And so the problem still presents itself for direct realists — Marchesk
I'm not convinced that there is a "what it's like", for bats or otherwise. — Banno
Einstein might disagree. — Banno
Just so long as we agree that what is true for A is also true for B — Banno
Still, whatever... but how about at least a word limit? — bongo fury
It's epistemic if you're an indirect realist. — Wallows
Starting from substance, in that order, ending with the mind. — Wallows
Substance>Ontological>Epistemic>Perceptual>Mind? — Wallows
I'm lost here. Just where did this start and where are we going? — Wallows
So you agree or not that it is an epistemic issue? — Wallows
Let me know why would you think otherwise? — Wallows
Then please elaborate about ontological commitments in light of private content or whatnot? — Wallows
My point is that an observer is redundant is God is one and the same with god being nature. — Wallows
Are you advocating a form of idealism in ontology? — Wallows
If there are parts of language that are invisible, — Banno
then we can't talk about them. — Banno
One of the outcomes of the behaviorism of the 20th Century was Quine's inscrutability of reference. By way of some reflection on that viewpoint that I could lay out if I really had to, meaning in human communication ends up collapsing altogether. — frank
The whole point is that Kripke explains it in terms of a concept (accessibility) which requires the notion of possibility to be understood, which seems to be circular. — Nicholas Ferreira
When he talks about the accessibility relation R (p. 4), he says that a world H2 is accessible to H1 if every proposition A that is true in H2 is possible in H1. But then he defines a proposition A is possible in the world H1 iff there is a world H2, accessible to H1, in which A is true. But isn't this circular? In order to understand what the accessibility relation means, I need to know what it means a proposition be possible, but to understand what means a proposition be possible, I need to know what the accessibility relation means. — Nicholas Ferreira
analytic philosophy seems more ahistorical. — Coben
Natural selection implies a sort of dog-eat-dog competition. — Teaisnice
TS being purposely obtuse — Mark Dennis
How wonderfully well (and typically) argued... You're free to disagree, but if you cannot point out an inconsistency in it without dragging in some strawman assumption of your own, then it is not crap at all. — noAxioms
But I don't what you to write it, I want you to point to it. — Banno
That sort of pointing is sort of metaphorical. — Banno
Well, if you cannot see the circularity in "Run points to running"... let that be an end to the discussion. — Banno
All of the instances of "run"? You got a lot of fingers. — Banno
What you did was request definitions as if that would help our discussion. — Banno
I personally have never seen or read anything that contested the suicide rate data — Pantagruel