chipped physical machines. Computational universality is a mathematical construct. Deutsche's principle is about the extent of what that construct can be used to model. Read the paper you linked to, his brief discussion of what a UMCM is makes it clear that it is an abstract model.Right, they are abstractions obeying abstract rules, not real physical systems obeying the laws of physics.
Physical systems that obey the laws of physics may be emulated on certain other physical systems that possess the physical property of computational universality.
Babbage's Analytic Engine is a universal computer, as are PCs. These are all finite state machines. Ignoring the fact that Turing machines do not exist, they are not finite state machines. — tom
To the first question, I suggest you read the papers referred to - and note that the remark was about Turing machines and their extensions (Deutsche's universal model computing machine is an extension of a Turing machine).What has the Turing machine got to do with any of this, or Godel for that matter? What laws of physics do Turing machines obey?
Whatever Babbage's Analytic Engine was, that it was the realization of a universal computer is what the computer scientists I am talking about deny. Specifically they deny (in fact they claim to be able to prove) that there are computable functions that cannot be computed on any machine capable only of a finite number of operations.The earliest known design of a universal computer is Babbage's Analytic Engine.
That says nothing to the question whether the principle applies to human beings.It is proved that current known laws of physics obey the Deutsch Principle. It is conjectured that all future laws must also.
Why are you parading your credentials? Does having a PhD in chemistry - or indeed any subject - provide immunity from conceptual confusion?Oh by the way, I am a scientist and I do measurement every weekdays. I have a PhD in chemistry and I skipped a year in doing so. Thank you very much.
Exactly what I have I said that entails skepticism about the science of human physiology? Plenty of what I have said manifests skepticism about what the IQ industry is messed up in, but nothing I have said undermines the work of physiologists.You sound alot like someone acknowledging that he/she can move his/her arm, but denies the chemical reactions taking place within your muscle tissue.