So in summary, it has to be stable stuff that can be plastically re-shaped into stable forms. Materialism is the ontology of mankind the builder. That is the pragmatically useful way of understanding nature ... so it must be true. :lol: — apokrisis
truth noun
Definition of truth
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4 capitalized, Christian Science : GOD
We perceive material objects all of the time, we do not perceive matter. — Jamesk
The material substratum supporting the mind independent, absolute existence of those material objects is invisible. — Jamesk
matter noun
mat·ter | \ˈma-tər
\
Definition of matter
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2a : the substance of which a physical object is composed
b : material substance that occupies space, has mass, and is composed predominantly of atoms consisting of protons, neutrons, and electrons, that constitutes the observable universe, and that is interconvertible with energy
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3a : the indeterminate subject of reality especially : the element in the universe that undergoes formation and alteration
b : the formless substratum of all things which exists only potentially and upon which form acts to produce realities
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7 Christian Science : the illusion that the objects perceived by the physical senses have the reality of substance
Kant, for example, could not explain it's resistiveness and preservance in other ways. There cannot be a will to lift a thing up and one to hold it on the ground in one subject at a time.The difference between ideas and matter is that ideas are mind dependent and matter supposedly is not. — Jamesk
Right, to define something is to state an idea. It doesn't indicate whether the defined thing could be observed or not - go figure.
It is the claim that the defined thing, "matter", is something observed rather than just an idea, that is what needs to be justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's just an idea though, an assumption, not an observation. You are claiming, to paraphrase, "anything that occupies space and has weight is matter". But what we sense, and observe, is particular things occupying space and having weight, not matter. So the validity of this idea, this assumption, or claim you've made, needs to be supported. — Metaphysician Undercover
matter
[mat-er]
See more synonyms for matter on Thesaurus.com
noun
the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, especially as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.
something that occupies space.
We do not observe matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
My doubt is this: Does the falsity of a statement(p) necessarily imply its opposite(~p) is true? (My professor says it does imply.) — Jerin Jaison
Better not, as it seems.... Just forget about that kind of bullshit. Reinsure the rationality of such patterns of thought asking yourself what they are good for. As Aristoteles puts it: It is wrong to say of things, that are not, that they were. Think about this. What makes up for the being of such thoughts? Do you have reason asking yourself such stuff? Or are you just farting against the wind? Doing so may make the world stink.Thoughts? — Kranky
Do you consider that a rational question? What should that be good for? If I was a religious person I could simply say that divine matters are not for humans. As I'm not I just ask why anyone would or should be interested in something that is - per definition - not real. Nonsense, right? We've got TV for those things. And just maybe philosophy forums.why does Reality exists? — DiegoT
Maybe that is part of the problem: You do not even recognize the process you are part of. How could you? It is about intentionality, as you pointed out. To someone like me the resulting contradiction is obvious. Not that there would be anything to discuss - questions are only the beginning. We are beyond this point, aren't we?I read your response. I am unsure what point your first paragraph is making other than many people question human knowledge. I give no weight to group opinions without rational grounds. — Dfpolis
I thought, I was. For example we know even the most basic ontological basis' have been put into question numerous times with more or less impact on contemporary philosophy. We know the history and conceptual origins of the words as we use them today to a great extend. Such things weren't proven, they were said. A-priori deductions conclude from certain foundations more or less like mathematics deduces from axioms. Adorno and Horkheimer put this to a point saying at the end of enlightenment even the subject itself is no more than a substrate of the right to set itself as such. Modern society, educated as it is, recognizes this - at least when things get serious.As I was talking about knowing, I assumed that you were as well. — Dfpolis
Well, when talking about concepts mixing things (read: perspectives) up is pretty contra-productive. It may well be that a natural number is always a real number as well but that doesn't make the natural numbers the real numbers or vice versa. So, to put this to a point, if the sciences of nature managed to say what you were up to do without even asking, what importance would the insistence of being "a deciding subject" make? "You" do what you do, right? This is about perspectives only, we are talking reasons. Reasons may seem compelling or void - who should judge that? Is it enough that someone felt compelled to do something to make the reason sufficient? Is there a higher-than-individual (divine) reason that could judge? We are far away from any "knowing" if we even can argue about such things.The partial identity of subject and object in the act of knowing is an ontological fact. Distinction belongs to the logical order. Ideas of the identical reality can be distinct if they consider that reality from different perspectives. — Dfpolis
I'm not sure I can not follow you. Are you sure you answered the question? Your "intelligibility" for example either is something I could not care about less or something that science would only be concerned about as far as you pose as an object. Not even Kant would have made the mistake to call his deductions as describing a thing in itself.1. The intelligibility of the object and the capacity of the subject to be informed are both actualized by the identical act, viz. the subject's awareness of the object, and — Dfpolis
I don't ask if you could prove that statement. I stick with the phenomenological account that you put forth the identity of subject and object on the one hand while implying a sharp distinction on the other.2. The object informing the subject is identically the subject being informed by the object. — Dfpolis
You are putting it to the point. You are different from the physical object observed, so... why should anyone assume you got something to do with it?I have argued previously that although all knowing is a subject-object relation, natural science begins with a fundamental abstraction that focuses on physical objects to the exclusion of the knowing subject. — Dfpolis
Correct. But the symbol "a" just establishes an abstract identity. This is why you can know that I am talking about the same symbol when I now write, "a" was introduced at an earlier time.it is concerned with the particular thing which is identified through the use of the symbol. — Metaphysician Undercover
How would you recognize a change in meaning if the term wasn't identical to itself?or by changing the meaning of terms mid discussion — MindForged
Sure it is. It models that a mental object that was defined stays the same. A quantum particle, in contrast to it's definition, does not.The law of identity is not a law about reference — MindForged
Expressing such a formalism in itself is:That I believe what I'm saying is true does not entail that it's impossible to give a coherent formalism where objects are not self-identical. — MindForged
It'd be unclear what "those" refers to if the "terms" would not be the "terms", don't you think?For terms of the second kind, tp t2, ..., identity is not an allowed relation. In the intended interpretation *those terms* denote non-individuals, items with no identity conditions
Do you mean that sentence to be taken as truth?Truth-predication isn't even directly involved, I think. — MindForged
How so if "∀x(x = x)" does not mean "∀x(x = x)" but something else? You cannot make a statement which does not assert itself without... an extra-ordinary amount of freedom what can be written without any possiblilty of someone marking it as an error.so that there is a failure of application when you try to assert something like "∀x(x = x)". — MindForged
Terms to which identity holds and terms to which it does not. — MindForged
I know :)I somewhat confused. In the part you were quoting, I was talking about whether it's possible have a logic to represent the idea that some objects might not be such that Identity is applicable to them. — MindForged
The point where I can not follow this is:Identity appears in basically every logic (even non-classical systems), but that's not because it's impossible to modify it or do without it (it just seems like such an obvious thing to assume). Nor does it follow if you limit identity that "water=water" is false. — MindForged
This makes the proposition that one is willing to understand the decisions made. One does not have to and hence: why should I? Just invest less in abstract "growth" and employ them right away.The higher unemployment rate that's caused by minimum wage laws is the aggregate result of all those many varied individual decisions, or one might say a mean around which all those varied decisions tend to cluster — gurugeorge
I see. Than it is just a sloppy formulation not pointing out the factum in the right way:No, it's just a general observation explaining the economic logic of the situation and making a prediction, based on economic theory, which has been borne out by the facts again and again and again. — gurugeorge
It is not about how much their work would be worth objectively but how much a potential employer could profit from it.They(Employers) are the ones who have to weigh up the costs and benefits to them — gurugeorge
Strange how free will suddenly can become irrelevant, huh?This is silly semantic quibbling. It's legitimate in ordinary language, to call a government policy the cause of a statistical trend, even though everyone knows perfectly well that the efficient/necessary causes involved are the millions of individual decisions that go to make up the trend. Newspaper/media articles and scientific papers do it all the time. — gurugeorge
On the other hand you sayI don't have to define it, the employers do. — gurugeorge
This sound like you had an idea what was worth how much.Some labour just isn't worth very much — gurugeorge
Would a definition be true in respect to itself?Therefore I am not overly impressed when a mathematician speaks of "undefinable truth". — Arisktotle
Who? Which model?Modern mathematics holds the view that the G-sentence is true in some models (notably the standard model) and false in others. — Arisktotle
Again: Which model?Since some essential "reflective" information was not passed on from the model to the formal system, it couldn't decide the outcome. — Arisktotle
No, no... The sentence could be coded into the all-system. It just blew up then.Then again, formal systems actually lack the tool required to receive that information and we would have to conclude that Gödels concept simply cannot be completely coded into the language of the formal system. — Arisktotle
And I meant there cannot ever be another cause of unemployment but the two mentioned.I didn't mean that minimum wages are the sole cause of unemployment, just that they do cause unemployment when implemented. — gurugeorge
Which underlines the above statement.The reason is obvious: if you make labour cost more than it's worth, the demand for it will be less. Employers will simply not employ people at the higher rate - they will use substitutes, re-organize the business, employ more automation, etc. — gurugeorge
How would you define what the labour is worth?Some labour just isn't worth very much - the labour of young, inexperienced people, the labour of relatively stupid people, the labour of immigrants who can't speak the language, etc., etc. But in a free market such people will be employed at the not-very-great value of their labour. However, if their labour is artificially priced higher than its value to employers, they won't be employed at all. — gurugeorge
But the unions do not make the decisions to employ or not, do they?That's handy for entrenched union interests, who don't want the competition (IOW they don't want new blood getting on the bottom rung of the employment ladder, gaining skills and work experience, and eventually competing with them), but it's a miserable deal for those who now have no job prospects at all. — gurugeorge
The ability to understand and maybe manipulate the world without limitation.What do you mean by omniscience and potential omnipotence? — Posty McPostface
I do not understand. There is math and there is... stones. How are stones math?I take it from a Platonic POV and assume that math is the reality, therefore what does that imply according to Godel's Incompleteness Theorems? — Posty McPostface
That is incorrect since it is covered by the syntax of the system. — Arisktotle
Oh... the syntax was a metaphor. "2=3" ain't true either and looks like some equation nontheless. When using "syntax" in the sense I did this does not mean " 'Number = Number' is a valid expression ". One can easily write a computer-program that could deduce any valid a+b=c for natural numbers gramatically.The Gödel-sentence would never have been debated, would it have been excluded a priori by the syntax-checker of the active system. — Arisktotle
It is not true in the formal system as it cannot be deduced.It is true though that it has no semantic value and therefore does not exist as a theorem. — Arisktotle