I have no idea how you'd arrive at those conclusions. If it is to look at stuff, why are there blind people? And why isn't everything unremittingly beautiful?
Apply your reason and stop the daydreaming! — Bartricks
Ok, I didn't realize heaps were an understood matter of consensus. You asked me if a single grain can change a heap to non-heap; rather insisted it couldn't. If your defining heaps by grain number; the only possible context in which your question becomes answerable and therefore implied to be the case, then yes. I can identify that transitional grain. I'm a little lost to what I was supposed to be believing, but it's been a pleasure. Thanks for the feedback.I wasn't trying to prove anything. Only to look for examples we can agree on. I don't see the relevance of criteria. Unless you want to say, being a billion grain collection is a criterion, or a sufficient condition. Fine. Bring it on board. How does it help? — bongo fury
Nonsense. Something being easy, abundant, and easily taken for granted would not remain meaningful. Relationships are valued because they aren't always abundant or easy to maintain. Also, something being finite adds to it's perceived value. Literally, the opposite of every point quoted is the truth of the matter. It is possible for people to disconnect from empathy; in which case it would seem more reasonable to think the quoted view is true.God exists and if God's purpose in placing us here was for us to have meaningful relationships then we'd all find them easy to acquire and maintain (and they wouldn't end). — Bartricks
Ok, I didn't realize this was the format. I'll keep it in mind.The puzzle, it should be clear, is how to reach P3, or avoid denying it, while accepting both P1 and P2. — bongo fury
If you tell me heaps exist then you can prove the existence of a heap through some criteria. Once I have this criteria I can tell you which grain completes the min. heap.You lost me. What exactly do we need to agree is implied by P3. heaps exist — bongo fury — bongo fury
Alright, then grain 1,000,000,000 makes a heap. Where do I send the invoice?Not that we need to straight away consider examples, but I'd offer, say, any billion-grain collection. Premise 1, on the other hand, does refer to an alleged counter-example. — bongo fury
Don't waffle on about something orthogonal to this issue. Just focus. Focus on premise 1 and its incredible plausibility. It isn't open to reasonable doubt. To doubt it is to think that there can be representations that lack a representer. And that's to think that the clouds could be telling you about a pie in the oven. — Bartricks
If premise 3 is true it implies criteria for a heap exists. The same criteria could produce a lower and upper bound. But, none of this addresses a paradox.[1] Tell me, do you think that a single grain of wheat ever amounts to a heap, for any rate of flow? — bongo fury
P3. heaps existWhich question asks such a thing? — bongo fury
Ok. And does assuming a rate of flow perhaps render the tipping point unknowable, as per url=https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/559805]epistemicism[/url]? — bongo fury
P2. adding a single grain can never turn a non-heap into a heap — bongo fury
Did we really though? I think we conceived the conditions for an infinity. I can conceive 10s or maybe hundreds and infer about millions and billions, but saying I'm thinking about the impossible whole of infinity seems reaching.So why would it be difficult to conceive infinity? We did it in grade school. — fishfry
I'm thinking we use it in a more exact way than we realize. The assumption the exactness is a number seems like the mistake. A heap is usually a large enough amount that having it gathered together is the plausible driving force behind its accumulation in an area. It implies a supply that will be broken down.If it is the use of the term that gives it its applicability, where its use has no perfect standard, neither will its applicability. — Snakes Alive
Perhaps, but I was thinking the time sensitive value they had to each person that might need one. Like the phrase "Guard this heap with your life"; seems silly and I'm suggesting for a reason that reflects a universal subtext. I've been wrong before though.Out of respect for the victims of some disaster? Ok. But not for any reason relevant to the puzzle. — bongo fury
People are instructed on how to define something they intuitively understand?It has distinguishable senses, like all sorts of words. The puzzle as usually conducted inspires (often) recognition of a sense agreed for the game. With clear examples and counter-examples, and an implication of some kind of boundary. What kind being the puzzle. — bongo fury
Is static electricity part of the car door?Either physicalism is true or nonphysicalism is true! — TheMadFool
I think a version of this is probably the case. We evolved from animals that survived well using group cooperation and during extreme environments animals that fended for them selves well. I'm suggesting altruism might be more appealing to certain people relative to the environment at any given time.Is it always just different political views or are there more fundamental psychological differences that make those views appealing to us in the first place? — Apollodorus
I would agree that a rigorous definition or rejection of one has no bearing on the use of know in this context. I'd also note that people don't tell each other they know obvious things. So, using the language "in use" as representing knowledge is at least as obtuse as expecting the term true to hold a binary meaning.But neat that you relate this to the Problem of the Criterion; there's a similar unjustified expectation of exactitude in what one counts as knowledge, or as true. We don't need a definitive understanding of knowledge in order to establish that we know this thread is in English. — Banno
If God is less than anything he can't be "that than which nothing greater can be conceived." Infinity is the numerical representation of that than which nothing greater can be conceived (God). Ergo, since actual infinities don't exist, God too can't exist. — TheMadFool
It is certainly an awkward phrase, but people rhetorically ask how/why something would come from nothing. Which I think is in the process of being answered by this approach to physics that concentrates on using impossibilities as axioms. Really, at this point it starts digging into the problem of change. If everything is in flux how could something not happen? I think I got lost on my own detour. Thanks for the commentary.It doesn't make sense to ask "why did nothing cause it"! — Down The Rabbit Hole
It seems like mechanical questions are better suited to 'how'. How implies a terminating point into the state of affairs or corresponding facts that are the subject. How we settled on calling it blue might be a why question that tracks the origins of words.Good point. I was thinking more of subatomic particles, billiard balls, and galaxies. Is "the sky is blue because blue light scatters more than other wavelengths," how or why? — T Clark
Yes, we covered the contradictions which you didn't find compelling. So, I was at least trying to understand the matter from your point of view. But, I don't think I can without knowing what implications you believe are being demonstrated by this information. All I honestly know is that it seems you want to make a statement about evolution and you are trying to derive it along the lines of an 'ergo sum'. However, you don't seem to believe it is without flaws yourself due to the excessive appeals to emotion and evasion of plain questions.You just veer from telling me I've contradicted myself to refusing to say clearly which premise you dispute. I ask you what objection you have to premise 1 and you give me concerns that only make sense as concerns about premise 2. You're all over the place. — Bartricks
Frankly, I'm a bit neutral. It sounds like it intends to be self-evident much like the other premise. Are you asking if I'm hearing something I must be deliberately using my ears?But anyway, do you have any objection to what I argued in defence of premise 1? That is, do you agree that for something to be a representation, some agency needs to be using for that purpose? — Bartricks
I thought it was beneficial to confirm I understood what you were saying well enough to demonstrate it through an adjacent example. I was having trouble nailing down number 1's defense, so why not confirm number 2.What's the point in coming up with other examples when mine does what's necessary? — Bartricks
I'm not being tedious. I thought something was hiding behind your choice to select 'not unguided' versus 'guided'. Deciding this is the point at which this exchange became tedious reinforces my suspicion.Stop being tedious. — Bartricks
Really? I assumed it was in reference to an awake person asking some one obviously asleep if they were sleeping. Yes, I am sleeping would be an unanswerable form of awareness. Smells the same.No, for it is both metaphysically possible that I am sleeping right now (and thus that this is a dream) and I can believe it coherently. I may even acquire evidence that it is true (if, for example, I suddenly find that I am a horse or something). So just not the same at all. — Bartricks
Child: p v ~p (always true, tautology)
Adult: p (Aagrippa's trilemma)
Child: Why? — TheMadFool
It's a reliable strategy. It cuts down on people having their humors adjusted by leeches.I am just attacking the notion that only science is a reliable source of evidence or that evidence has to be couched in scientific jargon citing p-values etc. — Andrew4Handel
No, as in imprecise or conceptually different?No. — Bartricks
Why insist on calling something by a negated state? Not Unguided means guided, correct?Because if true, then in combination with premise 2 it tells us that the evolutionary processes that have furnished us with our faculties of awareness have not been unguided. — Bartricks
I would be willing to suppose that it is the same outside of mathematics; that the termination of Why? is most likely an unspoken assumption like reality can't exist in contradiction or the state of affairs was possible long enough to occur and did.Mathematics, as we all know, is Axiomatic. In other words, it just is! Axioms, by definition, are assumptions - deemed true sans proof. Whatever else mathematics is, infinite regress isn't one of its problems. — TheMadFool
It comes down to what "completely explain the outcome" means. Does it mean "how," or does it mean "why." I think how is all we can know. — T Clark
In order to raise venture capital.After all, common folks (David Hume called them "vulgar") don't feel the need to justify their beliefs, why should I? — Wheatley
Is that analogous to being unable to answer the question "Are you sleeping" in the affirmative?For an analogy - it is possible for me not to exist, but I am never going to be justified in believing such a state of affair obtains). — Bartricks
It's less clear how this informs one about the nature of evolution.And what I argue is that for a mental state to have representative contents, it has to be being used by an agent for the purpose of representing what it is representing. — Bartricks
To say we can give a physical account of what took place but we can't completely explain the outcome when others were possible?I like "Because I said so," although the best answer is probably "There are no answers to the question "Why." We don't or can't know that. The only question we can answer is "How." — T Clark