I think it’s a mistake to believe that you can explain numbers and the like. Mathematics is one of the main ways in which explanations can be found for all manner of things - almost anything that can be quantified, really. But explaining number is a notoriously difficult thing to do. — Wayfarer
What I don’t think your account allows for, is the ability of mathematical reasoning to predict otherwise unknowable things. I mean, you can’t do that just using language. It’s the fact that mathematical concepts and operations seem to have an uncanny correspondence with nature that gives mathematics what Eugene Wigner called it’s ‘unreasonable effectiveness’ and predictive ability. There are quite a few examples of discoveries falling out of mathematical physics that were predicted just by the maths - Dirac’s discovery of anti-matter is a classic example, not to mention the many predictions that came out of relativity — Wayfarer
This is obviously a very complex issue, but one response is to equate numbers with brain processes is a form of category mistake. — Wayfarer
But the same operations can be outsourced to a variety of different devices, other than brains. — Wayfarer
And in studying brains themselves, there are major obstacles in understanding the relationship of neural events and such elements of rational thought as number, logic, language, syntax, and so on. — Wayfarer
So saying that 'numbers are dependent on the brain' (which is actually what you have said, not 'mind') doesn't really say anything. — Wayfarer
It just safely puts the whole issue into the category of 'things we'll figure out when we understand better how the brain works'. — Wayfarer
You might pause a moment and think about just what value is. — tim wood
And please keep in mind my remark about this not being a discussion about practical matters thought of in a practical way. — tim wood
The thing can't value. Only a person can value. The person may well value something about the thing, but that is not the same as saying that the thing somehow has value. — tim wood
All right, you choose something and list some qualities of that something, and we'll see whether or not if we can establish whether or not the things have in themselves those qualities. — tim wood
Or maybe better you try reading some of George Berkeley's dialogue's between Hylos and Philonous - or google them. — tim wood
You brought up Aristotle's matter and form as (probably) being different than my concept of matter and form. I intended to clarify my position to help clear things up.
In any case with respect to the context, your remark is at best a non sequitor.
— tim wood
Ok, could you explain how it's a non-sequitur?
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Here's the context, post on p. 2.
Does the thing itself contain in itself that which satisfies the criteria? Think this one down and you get close to Aristotle's matter and form — tim wood
The idea is that if you try to attribute things like colour to a thing, you find you cannot (except as a practical matter). — tim wood
All the qualities and accidents supposedly attributable to things prove similarly problematic (see Berkeley's dialogues) . — tim wood
Pretty soon all you've got left is matter and form - and they're problematic in their own way. So far you're arguing (if I may call it that) by opinion and personal definition: you don't agree with Aristotle and you "view qualities as phenomenal properties of some x." You can do that, but it doesn't make for productive discussion. — tim wood
What do you mean; an anti-realist in what sense? I don't believe numbers are 'out there' floating about in some 'realm' if that is what you mean. But I do believe natural complexes are real, and that they instantiate number (multiplicity and difference). — Janus
It's a tough distinction for me, because, as I said, I find it to be often an erroneous distinction. — Noble Dust
Now, is there an objectivity to my words? — Noble Dust
There's an objectivity to what I am trying to communicate to you. — Noble Dust
But language itself is subjective, not objective. — Noble Dust
Subjectivity, then, seems hard to get away from! But have we still sufficiently out-run it? No, we haven't. — Noble Dust
When you post on this forum, you are saying something, that to you, represents an objectivity. — Noble Dust
But the paradox and the tragedy is that you can only say it subjectively. — Noble Dust
Nothing determines levels of hierarchy per se; what would be the thing that actually determines them in the first place? — Noble Dust
If I said "yes, priority and generation determine hierarchy", that would assume that priority and generation have some kind of agency in the way that we anthropomorphically think about agency. — Noble Dust
But if generation has no agency, no cause, no beginning, then generation is a process without origin, per se, through which the non-physical gives birth to the physical. So there's no determinate function; there's only generation. — Noble Dust
No, because I'm not conflating "non-physical" with "consciousness". — Noble Dust
It's hard to parse through, but I do think of it as both subjective and objective because that dichotomy tends to be misleading. — Noble Dust
These experiences are all subjective, and yet, through the experience itself, the possibility of something objective being experienced through the lens of subjectivity becomes apparent. — Noble Dust
Your abstract reasoning won't bring you to this conclusion, so if you rely solely on that faculty, you won't arrive at the same conclusion. The experience of beauty is like mysticism, or sex, or grand cru Burgundy; you have to experience it to know — Noble Dust
As with gold. What is its intrinsic value as a precious metal? As the "precious" suggests, it requires someone to think it precious. Without that, its "precious" value is nil. — tim wood
Careful here. It's hard to defend the notions that any thing has qualities in and of itself, or that a quality (value) itself has qualities. — tim wood
I wasn't aware we were discussing your opinions of Aristotle's ideas. — tim wood
In any case with respect to the context, your remark is at best a non sequitor. — tim wood
Number is inherent in nature if there are multiple things. — Janus
I'm not sure; why is the distinction important for you? — Noble Dust
So we don't experience beauty as something external to us, is that the distinction you're making? — Noble Dust
As I mentioned to Jake, the fact that the experience of beauty is subjective doesn't mean there isn't an objective reality of beauty external to the experience. — Noble Dust
No, because I don't conflate experience and mental apparatuses. — Noble Dust
In my view the physical is generated by the non-physical. I'm not sure how one being superior to the other would obtain in any meaningful way. Consciousness isn't the basis for the hierarchy because consciousness is in some way superior to the physical world; it's just prior to the physical, in my view. — Noble Dust
What do you mean by subjective? — Noble Dust
'Ontic' is what is, and 'Ontological' is the study of what is, its theory. — Cavacava
Ontologically, beauty is first an experience. — Noble Dust
The combination in the bird of color, movement, and song, cause us to experience beauty. — Noble Dust
But moving outwards from experience, the way I'm using beauty in this thread is as a fundamental aspect, an identifying characteristic, of a being. It's not the colors themselves, the movements themselves, or the songs themselves, that specifically make the bird beautiful. Even a flightless bird, a bird with a broken wing, a molting bird, or squawking crow is still experienced as beautiful. — Noble Dust
There is something intrinsic to our experience of the bird that is beautiful, regardless of the specifics of the characteristics. — Noble Dust
I think number is inherent in nature; so number is not merely the product of minds.That much seems obvious to me. — Janus
And yet you say you are a "physicalist" not a "mentalist". Seems like an ontological distinction to me. — Janus
Because it's not a physical aspect like limbs or mass. Consciousness gives birth to reason, imagination, etc; the things you're using to discuss in this thread. It's the backdrop of you're entire human experience. — Noble Dust
Agreed! But just what is that value? Ans.: in itself, nothing. What is the value of anything, beyond what some person will give it? — tim wood
I don't know what "ontologically" means, here. I assume you mean what is its being. — tim wood
Does the thing itself contain in itself that which satisfies the criteria? — tim wood
I'll try this: beauty is the name of a feeling, given voice as the expression of an appreciation for the compliance of something with something - like a set of criteria. — tim wood
Aristotle's matter and form — tim wood
Not quite, beauty doesn't entail an entity in the sense of it being an entity itself, but it does require an entity in the sense that it requires an observer. But if you take the second sense, then your (a) and (b) descriptions would be right, yeah. — Noble Dust
OK, I certainly agree that abstract concepts do not exist extra-mentally. But the problem seems to be that, for example, numbers are independent of any particular mind. — Janus
I tend to think the whole distinction between mental and physical ( beyond its ordinary commonsense applications) is fatally flawed — Janus
I had the thought then, so much for beauty. Probably so much for any aesthetic judgment. — tim wood
Their level of development of consciousness. — Noble Dust
Higher in the sense of hierarchy, not in the sense of higher number. — Noble Dust
Do you define features of experience as extra-mental then? — Janus
If numbers, shapes and ideas have no extra-mental existence then what are the "extra-mental things" "we apply those concepts to"? — Janus
The following from SEP:
Aristotle famously contends that every physical object is a compound of matter and form.
Form and matter are bound together, their mix is inexorable in the same way each separate being is inexorable bound to Being, to existence. — Cavacava
We are a unique 'mix' of form & matter — Cavacava
The bird's connection to what it is (its being) — Cavacava
Yes, but the word 'subjectivity' does not (in my opinion) encompass the totality that word 'being' is capable of expressing. — Cavacava
The bird is as tightly caught in the spell of its own being as we are tightly caught in the spell of our own being. A bird can't sense the beauty we see it in any more than we can sense the beauty a higher being (might) see in us. — Cavacava
Quick tip, highlight the text you want to quote, then click "quote". — Noble Dust
But how does "beauty", aesthetically speaking, obtain evolutionarily? How would Adorno respond to you, for instance? — Noble Dust
In this particular case in this thread, beauty first refers to our perception of the bird (view the attached photo for context), and then secondarily refers to an abstract concept in which the first concept of beauty is creatively applied to a possible form of being which is higher than humanity. — Noble Dust
As to an ontological view of beauty, I love that stuff, but at this point...it's tough ground, and a lot of the ground feels tough because of language.
I would say Divine Being is primary, and Beauty might possibly be secondary. Beauty might be the generative outgrowth of divinity. That's not very good, though. Go easy on me. Or not. — Noble Dust
Higher in the sense that we are higher than the birds. Who's higher than us? No one/thing? — Noble Dust
But I don't know what you mean by "superior/inferior/valuable". I get "superior/inferior" from my suggestion that we see something the bird does not, and maybe something/someone else sees something in us that we do not (superior/inferior here, for clarity, has no moral connotation). But I'm not sure how "valuable" plays into that.
So, I'm entertaining the possibility of a macrocosmic hierarchy in which various beings grade along the scale (slugs, birds, humans, angels??? God???), but any sense of inferior/superior is just a sense of ontological scale. If that make sense. — Noble Dust
Would there be a sweeter ice cream sweeter than the sweeter ice cream, btw? — Noble Dust
I agree, but I'm not talking about evolutionary functions.
Plus the only minds thinking are human minds; no other minds are thinking, presumably.
If you re-read that section of the OP, you'll see that beauty there is metaphorical and not literal in a physical sense.
But it sounds like you're just talking about people observing people. Again, if you re-read the OP, I'm using the bird as a metaphor for imaging if a similar scenario of us observing the bird applies to some higher form of being observing us.
A form of being higher than humans.
I agree, but it looks like you're thinking within a physicalist/materialist framework; I'm not. I agree that what you say here is true, but it's not an argument against the possibility of a higher form of being existing above the being of humanity; a form of being that apprehends a different view of humanity in the same way that we observe a different view of the bird.
What kind of existence do numbers, shapes and ideas have outside our thinking them, and their temporal and spatial instantiations in nature? — Janus
Is there a macrocosmic hierarchy in which beings "look down on" beings lower on the hierarchical scale and observe qualities of those beings which are invisible to those lower beings themselves?
"Does a human person know that it's beautiful?"
And secondly, could there be a higher form of being that observes and apprehends a beautiful quality in us which we are incapable of seeing?
That's my entire argument; we see an aspect of the bird which the bird is not capable of seeing.
Events could be non-randomly probabilistic, too. That's why I put "random causation" in quotation marks by the way. — Terrapin Station
Keep in mind that "random causation" need not be B or C happening with a 50/50 chance. — Terrapin Station
Neither sort of light is ontologically privileged. What would actually be the case with the object is that in light 1, it looks green, and in light 2, it looks blue. Both would be accurate. — Terrapin Station
That's weird. If language and reasoning would be circular, then words would be meaningless (e.g. 'food' would not refer to edible things in the world but only other words), and all reasoning would be invalid. — jkop
Our awareness of the phenomenal leads us to epistemological analysis, — Cavacava
Ontological commitment suggests necessity, but it is subject to continued empirical verification, every thing that is, is contingent . What is experienced is not necessarily circumscribed by our logical analysis. — Cavacava
I've posted so much today I don't really have the energy to write something more detailed about it at the moment. I might be inspired to do so later. Maybe we should start a thread on it, by the way. — Terrapin Station