I almost agreed. The problem is "supervene" instead of "depend." "Supervene" is a weasel word used to avoid discussing causal relations. Like correlation, it avoids, rather than addresses the dynamics.Why think a mind is something that can exist without an information processing substrate to supervene upon? — wonderer1
Because I have read Aristotle, who was not a member of any faith I know, as well as ibn Sina and Aquinas, who were. Their proofs are sound: based on true premises and valid logic.I.e. why think that a belief that God is metaphysically possible is not faith based? — wonderer1
When things act on us in a particular way, which is what an appearance is, it shows that they can act in that way. That gives us a partial knowledge of their operational capabilities, traditionally called their "essence."One problem I see with the Laws metaphor is related to whether or not there are real physical properties of things. Does an electron have charge, spin, and mass, or do laws dictate the behaviors of things such that electrons having charge spin and mass is only an illusion. — wonderer1
The difference between the laws and properties is that properties are possessed at each instance of time without reference to other instants, while the laws say how systems will evolve over the course of time.My working hypothesis is that subatomic particles actually have properties that determine how they interact, and to add Laws on top would be overdetermination. — wonderer1
I fail to see how.The notion of Laws of Physics seems to fit better with the notion that we exist within a simulation rather than within a physical world. — wonderer1
Yes, you are right. Logically, they could change. Physically (in other words from a scientific perspective), they do not change and are the basis for the concept of physical, vs. logical, necessity. For example, if you step off a cliff, it is physically, but not logically, necessary that you will fall.They have been observed to be invariant, but it does not follow that they are necessary;
as implausible as it might sound there is no logical reason they might not change. — Janus
I am almost positive it was not. My point is that after Descartes, many Europeans developed materialistic thought patterns, not that they became materialists. Augustine was a dualist, but he would never have said that the soul is thinking stuff (res).I guess that's one way of framing it, but I doubt it is what Spinoza had in mind. — Janus
I am asked "Do you know that strange object?" I say "Yes," because I have seen it, not because I understand it. That is not to say that I don't try to understand what I see, but that I know it with the first flash of awareness.I agree there are different kinds of knowledge. In relation to knowledge as acquaintance, I'd say that we become acquainted with things by learning to understand them and I think this process of coming to understanding involves imagination. — Janus
Perhaps. My correspondents often use "the best explanation" for justification.I understand abductive reasoning to be more about conjecturing. imagining possible hypotheses, then it is about justifying beliefs. — Janus
As I understand Kant, he does not believe that phenomena are real. They are just how things appear (very like Plato's "shadows"). His noumena are real, but they are not accessible.As I understand him, Kant believes that empirical reality, appearances or phenomena are knowable. — Janus
I think we agree. I would add that phenomena are the contingent forms of knowing. It is like Kant wants to know reality, but not employ the means of knowing reality. When we employ the means, which are phenomena, what we know is the ding an sich (thing in itself), but not exhaustively.For me it's hard to escape the conclusion that the empirical is a manifestation of the in itself, and real as such, but it does not exhaust reality, only the reality available to us. — Janus
I find it entirely implausible that "neural processes [completely] determine thought and action.The point is that if neural processes determine thought and action, which seems to me highly plausible, then there can be no libertarian free will, regardless of whether physics is deterministic or indeterministic. And we have no way of knowing which is true, in any case. — Janus
We have no way of proving a theory in a hypothetico-deductive science. We can show that there is no need to invoke indeterminism to explain present data.... regardless of whether physics is deterministic or indeterministic. And we have no way of knowing which is true, in any case. — Janus
Of course we do. Biological (in a large sense) drives. There are situations that call for a response. We can respond automatically, or thoughtfully. If the thoughtful response is not the automatic response, our mind has taken control. How can you deny that thought makes the difference?Choices are made because we feel compelled to go one way or the other at the moments of decision, and we don't really know what determines that. — Janus
Exactly!!!!! You see how you framed this? (1) You assumed the person is a non-physcal entity. I deny that. (2) You assumed that events are not caused. I deny that. (3) You assumed that it is outside the order of nature. I deny that as well. This is framing the problem in terms of Cartesian concepts, even though you are not a Cartesian dualist. It is the conceptual space into which you have projected the problem, rather than the facts, that leads to your conclusion.It is hard to believe that there is some non-physical entity which is the person, and which stands outside of the causal order of nature. — Janus
Neither do I. We are natural beings, but natural beings who can act both physically and intentionally. Why would anyone want to deny that it is natural for humans to be intentional as well as physical?But I don't see myself as some entity outside of the greater nature that has produced that personal nature with its desires and thoughts. — Janus
Indeed. That is not a theological premise. A premise is a starting point, not a conclusion. I am happy to say that the most uncontroversial starting points can be used to deduce God's existence, but that does not make them theological in the sense of being faith-based.My account of consciousness has no theological premises. — Dfpolis
You said:
The question is how do we know that there is an apple on the counter, because if we understand that, we can understand how we might know that there is a God. — Dfpolis — Fooloso4
You seem confused. I said the Laws of Physics are approximate descriptions of the actual Laws of Nature that guide the evolution of physical systems. It is the laws of nature that I said were intentional realities.Approximate descriptions" do not tell us how things must be, only approximately how they are. This is quite different from your claim that:
In the same way, the laws of nature, which are intentional realities, act on prior states produce final states. — Dfpolis — Fooloso4
A conclusion, not a premise. The premise is that physics has found that systems develop in determinate ways.and:
God has a creative intent. It is manifest in the laws of nature which guide the transformation of the acorn's potential into an oak. — Dfpolis — Fooloso4
Only in behavioralist terms. It is not evidence that your dog is subjectively aware of what it is doing.If the dog attempts to reach the apple and attempts to reach it where it is and not elsewhere then its behavior indicates that she knows it is there. — Fooloso4
— Fooloso4
My account of consciousness has no theological premises.Theological mystification is the kind of thing philosophy attempts to clear up. — Fooloso4
Yes, and we call those aspect "the Laws of Nature."Descriptive laws of nature are descriptions. Those who think that the laws of nature are prescriptive do not deny the truth of the uniformities or regularities of the descriptions of the Regulatory Theory. You say as much:
we need to accept that the Laws of Physics are approximate descriptions of aspects of nature — Fooloso4
Is there a real difference? If they are invariant, they are necessary. It is irrational to suppose that processes have invariant ways of acting without there being a reason for their doing so that might justly be called a principle.The problem is that there is no way to determine whether the so-called 'laws of nature' are merely descriptive of the invariant ways that nature manifests itself to us, or whether they stand as somehow real overarching metaphysical principles of nature. The latter idea seems to be hard to coherently articulate, just as Plato's forms are. — Janus
That does not change the the potential nature of his substance -- which means that from an Aristotelian perspective, it is a kind of matter, though not the normal kind.For Spinoza substance can take the various forms of matter and of mind, matter is the attribute or mode of extension and mind is the various attributes or modes of thought or affect. — Janus
There are at least two kinds of knowledge: knowledge as acquaintance (Russell's "knowledge of things"), and propositional knowledge. Abductive reasoning is one of a number of ways to justify a belief, not knowledge in the strict sense.Knowledge results from interpreting what is experienced; and I count interpreting as one aspect of imagination. Peirce calls it abductive reasoning. — Janus
We more or less agree, except that Kant believed that reality (noumena) is not knowable, because our mind adds content to it, such as the forms of space and time.So, I don't take Kant to be saying that what we experience is not real, rather it is one limited aspect of the real. — Janus
Only if you start by thinking plain old reality is only what we experience, which is not the common understanding. Let's say it adds emphasis.The "absolute' signifies what is real despite or in addition to what we or any cognitive being experiences — Janus
Yes, we can never be another subject or kind of subject. Whether animals experience or merely respond is a different question.We cannot experience what animals experience, for example, we cannot know how things appear to them, so there is an aspect of reality which is effectively closed off to us. — Janus
Yes, not A precludes A. So what?There are two objections to the idea of radical libertarian free will. First, if we accept that our actions and thoughts are determined by neural activity of which we have no awareness and over which we have no control, then libertarian free will is impossible. — Janus
There is no reason to suppose that such a recess exists. What happens is that we attend to experience, and sometimes the data stream calls for a choice. So, we do not decide to make a choice, although we can choose not to decide and so drift. We are called upon to respond and must choose how. This can happen because what we value is threatened and that requires an action. Nor is our choice determined by some prior utility, because we are the source of value and decide what to value more and what less.Second when we choose, we do not choose to choose and choose to choose to choose and so on, but at a certain moment a choice arises, and we act or attend or whatever. — Janus
Yes, they demand a metaphysical explanation just as the foundations of mathematics demand a meta-mathematical investigation.I think the motivation for questioning the existence of 'natural law' is because even though science assumes the regularities of nature designated as lawful, it can't explain them. — Wayfarer
I said the work on "self"-organization apples the laws, not nature.it applies them. — Dfpolis
Nature does not "apply" its laws. — Fooloso4
It doesn't. It behaves in response to it.How does my dog know that there is an apple on the counter? — Fooloso4
There is no need for you to participate in philosophical discussion. If you find it confusing, ignore it.he question does not arise for my dog and does not ordinarily arise for human beings either who are not confused by philosophical conundrums. — Fooloso4
No. I dismiss it because I am a physicist, and descriptions that do not describe reality are fictions.You dismiss the idea that the laws of nature are descriptive rather than prescriptive because it is problematic for the larger story of God you want to tell. — Fooloso4
I know.This is not uncontroversial. — wonderer1
Not quite.Each side takes a different stance on each of these issues, and to adopt either theory is to give up one or more strong beliefs about the nature of the world.
Some of these implications involve accidental truths, false existentials, the correspondence theory of truth, and the concept of free will. Perhaps the most important implication of each theory is whether the universe is a cosmic coincidence or driven by specific, eternal laws of nature. Each side takes a different stance on each of these issues, and to adopt either theory is to give up one or more strong beliefs about the nature of the world.
Right! But, one makes an explanation possible, and the other does not. Abandoning dualism is only removing an obstacle, not an explanation.I am not a dualist. I am simply pointing out that changing one form of substance ontology for another or calling it "relating" instead of "interacting" explains nothing. — Arne
Thank you. Message me with your email and I will send you a draft of "How the Agent Intellect Works" to comment on. I will be submitting it for publication around the end of the month.And I certainly look forward to your putting this centuries old issue to rest once and for all. — Arne
Contemplating fixed content requires no change once it has begun.Wait, what kind of activity is not always a change? I think activity is always a change, whether it's change of place, or change of some quality. Activity as motion, necessarily implies change. — Metaphysician Undercover
You told me what you think. You did not cite Aristotle and you did not lead me to reject being during change.I explained to you why becoming is incompatible with being, and this is directly from Aristotle. — Metaphysician Undercover
I already answered this. Describing is a mental act and there is not an actually infinite number of such acts, only a potentially infinite number.So it is impossible that becoming can be described by states of being at various stages, because this would require an infinity of stages for even the smallest degree of change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle is giving dialectic advice, stating that the best starting point for arguing against nonsensical claims is a definition, not stating a metaphysical principle, in the quotation you cite.This is exactly what Aristotle denies. — Metaphysician Undercover
To say that a thing is identical with its essence (which btw is false) is not to say anything about what happens over the course of time, which is what you are talking about. Essences only define what a being could do if it existed. So, as Aquinas saw, we need actual existence in addition to essences.A good representation of the law of identity is found in Metaphysics Bk7, Ch 6. — Metaphysician Undercover
Organic continuity is continuity that maintains unity, as when an organism is transformed over the course of its life. For example, when a caterpillar, which is not a butterfly, becomes a butterfly.I haven't the vaguest idea of what "organic continuity" means. It's not Aristotelian and it seems that it is actually you who is making up your own laws. — Metaphysician Undercover
By the operation of the same laws of nature that account for the physical processes of organisms.How would you account for the temporal continuity of changing inorganic things like rocks? — Metaphysician Undercover
When does a chip become a fracture into two rocks? It depends on how we define "the same rock." Rocks do not have the same kind of unity organisms do. Organisms have immanent (self-perfecting) activity. Rocks don't.Surely the rock remains the same rock, despite despite a change in location, or chipping and other changes which occur to it. — Metaphysician Undercover
I accept that, but there is also being at each point in the process.You seem to be incapable, or unwilling to grasp the fact that "becoming" is what occurs between points in time, — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense!This issue is fundamental to an understanding of Aristotle's metaphysics. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are missing the point. Becoming is the actualization of a potency insofar as it is still in potency. What you are missing is that there is no bare potency. Potency is always an aspect of informed being.f understanding becoming was a matter of grasping "the intelligibility of the being in progress at each point in time", then "becoming" would be completely unintelligible as requiring understanding "the being in progress" at an infinite number of points in time, just to be able to understand even the most simple case of becoming. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you say.This does not resolve the problem, nor is it Aristotle's recommendation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree. I did not say it did. I said the actualization of potential does.So, saying that at t1 there was X type of being, and at t2 there was Y type of being, does not explain the intermediary change which occurred — Metaphysician Undercover
I did not say that. I said the number of kinds was always finite.If we say as you are proposing, that there is a limited number of actual stages — Metaphysician Undercover
A continuum is not a regress. There is typically one efficient cause, and one potential being actualized, for the whole transformation. What do you see as a regress?we face an infinite regress — Metaphysician Undercover
You have to realize that the laws of logic are based on the laws of being. There cannot both be a sea battle and not be a sea battle, but given that there is not yet a reality to conform to, "there will be sea battle tomorrow" is neither true nor false. Since it is neither true nor false, the rules applying to truth and falsity do not apply.I think the most famous is in "Categories" where he talks about the possibility of a sea battle tomorrow. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not quite. Conceiving the same reality in different ways is a form of equivocation. When we are using different meanings for the same (nominal) concept, the same formal proposition can be true and false, not because the reality is indeterminate, but because we are not thinking the same things about it.If different people perceive the same changing thing in different ways, and the truth about a thing is according to how it is perceived, then the same thing is at the same time both "so and not so". — Metaphysician Undercover
In Plato's theory, sensible things are like images in a mirror and have no more an essence than a reflection does.However, in his Metaphysics the substance of a self-subsistent, separate thing, is equated with the thing's essence, following Plato's Timaeus. — Metaphysician Undercover
The work being done on "self"-organization does not falsify the existence of actual laws of nature. it applies them. It is on the basis of the laws discovered today that we explain the origin and evolution of the universe and the evolution of life. If you reject them, you reject the foundations of cosmology, physics and chemistry.That is your supposition not a fact. It ignores the work being done on self-organization. It is understandable that you want to put it aside. — Fooloso4
Agreed. That is not in question. The questions are: (1) how can intentional acts have physical effects? and (2) how can physical operations, such as sensing, elicit intentional states such as consciousness of what is sensed?Human beings have the capacity to act intentionally. Just as we have the capacity to see and speak and think. And desire and want and move toward those things to obtain them. — Fooloso4
We agree, but when you start with a Cartesian conceptual space, answering (1) and (2) seems impossible. This leads many to become metaphysical naturalists and try to reduce intentional operations to physical operations.It may be that when you consider it you do so using Cartesian categories, but the capacity to act intentionally does not entail dualism. — Fooloso4
No it does not, because "matter" does not mean potential, not actual, which hyle does. When we hear "matter" we think actual stuff.Material works pretty well. — Fooloso4
I agree. The question is how do we know that there is an apple on the counter, because if we understand that, we can understand how we might know that there is a God. In that quest, understanding the identity of action and passion is essential.Whatever your theory is of how we experience apples, there is little or no disagreement that there is an apple on the counter. We can see it. We can pick it up. We can eat it. — Fooloso4
Little Women is a story. Showing that electric charge is quantized requires reason applied to experience. They are not the same.Unlike the apple your theological claims, as you said: are
... based on reason applied to experience. — Dfpolis
A story about God is not sufficient evidence of God. — Fooloso4
But isn't this just saying that the one substance has the potential to be any of the things we experience? And what has the potential to take on various forms is matter. In my mind, that makes his substance a kind of matter, not in the Cartesian sense of being extended, but in the Aristotelian sense of having the potential to be formed -- which is what taking a new "mode" is.I don't read Spinoza's idea of substance as an idea of "stuff" in any sense. His way of thinking is not materialist or idealist in my view but, if anything (neutral) monist as he understands both matter (extensa) and mind (cogitans) as attributes of something more fundamental ("substance", "nature" or "god"). These attributes are also understood as just the two attributes out of infinitely many, that we can apprehend. — Janus
Many thoughts begin with imagination. Knowledge begins with experience.I don't know what you mean by saying that beginning with what we can imagine is unsound. All thought begins with what we can imagine. — Janus
The notion of reality comes from experience. You can try to extend it to mean something other than what we experience, as Kant tries to do, but there is no justification for that. So, to say "what we experience is not real" is an abuse of language, as "real" means like the things we experience.Also, we don't "end with reality"; what could that mean? — Janus
I see no difference between "absolute" reality and plain old reality. The term "absolute" adds no definable information here. We certainly do not have omniscience, but omniscience is a ridiculous standard for human knowledge. Instead, we have projections of reality -- and that in two ways. The first is dynamic: objects project their power into us by the identity of action and passion.We are able to imagine that there could be, or ought ot be, an absolute reality, but we cannot say what that is. — Janus
But, they can only "appear" as they act -- and those actions flow out of their Aristotelian form (eidos) which is their "first actuality" or intrinsic operational capability. That means that sensory experience is inseparable from reality. Things appear to us because appearance is exactly objective reality informing us."Appearances" as I used it just denotes that we know things only as they appear. — Janus
I agree with most of this. Knowing is a subject-object relation, and so determined by the nature of both subject and object. But it is absurd to imagine that we could know without subject limitations, so that our knowledge, or any knowledge, is subject-free.I have not said that what we see depends on us in any intentional sense, but it does depend on our nature, on how we are constituted, and over that we have no control, which means that our nature does not depend on us in any intentional sense. — Janus
I mean that the physical basis of red in an apple may be an absorption spectrum, but how we receive red is by experiencing a certain quale -- a contingent form of awareness.I'm not sure what you mean "how we receive it" depending on us. — Janus
That comes later, in judgement. First, we experience without classifying, then we make classifying judgements, projecting experience into our conceptual space. That space reflects past experience including culture. I see an elephant. Is it an African elephant or a sign of intoxication?Perhaps how we interpret things depends on us to some degree, on culture, on genetics; is that what you mean? — Janus
That is not what I meant, but I do not agree. We can and do decide what to attend to. And it is what we choose to attend to that sways us.I don't agree if you mean it depends on us in some libertarian free will sense. We cannot even decide what we will be convinced by; we are either convinced or not. — Janus
Putting aside that matter does not organize itself (the laws of nature do), this does nothing to explain human intentional acts, such as awareness of contents. When that is considered, it is still done so using Cartesian categories. That is where dualism comes in. Even if thinking stuff is rejected, no other way of framing the problem is considered.The development of self-organizing matter gives rise to the development of organisms. No dualism. — Fooloso4
Yes, and the context was an explanation of Aristotle's technical terms. As you see, I am happy to answer questions if my are explanations inadequate.This is still misleading. What you said was:
(hyle = timber, poorly as translated "matter") — Dfpolis — Fooloso4
Quite right. That is why I often do not translate it. It is a technical term with no good English equivalent.That out of which an acorn comes to be is not timber. Timber comes to be out of a tree. An oak comes to be out of an acorn. Translating hyle as 'timber' is at least if not more problematic than matter. — Fooloso4
Not quite. We experience everything through its action on us. When we see a red apple it is because it has acted to scatter red light into our eyes, and sufficient light triggers a neuron and so on until the action has changed our brain state. The apple informing our brain state is, identically, our brain state being informed by the apple. This identity is the basis of knowledge.We have not experience of the arche or source or beginning, only conjecture, only likely stories. — Fooloso4
I hold that God is radically different, but inseparable, from the world. Still, that is not the kind of dualism we are discussing. The dualism we are discussing has one kind of thing doing physical acts and a separate kind of thing doing mental acts.This is a dualism of God and world. — Fooloso4
All ideas, being actions (humans thinking of something) inhere in the persons thinking them, and are therefore accidents in the sense of predicables. This is true whether we are thinking of singulars or universals.it is as you say an accident, and therefore not a universal — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, it is an activity, and it can change but it is not always changing.Would you agree with me that this sort of idea is better represented as an activity, a thinking activity, always changing according to the evolving circumstances as physical activities are carried out? — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes.And would you agree that although habit plays an important role in this sort of thinking activity, there are many ideas which stretch beyond habit, freely willed ideas, which contribute to creativity? — Metaphysician Undercover
Becoming x has ceases when x complete.There is no middle ground between being the completed thing and not yet being the completed thing (an entelecheia). — Dfpolis
There is always a middle ground, it's called "becoming", and becoming is fundamentally incompatible with being, as explained by Aristotle. — Metaphysician Undercover
The Aristotelian answer to this is that this infinity is potential, not actual. It is not that we have different being, but a different kind of being. "Kind" is a conceptual reality, based on the intelligibility of the being in progress at each point in time. That intelligibility does not become an actual "kind" unless the agent intellect actualizes it, and forms a universal concept by prescinding from individuating notes of intelligibility. So, while we have an infinite number of potential kinds, we only have as many actual kinds as the agent intellect is able to generate.You can see that this leads to an infinite regress of different beings at each conceivable moment of passing time in the duration of change. — Metaphysician Undercover
Give me the text and citation.So Aristotle concluded that "becoming" is incompatible with the logical terms of being and not-being. — Metaphysician Undercover
Citation? His solution was to point out an equivocation.His solution was to allow that the law of excluded middle be violated — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense. Aristotle did not say what you claim. There is no middle ground between being and non-being. Every potential is grounded in actual being. New forms of being come from old forms of being, not from non-being absolutely considered. In other words, the non-being of a potential being is not absolute non-being, so the new being comes from something, rather than from nothing.The potential of activity cannot be described in terms of being and not being, due to the problem of infinite regress outlined by Aristotle, and there must always be something in between any two distinct states of being, which cannot be described as a state of being, because it is change, becoming. — Metaphysician Undercover
Citation? The Law of Identity is "Whatever is, is and whatever is not, is not." So, you are making up your own law. Please state what you think it is.The law of identity allows that the very same thing is changing as time passes — Metaphysician Undercover
No, the self-identity of a changing being is based on organic continuity. I do not have the same description I did when I was conceived, but I have organically developed developed from that zygote into the person I am today.If the "identity" of a thing is a description which is supposed to correspond, then at each passing moment, a thing which consists of moving parts, must have a new identity, i.e. be a new thing at each passing moment. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where did he do so?So Aristotle was very intuitive to clarify the law of identity to account for this reality of observed temporal continuity, that a thing maintains its identity as the thing it is, despite changes to its form, as time passes. — Metaphysician Undercover
We agree on this. Aristotle contributes his distinction between substantial and accidental changes to the discussion. Still, he seems to have stuck with Plato's notion of static universal forms, even though he rejected Platonic Ideas.No specific description forms the identity of a thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it is not. As I explained earlier, to have actual "kinds" requires a mental act.The infinite regress demonstrated by Aristotle, and explained above, is a very significant ontological problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
Neither Aristotle nor I assume one substance. He defines each ostensible unity (each tode ti = this something) to be a substance (ousia).This is why we cannot accurately account for the nature of reality by simply assuming one substance. — Metaphysician Undercover
This does not follow. In Aristotle's view I am the same substance I was the moment I qualified as a rational animal. What need is there for another substance?So we must accept that there is something other, which is incompatible with this one substance existing in distinct states. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is because secondary substances (species and genera) are derivative on primary substances. They only exist in our minds because primary substances act on our senses to form phantasms (neural states) from which we abstract species concepts.Again, you are adhering to Aristotle's "primary substance", and conveniently ignoring his "secondary substance", in your definition of substance — Metaphysician Undercover
Yep, they're accidents. Still accidental being is a type of being, not non-being.So concepts are very real occurrences of "non-substance". — Metaphysician Undercover
It is Aristotle's definition. I just accepted it.But now we have a problem with your definition of "substance", as "this something". — Metaphysician Undercover
Not by Aristotle's definition. He knows that things undergo accidental changes and remain the same substance. Read De Generatione et Corruptione. I have lost a lot of hair, but I am still a human and will be until I die.Every time we point to a "this something", we find that it is engaged in change, activity, so it is also non-substance at the very same time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but most of these changes do not break the thing's organic continuity. It is the same unity, the same "this," and so the same substance.Any instance of substance, a thing, also consists of active becoming or change, and by your exclusionary definition of "substance", this must be "non-substance" — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, there is, but it is not the actuality of a potentially living body. It is an actual efficient cause.There is necessarily an actuality which is before, that's what Aristotle's so-called cosmological argument demonstrates. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. As I just said, it is the actuality of the efficient cause, not of the potentially living body, which it must be to satisfy the definition of psyche.This is "the soul", the actuality which is necessarily prior to the actual living body. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, classically, substance/ousia refers to true reality. What I mean is that for Spinoza, there is one substance, and what we see as things are its "modes." Another way of saying this is that the things of experience are "made of" his one substance. That makes it a kind of stuff. So, while his language is not materialistic, his way of thinking about reality is.Spinoza, as I read him, treats substance as being or true reality, not as "stuff". — Janus
Beginning with what we can imagine and ending with reality is fundamentally unsound.We are dialectically capable of imagining that there is a reality beyond or in addition to how things appear to us. This comes with the realization that things do not depend in us for their existence, although their appearances obviously do depend on us as well as the objects which appear to us. — Janus
Thinking of matter in a different in terms of self-organization and systems (rather than extension) neither rejects nor replaces the dualist conceptual space.Contemporary philosophers of science, or at least the ones I think are worth reading, are much more likely to talk about self-organizing matter and systems than extended stuff. — Fooloso4
No one said it was. Aristotle took an existing word, hyle, an gave it a new meaning, namely that "out of which" something comes to be.The material of an acorn or an oak is not timber or wood. If it were our buildings would have some very odd features. — Fooloso4
It is based on reason applied to experience. It is just not what I am arguing in this thread.A great deal hinges on this for you, but it is an assertion without sufficient evidence. — Fooloso4
You have provided no arguments to support this strange claim.So, you are an ontological and epistemological dualist. — Fooloso4
To continue: Primary substances are the things from which we abstract the concepts of species and genera. This is done by sensation and the actualization of selected notes of intelligibility by the agent intellect.Since each sense of "form" is actual, we need to resolve how primary and secondary substance interact with each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Please read Aristotle's Physics I, where he explains the relation between these concepts.You have no grounds for this statement because "becoming" is incompatible with the states of being and not being. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it does not. There is no middle ground between being the completed thing and not yet being the completed thing (an entelecheia).By Aristotle's principles, "becoming" violates the law of excluded middle — Metaphysician Undercover
Hegel was confused. He seemed not to understand potentiality and the definition of change.Hegel's principles, "becoming" encompasses bot[h] being and not being. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, we can. What we may not be able to say is where the line is. For example, when is a fetus a human being? Still, wherever the line is, before that, we have becoming and from that point on we have the being.So we really cannot say with any amount of certainty whether becoming truly overlaps the being of a thing or not. — Metaphysician Undercover
First, we are not completely identical at different times, so the law of identity does not apply. Second, we are the same being because of our dynamic continuity, not because of the same stuff or the exact same form. Third, being and becoming do co-exist, but not with respect to the same terminus. When I was 10 years old, I was becoming 11, not 10.I would say that since a thing is always changing, and maintains its identity as the same thing, despite undergoing change, according to the law of identity, we must conclude that the being and the becoming of the very same thing, do co-exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, no, that is not the reason. My 10 year old self was not identical to my 11 year old self.By the law of identity it is still the same thing — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that applying our concepts can be fuzzy. This results from our concepts not being as clear as we would like, and perceptions being inadequate to determining sharp lines. These are epistemological, not ontological problems.Clearly, the becoming of a thing must overlap the being of the thing, and this is why there cannot be a clearly and distinctly defined "point in time" at which the not-being of the thing is replaced with the being of the thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I am applying the term in the different ways it was applied historically. Aristotle and Aquinas define a substance as "this something" (an ostensible unity). Descartes and the modern tradition see substance as a kind of stuff things are made of (an analogue of matter). These are radically different concepts.It appears like you are just manipulating your use of "substance" to suit your purpose — Metaphysician Undercover
You misunderstand. I am objecting on Aristotelian grounds. Concepts are not substances because they inhere in people, who are instances of "this something," i.e. substances.if you do not want to call the immaterial form which precedes in time the material form, a "substance", because "substance" implies matter to you, then we can proceed on those terms. — Metaphysician Undercover
Concepts are real because they are acts of real people, e.g. the concept <apple> is people thinking of apples.Still we must account for the reality of that immaterial actuality. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it absolutely does not. Living, and the actuality of being alive, are one and the same. There is no actuality of a potentially living body before there is an actual living being.By my translation, "soul" is defined as the first actuality of a body having life potentially in it. This means soul is prior to life. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. Because if you start with the false premise that the human mind and body are two things, you miss the fact that one thing, a human being, can act both physically and intentionally. By seeing human unity, the question of how res cogitans and res extensa interact never arises to distract us from the issue of how human beings interact with intelligible objects.Because explaining how mind "relates" to entities not having the characteristics of mind is so much easier than explaining how mind "interacts" with entities not having the characteristics of mind? — Arne
We are debating the truth of the claim, not what Wafarer said, which we call all read for our selves.You are misrepresenting what Wayfarer said. Ideas exist only in minds, not as particular substances, even though they may be about particulars. — Dfpolis
Well, this is what is being debated, whether or not some ideas actually exist in some minds as particulars. — Metaphysician Undercover
No it is an idea about particulars. If I am thinking of the universal identity of action and passion that is as particular an idea as the one you offer, because it is me thinking it at a specific time. Still it is about a universal fact: all actions are identical with their correlative passions.if I have a plan to put some particular pieces of lumber together with some particular nails that I have, in a very particular way, this is also a very particular idea. — Metaphysician Undercover
The universal ideas are in the mind, but they are not objects because objects are particular instances. The particular quantities (mathematical objects) in reality are actualized by the operations I mentioned.By Aristotle's Metaphysics, it is the mathematician's mind which actualizes mathematical objects, therefore they have actual existence within the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then they are not very good mathematicians. I took courses in abstract mathematics, and addition is not identity. Mathematicians have a different notion of identity than philosophers, and say that x=x is true by their principle of identity.suggest you speak to some mathematicians on this forum. There are many here who insist that "2+2=4" means that "2+2" is the same as "4", by the law of indentity. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. It is defining "set equality," not equality in general, because quantities are not sets, but can be equal.Notice that under this axiom. for two sets to be equal, they must be the same. This axiom supports the claim that if two things are equal they are therefore the same. — Metaphysician Undercover
They don't. Primary substances are real, secondary substances are abstractions. Only agents can act and so interact.we need to resolve how primary and secondary substance interact with each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
He did not posit, but recognized, that individual things were the basis of our concept of reality. That is why he said that ousia is tode ti (=this something). Ousia (translated "substance") meant true reality, not a kind of stuff, in Greek. Aristotle's word for the stuff things are made out of was hyle (=timber and poorly translated as "matter"). Spinoza used the same Latin word, substantia, but with a different definition in his writings.AFAIK, Aristotle posited a potentially infinite number of substances in that he thought that the primary substances are individual objects. — Janus
Yes, it is. But, it is a critical datum that species are not eternal and unchanging, but evolve. It means that particulars do not instantiate Platonic Ideas or universal Exemplars in the mind of God. God intends to create whatever He creates, and He creates particulars. So, there is nothing "ungodly" in not conforming to a universal norm.I've read up on it, to some extent. The paper you linked is highly specific, however. — Wayfarer
You are misrepresenting what Wayfarer said. Ideas exist only in minds, not as particular substances, even though they may be about particulars.This is a misrepresentation. The idea, as design or form in the mind of the artist exists as the idea of a particular, not of a universal. — Metaphysician Undercover
The law of classical logic are abstractions, not inductions generalizing experience. If they were inductions, any new case might violate them, as happened with Newton's laws of motion, which were inductions based on a limited range of experience.The law of identity is a general law, but it applies to particulars just like any inductive law. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it is not limited to particulars. Universal concepts are equally self-identical.It states something about all particulars which differentiates a particular from a universal. — Metaphysician Undercover
What prevents mathematical objects from being physical is that they require a counting or a measuring operation to become actual, while bodies need not be observed to exist. So, mathematical objects are mental existents with a foundation in reality, not realities simplicitur.in order to prevent the sophistry which follows from failing to maintain this difference, such as the tendency to allow that mathematical objects, like numbers, have the same type of existence as material objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Good! What makes them the "same" is that they can elicit the identical (universal) idea. They need not be equal. 1 kg of sugar is the same kind of thing as 5 kg of sugar, but they are not equal.When two things are of the same type, people commonly say that they are the "same". However, they are not "the same" by the law of identity, because that would imply that they are one thing, not two. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense! They are saying nothing about the law of identity. You are equivocating on "the same." It has one meaning in identity, and a different meaning in equality.Therefore whenever someone argues that two things which are equal, such as what is represented by the left side and what is represented by the right side of a mathematical equation, are "the same" because they are equal, they violate the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but not in the same way. An actual idea is an ens rationis. An actual artifact is an ens reale.Under Aristotelian principles, all instances of "form" are actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, he never has an interaction problem because one substance, a human being, cannot interact with itself. The interaction problem arises when you deny that we are one substance and make us two: res cogitans and res extensa.This is how the interaction problem is resolved by Aristotle, by making forms actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Becoming cannot be an interaction with the product of becoming, because they do not co-exist. Once an artifact exists, its becoming has ceased. Aristotle defines change/becoming as "the actualization of a potential insofar as it is still in potency." Once the potency is actualized, it is no longer in potency, and so there is no change/becoming with respect to it.And there is interaction between the prior intent, and the instantiation, it's called "becoming". — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but while it is being perfected, it is not the finished (formed) product. When it reaches the intended form, it is perfected and no longer becoming. So, the imposition of mental form and the existence of the finished physical form are never concurrent. They are temporally adjacent. If Tf is the finishing time, then the becoming time is <Tf, and Tf is not included in <Tf.Becoming requires a period of time within which the two interact, as an artist interacts with one's work, with the intent to perfect it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay, if you mean departures from the artist's intent, not if you mean predicables.The accidents are attributable to the matter's prior form. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, because the matter is not completely suitable. So?they are causal in the sense of "material cause" — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay. The plan was not executed perfectly for some reason. Maybe bad material, maybe a failure on the part of the artisan who is the efficient cause.If the form of the intended object and the form of the material object created, are not the same form, then there is necessarily a gap between the two, a lack of formal continuity which must be explained. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you mean that there are two kinds of form, one the mental plan and the other the actuality of the product, I agree. If you mean that there are two substances in the product, which is what "dualism" usually means, I disagree.But it requires either that the form of the object of intent is the very same form as the form of the created material object, or that they are distinct, and that there is interaction between the two during the process of becoming. Either way is dualist. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not denying that. I am denying that the actual plan is the actuality of the finished product, however prefect it may be. The product is made according to the plan. It is not the plan, because it is a different sort of thing.Denying that the "form" which is called the object of intent, as plan or design, is actual, as you are doing, is not Aristotelian. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree. The problem is that there is no evidence that organisms other than humans make such choices.Anytime a plant or animal selects from possibilities, for a purpose, there must be intention involved. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course.To say that intention necessarily involves "mind" makes mind prior to the material body of living beings. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem not to have read De Anima. Psyche is defined as the first actuality of a potentially living body. It cannot exist before there is an actual living body. The agent intellect is "divine" and separable, while the passive intellect is "perishable" and so physical.But the soul is demonstrated to be prior to the body, while the intellect is posterior as dependent on the body. — Metaphysician Undercover
You forget that the prime mover is "self-thinking thought." Thus, Aristotle sees thought as the ultimate source of all change/motion.However, the soul is actual, and acts with purpose or final cause. Therefore "intent" or "final cause" does not necessarily imply "mind" or "intellect". — Metaphysician Undercover
And having a purpose is an act of will. There is no concept of purpose in physics. It only occurs when we discuss psychology."intention" means simply to act with purpose — Metaphysician Undercover
Thank you. That is why we need God to complete the quest for explanations, as Aristotle saw.renders all the purposeful acts of all the creatures which have no mind, as unintelligible because then you have purpose without intent. Purpose without intent cannot be understood as it makes this sort of "purpose" a sort random chance selection, which cannot be "purpose". — Metaphysician Undercover
Interaction requires two or more things to interact. If we are one thing, which seems pretty obvious, this mis-states the question, and bad questions lead to bad answers. We can ask what is the relation between intentional and physical actions without assuming that that relation is an interaction. That is a sensible question and has sensible answers involving the origin and nature of such relations, not interactions.Substituting one form of "substance" ontology for another does eliminate the issue? — Arne
If you mean biological minds, then, yes, I think a mindless universe is possible and that this was such a universe for a long time. On the other hand, the laws of nature (not to be confused with their approximate descriptions, the laws of physics) are intentional in Franz Brentano's sense, for they are about the succession of physical states they lead to, just as by intention to go to the store is about my arriving at the store. Intentions imply a source of intention, namely a Mind. So, I think a lawful universe entails an intending Mind.Do you think a mindless universe is possible? — RogueAI
Yes, but they agreed that we did not need two substances.Spinoza's idea of substance was very different than Aristotle's. Not sure about Aquinas' since I am little familiar with his writings. — Janus
I am a moderate realist. That means I think universals do not have a separate existence, but do have a foundation in reality.With your background and interests, I presume you hold to realism concerning universals. Am I right in that? — Wayfarer
Yes. There are volumes on this. I discussed my position on universals (with references) in light of the fact that species are not static but but evolve, in "Metaphysics and Evolution: Response to Critics," pp 849-857. The basic idea is that each instance of a universal has the objective potential to elicit the same idea. It is this objective potential or intelligibility that is the basis in reality for our universal concepts. As populations evolve, the kinds of ideas their members can elicit shift and, so new species concepts are called for.Do you see what I'm getting at? Is this a topic for discussion in the sources you're aware of? — Wayfarer
No. You cannot have an interaction between a prior intention and its instantiation anymore than a line can interact with its terminal point. First, the intention to create terminates once the object is created, and second, a form as plan is not a form as actuality. If they were, we would have an actuality whenever we had a plan.These must be one and the same form, or else we have the so-called interaction problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
True, but that continuity does not make a plan the same as an actuality.f there is a gap between the form as desired end, and the form as individual object (outcome), there is no causation between the two, and the telos or end is not causal. — Metaphysician Undercover
We must not confuse accidents as unplanned outcomes with metaphysical accidents, which are notes of intelligibility that inhere in, and can be predicated of, the the whole. It is not unplanned accidents that make a thing actual, but the efficient cause implementing the plan. Accidents inhering in a being cannot be prior to that being. Matter as potential is prior, but once we have an actuality, all accidents belong to that actuality or form. For a human artisan, the actuality may depart from the plan because of the stuff used, but that is not the reason a plan is not an actuality.The difference is attributed to accidents, and the accidents are the influence of the matter which is chosen by the artist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, if plans were identically actual beings, every time we made a plan, we would automatically make a reality. That would make cars and houses much cheaper.Now the question is whether the influence of matter, and the resulting accidents, renders the form of the individual as a distinct form, or is it just a change of form, allowing the form to maintain its identity as the same form, in the way that a changing object maintains its identity as the same object, by the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, no. The mental form part of the process of execution. There is no gap because that process terminates in the executed reality. If there were a gap, it would mean that were were finished making the thing before it became actual, a contradiction.if we do not allow that the form in the artist's mind, and the form of the artist's finished work, are one and the same form, there is a gap between the two which produces an interaction problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
It does deal with ends, it just calls them "final states"; however, it does not deal with them as intentional.The problem here is that physics does not deal with telos, ends, and intention, but metaphysics does. — Metaphysician Undercover
They both explain, but at different levels. Each level involves a different degree of abstraction, and so the explanations are complementary, not contradictory or even competitive.Physics cannot give an explanation for this, but metaphysics can. — Metaphysician Undercover
But, it cannot, because it has no mind. God has a creative intent. It is manifest in the laws of nature which guide the transformation of the acorn's potential into an oak.[quote="MetaphysicianWhat I am saying is that the oak tree has creative intent when it produces the acorn. — Metaphysician Undercover
He was anticipated by Aristotle, Aquinas and others in the Aristotelian tradition.Spinoza already solved this Cartesian puzzle. There are not two substances, extensa and cogitans, but one substance seen under two attributes. This renders the interaction problem moot. — Janus
(BTW, I'm leaning towards Platon. And I'm a pro-Socrates. Although I have never alalyzed or examined them from a "dualistic" point of view.) — Alkis Piskas
Of course, more is required. Still acorns grow into mature oaks, not pines or oats.Well, the sperm is not a potential human body. It needs to be united, combined with other organic stuff for an embryo to be created. Same thing with seeds and plants. — Alkis Piskas
The problem is that there are two traditions about souls. One is dualistic, and followed by Plato, Augustine and Descartes. The other is non-dualistic, and followed by Aristotle and Aquinas. In De Anima II, Aristotle argues against the idea of a separate soul, and concludes, essentially, that "to have a soul" and "to be alive" mean the same thing. He formulates this by defining the psyche (soul) as "the first actuality of a potentially living body." "First actuality" is being operational, which, for organisms, is being alive. Under this definition, every living thing has a soul, but not in the dualistic sense. Aristotle's psyche carries no mental implications, except in humans because human life involves thinking.But even if sperm is potentially a human body, i.e. the same thing in different development stages, they are both matter. Their relation could not be considered as soul and body or mind and body, a relation from which the subject of dualism arises. Am I right? — Alkis Piskas
Thank you.BTW, nice handling of the ancient Greek language ... — Alkis Piskas
Indeed it does, but a being's own form/actuality cannot be a prior cause because nothing is actual until it exists. What is prior is a being's matter, its efficient cause, and its telos or end. Thus, the efficient cause, working on specific matter for a specific end produces a specific form or actuality.when a thing comes into existence it necessarily has a cause of being the thing it is, and not something else. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are confusing the hyle of artificial processes, where the clay or wood can become many things, with that of natural processes, which is determinate. (See my hyle paper.) An acorn has a determinate potential. It will never sprout into a pine or a stalk of wheat.since potential encompasses many possibilities, it cannot be restricted by one specific thing, such as your statement, "an oak tree". — Metaphysician Undercover
No, an acorn is not an actual (operational) oak tree, but a potential one. If you never saw one spout and did not know where it came from, you would not know that its end is to become an oak tree.So your statement "to be an oak tree" does not represent the matter of the acorn, it represents the form of the acorn, as that which restricts the matter to specific possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
Every creature has a prior creative intention in the mind of God. But, that is a metaphysical, not a physical, explanation. Physically, the form of an acorn is the foundation for the form of the oak into which it may sprout, but, being the foundation for a form is not being the form. It is being a potential.So it is very clear that the form of the acorn "a kind of nut", which restricts the potential (matter) of the acorn so that the possibilities for what it may become are limited, pre-exists the material existence of the acorn. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is confused. What is ontologically, not temporally, prior is God's creative intent. But, God is simple, having no intrinsic diversity. What allows us to speak of distinct "exemplar" ideas in God is the fact that ideas are relational -- relating God, Who is simple, to creation, which is not. So, the Divine exemplars are diversified by terminating in diverse creatures, not by any diversity in the mind of God. Thus, without actual, existing creatures, there are no distinct exemplars. Since exemplars are inseparable from the actuality of the exemplified creatures, there is no dualism.This pre-existence of the form of the acorn, as prior in time to the acorn, therefore separate from the acorn, is what we need to deal with as implying the requirement for dualism. — Metaphysician Undercover
doesn't this separate existence, whether its called a principle or a thing, necessitate dualism? — Metaphysician Undercover
If the soul, as the form of the body, is the blueprint, or principle of organization, and the living body comes into existence as an organized body, then the soul must be prior to the living body, as cause of it, and therefore a separate thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I mistyped. I meant. "As I argued in my article, there is no reason to think physics has intentional effects."As I argued in my article, there is no reason to think that physics has no intentional effects. — Dfpolis
As Aristotle defined it, the agent intellect has one function: to make intelligibility actually known. I am identifying this with the act of awareness, by which neurally encoded contents are recognized.Does agent-intellect have three essential functions? Are they: entanglement, causation, over-arching cognition? — ucarr
Not at all. I am articulating a common and accepted view, viz. that people are capable of self-deception. Cf. Zengdan Jian, Wenjie Zhang, Ling Tian, Wei Fan and Yiping Zhong, "Self-Deception Reduces Cognitive Load: The Role of Involuntary Conscious Memory Impairment," Frontiers of Psychology 10 (30 July 2019) https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01718/full.Again, this begs the question. If you assume the possibility, you are not investigating it, you're simply declaring it. — Isaac
What they are calling "a contradictory unconscious real belief" I am calling "knowledge."People often hear classic allusions such as plugging one’s ears while stealing a bell, pointing to a deer and calling it a horse, drawing cakes to satisfy one’s hunger, and the emperor’s new clothes. These allusions reflect the principle that people believe in nonexistent phenomena to satisfy their desires. This is called “self-deception.” Self-deception is a personality trait and an independent mental state, it involves a combination of a conscious motivational false belief and a contradictory unconscious real belief. — Jain et al. (2019)
I am not saying it is sufficient. I am saying that it is an accepted psychological fact that some people self-deceive as described by Jain et al. above.There's obviously a difference between mere belief and actual knowledge, but that difference is not sufficient to justify a claim that people believe something despite knowing its opposite. — Isaac
I would say that it could indicate either. I only claimed that acting on a belief was a sign of commitment, not that it necessarily entailed commitment. Smoke is a sign of fire, but that does not mean that every instance of spoke entails an instance of fire.people acting as if p is not an indicator that they believe p, it is an indicator that they believe acting as if p is in their best interests. — Isaac
We agree entirely on this.stuff you believe is true is not necessarily true. — Isaac
I saw the picture of his crowd next to the picture of Obama's crowd. You could pettifog with various objections, but that is a rational basis for my conclusion on crowd size.Just because you personally believe Trump didn't have the largest crowds, doesn't mean he didn't. you didn't personally count them, you didn't personally see them. — Isaac
Hardly! It is paranoid behavior unless one has specific sound reasons for distrusting. I suggest you consult DSM 5.It is perfectly rational behaviour to not trust those others — Isaac
PPD (Paranoid Personality Disorder) is a DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition), diagnosis assigned to individuals who have a pervasive, persistent, and enduring mistrust of others, and a profoundly cynical view of others and the world. — American Psychiatric Association, 2013
Pettifogging. You are creating a diversion instead of addressing my point that no rational follower of D.T. could fail to notice many of his lies.Case in point. who told you he told over 13,000 lies? — Isaac
I am not seeking metaphysical certitude with my examples. I am merely suggesting directions to look in order to see what I see. So, raising possible alternatives in specific cases misses the point. The point is that this type of behavior occurs, and it is useful to reflect upon it. It is not that my example is infallibly a case of such behavior. I am morally certain it is -- certain beyond a reasonable doubt. Aides normally inform presidents of such things. I am not metaphysically certain that it is -- my conclusion lacks absolute necessity.That may well be true, but you haven't demonstrated that he, at the same time, knows it to be true that his crowds were smaller. — Isaac
"No ground"? In that case, you have a long way to go. It seems clear to me that many of our perceptions have specific, enduring sources, and that specificity grounds our property concepts.I'm arguing that there is no ground for saying that external objects (with properties consistent to that object) exist outside of our definition of them. — Isaac
I agree that sensible objects have no intrinsic necessity. They are metaphysically contingent. Beyond that, I have no idea what you mean by thinking it could have been otherwise. Do you mean that ants might not have evolved? Or that we might not have noticed that ants are organic unities, and so might not have formed the concept <ant>? Or that we could have evolved without giving "privilege" to sensations of organisms? Or what?no grounds for assuming that it could not have been otherwise. — Isaac
Quite true, but, I think, entirely irrelevant. In thinking of an ant, we are not saying this little six-legged thing in the sugar bowl is like something else. We are saying it is an ant. It is also like many other things -- say, a moving speck of pepper -- but that likeness is irrelevant to calling it "an ant." We call it "an ant" because it has the objective capacity to elicit our concept <ant> -- not because it is like a moving pepper speck. Orion does not have the objective capacity to elicit the notes of comprehension in our concept <a man with a belt and a bow>.Like the constellation Orion. It definitely is in the shape of a man with a belt and a bow. We're not making that up. But it is also in the shape of dozens of other things we've chosen to ignore. — Isaac