From a metaphysical standpoint, Charles Sanders Peirce drew a helpful distinction between reality and existence. The real is that which is as it is regardless of what any individual mind or finite group of minds thinks about it, while existence is reaction with other like things in the environment. Accordingly, abstractions and other immaterial objects do not exist, but some of them are nevertheless real. — aletheist
Here's a few biggies:What do you see about him that's different? — Pfhorrest
You can use whatever definition you like for purposes of your discussion. I was just making a general comment not directly related to what you were saying.There is a significant problem with that in the context of our present discussion, Relativist...one that should be obvious to everyone. — Frank Apisa
A live possibility is one that you include in your epistemic analysis, particularly in abductive reasoning - identifying the best explanation for a set of facts.So, let me change the question to: Why do you suppose miracles are not a "live possibility"...whatever that means? — Frank Apisa
Mind independent ABSTRACT objects, right?That's not correct. Platonism involves mind-independent objects. So, how does your triangle exist without consciousness? — 3017amen
That is the general problem with foundationalism. Plantinga addresses this by arguing that beliefs that are "basic in the proper way" (i.e. properly basic) have warrant. The "proper way" is that it was produced by a sound mind, in an environment supportive of proper thought in accord with a design plan successfully aimed at truth.Are the foundational beliefs warranted? What about justificatory regress? — creativesoul
Not really. The relations between consciousnesses seems indirect.In a humanistic sense, are you saying that we all are an interconnected consciousness? — 3017amen
I agree, but we can still analyse any specific belief to determine whether or not it is warranted. A belief that is fully wartanted would rely only on other warranted beliefs, so there are layers upon layers - until reaching the foundation. At any rate, that's the theory upon which foundationalism is based.Although it is quite clear that belief begins simply and grows in it's complexity, and is thus accrued in a way, I do not think that happens in a strictly linear fashion — creativesoul
To be warranted, a belief needs rational justification. Justification means showing how the belief is inferred from other warranted beliefs. Ultimately, there will be beliefs that aren't derived from prior beliefs- these are the basic beliefs, the foundation for one's entire belief structure.In what way are they foundational? — creativesoul
Not impossible, just not a live possibility. When your dog disappears, you don't seriously entertain the possibility he was abducted by aliens.Why think anything not conclusively established as impossible...not to be possible. — Frank Apisa
I am doing exactly what sickens you. Here's my reasoning: Trump is a disaster, and it is of utmost importance to replace him. Odds of replacing him are improved by choosing the most electable alternative - as long as the alternative is a significant improvement. All the Democratic candidates are a significant improvement.I think what I enjoy the most about Sanders is that it is about his ideas, which was also the case for Warren, and not "can this guy beat Trump". I'm sick and tired of the lowest bar having to be met as being a viable option for a President. If politics devolves into running for President because you're more popular than the other guy instead of at least some policy issues, you might as well get it over with and implement an autocracy and enjoy your bread and games. Or in that case the NFL, MBA or NBA and nachos or something. — Benkei
The problems with this claim is that the sources are not independent, the easiest version was written at least 30 years after Jesus' death, and they were written by writers in a different locale, who spoke a different language. Further, the authors , and the people orally transmitting stories before them, were credulous, commited, believers, not dispassionate investigators critically examining the claims. Their motivation was to get more people to believe.The case of Jesus seems unique in history because we have a number of detailed accounts of his life and resurrection. — Gregory
It seems to me we need to accept some of the miracle claims as real — Gregory
That's exactly what a basic belief IS.What if the notion of "basic" amounts to something like being foundational to all other beliefs. — creativesoul
A triangular object has 3 sides that are arranged in a certain general way. It's existence and structure is not dependent on a mind analyzing that structure.Triangular objects exist even if there are no minds to conceptualize triangles.
— Relativist
How is that possible? — 3017amen
Yes, and thus we get into metaphysics. A topic for another day.That raises the question, "What do you mean by 'the real world'"? And what do you mean by "something exists in the real world"? — GrandMinnow
No, but one shouldn't conflate existential quantification with a statement of ontology. IOW just because we can do some useful math with infinities doesn't entail anything ontic.The presence of such questions doesn't impugn existential quantification. — GrandMinnow
Sorry. I agree with that. They are useful fictions.That doesn't answer my point that without infinitistic set theory, axiomatizing the mathematics for the sciences gets a lot more complicated. — GrandMinnow
OK, but that's just referring to a concept - a mental object. It is spatially located in your brain, unless dualism is true. Triangular objects exist even if there are no minds to conceptualize triangles. When people speak of the existence of infinity they are not merely referring to the concept that exists in our minds.I don't think it's Platonism because it assumes an independent existence outside of consciousness. The triangulation of a roof truss exists abstractly. The connection can be 'severed' and independent of the concrete thing itself, the roof truss. — 3017amen
Fair point, although infinites appear in some physics equations, and they are treated ad objects in transfinite math. Regardless, from this viewpoint, the question is: is there something that exists in the real world that maps to an infinite set?There is not an entity called 'infinity' (distinct from a different notion of points on a real extended line or figures of speech such as "as x goes to infinity"). Rather, there is the adjective 'is infinite', and an axiom that entails (with other axioms) that entails certain theorems including the existence of infinite sets. — GrandMinnow
Agreed. The question remains: do immaterial objects exist? If so, what does it mean to exist? Does Spider-Man exist? Do all fictions, past present, and future exist? What about possible fictions that never get authored?Existential quantification is not inconsistent with the claim that abstractions are not material objects. — GrandMinnow
Sets are abstractions. Creating abstraction just means conceptualizing. My point is that abstractions don't actually exist except as mental entities. Mathematical abstractions are useful because they entail analyzable properties Does anyone suggest imaginary numbers exist? Nevertheless, they appear in physics equations.Of course, we can hold that there do not exist infinite sets. But then providing a formal axiomatization for the mathematics for the sciences gets a lot more complicated. — GrandMinnow
That sounds like Platonism. My problem with ontologies that include platonic objects is that they seem unnecessary. Why posit an independent existence for triangles, when triangles can be accounted for as constituents of triangular objects? Further, how do triangles exist independently? How do they get connected to objects? Can the connection be severed? This makes it even more unnecessarily complex? Can they replaced with squares simply by replacing the connection?If a given abstract does not exist for the sole purposes of the creation of a particular concrete thing, by definition, it would then be something independent of the thing itself. — 3017amen
The notation is interpreted by a musician, analogously to a reader interpreting print words. Words refer to objects, concepts, actions etc, while musical notations refer to the various aspects of sounds you mention. The sounds can be reproduced on an instrument, or merely interpreted within the musician's mind.. I don't see the difference, or even how semantics would play a role. — 3017amen
Both ways are consistent with the way of abstraction. We mentally consider a set of attributes common to all triangles to form the abstraction in our minds, then reverse the process, adding back concrete elements.Abstracts can work both ways. — 3017amen
It's a strawman that fits the Leibnizian Cosmological Argument proferred by apologist William Lane Craig:He's also tilting at strawmen, — Douglas Alan
Laws of gravity in physics
2. Engineering/Design formulas for; compressive forces, tensile strength, torsional forces, etc.
3. Musical notation — 3017amen
Right, he uses that narrow view of belief, but he considers perceptions (including the sensus divinitatus) as part of the belief forming process. Seeing a tree produces the belief that a tree is before us. Perceiving God produces the belief of God.Platinga seems to be talking about propositions. — creativesoul
Being acquired as part of species development doesn't negate the fact these beliefs are innate to the individual, and that is sufficient for being basic.So not "basic", acquired (only by survivor species) via adaptation. In other words, emergent traits (i.e. habits) not "beliefs", or propositional assertions. Why conflate physiological, perceptual and neurological functions (i.e. inputs-throughput) with epistemic / cognitive states (i.e. reflexive outputs)? — 180 Proof
That doesn't entail a basic belief, because it is LEARNED. Basic beliefs aren't learned, they are innate. Plantinga suggests we perceive God through a theoretical "sensus divinitatus", analogous to vision, or hearing.I would argue the belief in gods or a god is a basicality mainly because to get large groups of people to work together you need a false belief or perhaps a real belief — christian2017