The "fact" of someone driving in another country is information, is the information not in your head? — Sir2u
Information might be observer independent, but a fact is something that has been proven/judged/evaluated to be true. That can only happen in someone's mind which means that a fact is not independent of the observer. Many things might be true even if we have no knowledge of their existence, but a fact is a human construct used to define the level of reliability of information. — Sir2u
I would think that there is no room for meaning in such an ontology. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ideas are reduced to mental states and mental states are reduced physical brain states. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where's meaning? — Metaphysician Undercover
Still not the point. The particular piece of information in question - about the ship - can be described exactly, by any one of a number of media and even systems of representation. The same can be said for all manner of information. If I write out a formula or a recipe or an equation, I can employ a wide range of systems or languages to encode it. Yet, one digit wrong, and the chemical won’t form, or the cake won’t bake, and so on. So the information in each case is the same, even if the representation is completely different. — Wayfarer
The information could be transmitted wrongly, or correctly. If it’s transmitted correctly, then it stays the same. The rest is not germane. — Wayfarer
I am questioning whether information, generally speaking, is physical. — Wayfarer
The question I want to explore is: in such a case, what stays the same, and what changes? — Wayfarer
I wouldn't say all facts are subjective. Some facts don't happen in the mind. — numberjohnny5
Name one please. — Sir2u
The reason I believe this is because I think facts are essentially events, and there exist events occurring inside and outside minds. — numberjohnny5
Is a tree in the middle of the forest an event? When does it become a fact? — Sir2u
What is the difference between a feeling (feeling love, anger, fear, etc) and an activity (or the participation in an activity) (e.g., a football match, a walk in the park, etc) (I do understand that feelings entail internal brain activity, yet I'm using "activity" to mean external, observable physical activity)? — jancanc
The problem with your argument is that it connects truisms with one or more false premises. The less time that is spent on these distracting truisms which you - and certain others who indicate a preference to be referred to in a certain outdated way which indicates a certain kind of haughtiness - raise, the better. — Sapientia
For example, it is a truth that Earth preexisted us. That is true whether it is judged or not. It would be absurd to suggest that the length of time that the Earth has existed depends on our judgement. You can rightly say that our judgement of that length of time depends on our judgement, but that's trivially true and beside the point. — Sapientia
As for meaning and reference, there is a charitable assumption that we are both competent English speakers, and that we aren't using words in unusual ways. So, "the cat" refers to the cat, and not a fish or an idea or my experience. If I had meant to refer to a fish or an idea or my experience, then I could have used the right words. That's a starting point to a sensible conversation, and that's the only kind of conversation that I'm interested in. — Sapientia
No, the individual is not doing the corresponding. The individual can make a statement, and it either corresponds with the truth or it doesn't. The correspondence is out of our hands. We can make statements, not correspondence. — Sapientia
I never suggested that people can make facts about statements. That's a misreading of what I said, as can be seen by comparing the two quotes above. — Sapientia
It means that you're missing the bigger picture by focussing on what's close by. What's close by are the words that I'm speaking and the judgements that I'm making and so on. By I'm trying to get you to step back and look at the bigger picture, or at that which is outside of your immediate vicinity. — Sapientia
Judgements don't make sense without something to judge. I'd rather we talk about that something, rather than getting bogged down by the judging and the judgement that is produced, as I think that it has a better chance of getting an answer to the question of the discussion. — Sapientia
So then you explain to me why my clarification has not clarified it for you, and we work from there. — Sapientia
And I prefer not to digress too much by, for example, talking about talking, or talking about the other person, or their motives, or talking about myself, and so on. — Sapientia
I would turn that around and ask you why you think that that definition is inadequate, if that is what you think. — Sapientia
Some words are difficult to precisely define in a way which avoids problems — Sapientia
The words "subjective" and "objective" are like that. I don't think it necessary to attempt to precisely define them, and I'm not willing to do so unless you give me a good enough reason. I could quote you a dictionary definition or give you some examples, but is that really necessary? If your interpretation differs from the norm, then that may be where the problem lies. And if it doesn't, then I'm not sure why you think that there's a problem. — Sapientia
I could quote you a dictionary definition or give you some examples, but is that really necessary? — Sapientia
I use the terms in a not too dissimilar manner. Off the bat, and loosely, I'd say that what is subjective is what relates to, or comes from, or is about, or depends upon, or is produced by, the subject. So, thinking, judgement, opinion, evaluation, experience, and that kind of thing. And what is objective is otherwise, like facts, the truth, rocks, planets, reality, and that kind of thing. — Sapientia
What about the collective mind? saving face, hive mind, group think. Don't they count for something? — matt
I don't know if I could definitively say if truth was subjective or objective. Is it possible that truth is beyond subjectivity/objectivity. — matt
Both fact and truth are subjective, they both happen in the mind. — Sir2u
Truth and fact are descriptive of the events and objects of the external world. And the are both relative to point of view. — Sir2u
If I am in the north in winter and you in the south it will be summer. The sun Is way down south is what I would say but you would say no it is on top of us. If the sun was over the equator both statements, the sun is in the north and the sun is in the south are true at the same time. — Sir2u
We judge, measure, compare the objects in our minds, even if we take measurements with a ruler, the results are processed in the mind. — Sir2u
Exactly, the fact that you can measure 1km using a measuring device make no difference to the fact that both the km and the 1 only exist in the mind. As Plato said mathematics is what we use to describe the universe. — Sir2u
I view truth as mental too. — numberjohnny5
Why? It's not. If a statement is true, then the truth is what the statement says. How is that mental? It isn't. — Sapientia
A fact is, or corresponds with, the truth. If it's a fact that the cat is on the mat, then the truth is that the cat is on the mat, and vice versa. — Sapientia
Or, better put, you're focussing on the map instead of the territory. — Sapientia
I've clarified what I mean, and it doesn't make that big of a difference whether we focus on truth or fact. — Sapientia
Determinants. They can be objective or subjective. — Sapientia
No, they're relational qualities between one thing and another. They're separable and independent from comparison or measurement. — Sapientia
Measuring is a thing that subjects or apparatus do. Measurements are what they give when they're done. It can be subjective or objective. — Sapientia
But when I say that Usain Bolt is better than me at running the 100 metres, the judgement aspect is not as relevant as the truth aspect. — Sapientia
The truth is what answers the question. Pointing out that judgement and subject are involved does not answer the question. It doesn't do anything. — Sapientia
And criteria are not subjective, even if they require a subject to set them, which they don't in at least some cases. No one really needs to set the criteria for what makes the moon bigger than my foot. The criteria are predetermined, unless you change them to something else. — Sapientia
They're not judgements, assessments, evaluations, etc., because they are what we judge, evaluate, assess, etc. They're relational qualities, like larger, smaller, greater, etc. Whether the moon is bigger than my foot is not down to my judgement, assessment, or evaluation. It's down to objective criteria. — Sapientia
And there we have it: the false missing premise. There's nothing stopping you from strictly using those words in that way, but that's not integral to their definition, nor are they always used like that. In fact, they're often not used like that, as when someone says something akin to my example. I do not mean to suggest that it is only my opinion that Usain Bolt is better than I am at the 100 metres. He really is, whether it's my opinion or not. — Sapientia
If I read you right, things just are properties, and it/they are in continual motion, continually changing. This iincludes mental states (from above). — tim wood
From above, I argued that a bucket of chemicals does not explain your taste in neckties. I think you're in the position of claiming that it does. Please make your case. — tim wood
I have agreed that at some sub-atomic level, we're all electronic whizzies in constant motion - that as underlying ground, but not account. In the sense that metal is the "ground" of an automobile engine, but not the account of it. It's up to you to tell us how the sub-atomic particles that make up steel, for example, have in themselves the ability to become the engine. Or how your intestines, for example, cause you to favour striped over solid neckties. — tim wood
Regardless of whether or not your conclusion is true or false, it doesn't follow from that premise alone. So, do you have any missing premises? And, if so, can you reveal them? — Sapientia
In order to have complete knowledge of your own consciousness you have to be able to observe yourself being conscious. — Purple Pond
So let's say that science has advanced so far that they can show detailed brain scans of a you when you are conscious. All they are showing you are images/models/brain-scans of you being conscious not the actual consciousness. The conscious you is beyond the capabilities of science by the very limits of observation. — Purple Pond
The question is: Are some people better than others? The answer is simple (isn't it?) — Purple Pond
I think this collapses to "collections of chemicals/particles/etc" explain phenomena. If not, what am I misreading? — tim wood
I read this as, "A thing is [comprises the] physical components/aspects of matter/things. — tim wood
That reduces to a classical deterministic movement or a random quantum movement. Take your pick. — tim wood
I credit you with being able to demonstrate the impossibility of such an account. — tim wood
If it's chemicals/particles, then you don't get to have subjective - there is no subjective. That's why regarding you as chemicals/particles "is not... useful... in terms of your human being." — tim wood
Sure. But in this you affirm properties (as opposed to their functioning). If functioning is all there is, then what functions? You can have all the doing you want, but you have to have something doing the doing (which is neither properties nor functioning!). Properties and functions are different; they cannot be one and a many at the same time. — tim wood
1) is problematic. What is a thing? What is change? — tim wood
2) is a claim without evidence or argument. To be is to be just that that does not change. — tim wood
3) Properties are qualifications of the description of a thing - thing as yet undefined and it needs to be. The description is not the thing. — tim wood
You may not like my arguments, but there is enough in them to point you toward rethinking your own. — tim wood
As a tub of guts, you're different from a human being, yes? No? I think - possibly in error - that you're arguing that tub-of-guts and human being are reducible to a one. Maybe in some aspects, for some purposes, but not essentially. Or do you say they're essentially the same? — tim wood
What you are is ten to fifteen gallons of chemicals, mostly water - or at least that's one way of looking at it. Not a useful way in terms of your human being. — tim wood
On the other hand, if we focus on how something works - behaves - the question arises as to what it is that works. — tim wood
But this offers no account of what changes or moves. It appears that some account of being comes first, then comes movement or change. On that account, though, we need an account of what change is. — tim wood
We could call that spirit — tim wood
The difference between an ontological claim and an ontological commitment is what, as far as you understand it?
How it works, or how it is? Are these the same thing? Does working reduce to being? Or vice versa? — tim wood
I was wondering, if "I exist" sole on the basis of thinking (all realms of thinking), how would I know that I'm think or what if something is controlling my thinking. — dakota
(1) The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice.
(4) If the criteria to evaluate the moral value of an act is justice, and justice is objective, then morality is objective.
We're using seeing as a metaphor for all perceiving. — tim wood
In sum, perception is always deficient with respect to what is there. — tim wood
Are you arguing that the appearance of things is how they really are? — tim wood
Can you think of anything at all that you're willing to say is identical to your perception of it? — tim wood
Two problems: 1) perception is always deficient, never complete (that it may be complete with respect to some criteria is not to the point, here), and 2) perception is always through a set of filters, that you call our mental apparatus: therefore and thereby, the perception is filtered. — tim wood
More to the point, we can all agree the tree is green, and a scientist can give an account for how green works. But at its core this is just a consensus and a naming. But there is never anything that says that your experience of green just is, or is like, my experience of green. This surfaces where people disagree about their likes and dislikes. — tim wood
Your argument that both practical and scientific knowledge are equal as products of indirect realism is challenging, until one recognizes that the language is off. — tim wood
We do agree on the practical aspect of things. Green is green. The tree is a tree. To me this just means that the world's work can get done, and that the work is done within and with respect to appropriate parameters. — tim wood
Part of the reason is that often enough we find that how things appear, isn't really how they are. — tim wood
People have a problem with Kant because they don't understand him. — tim wood
They suppose he's saying you cannot know anything about the world because of the idea of noumena, and how can he then talk about knowing the world if he's already argued that it cannot be known. — tim wood
The other kind is practical knowledge, which is not so constrained. Never for a moment does he doubt that - or argue against - the tree is a tree, or that it is as it appears. From the standpoint of science, Gewissenschaft, he requires that science give a scientific account of the tree as tree, not as a pratical matter, but as a scientific matter. And he finds that science, because it works from perception/appearances, cannot. — tim wood
Maybe here I can open the clam. I can observe/perceive - see - the tree only in so far as I can see it. If it has an ultraviolet or infrared "signature," I won't see it. — tim wood
And to be sure, what I do see is just my seeing of it. — tim wood
It seems to me an unwarranted assumption that my seeing somehow is the same as the thing itself. — tim wood
As a scientific matter, concerning the tree as it really is in itself, then I don't. — tim wood
But is the tree really green? — tim wood
By "mental apparatus" I'm thinking you mean mind. — tim wood
By "knowledge experience" I'm thinking you mean just that which is the reflection/awareness/consciousness of the experience - or that which is added to the experience-in-itself that makes it intelligible to consciousness - or something along these lines. — tim wood
But the perception of the touching. Therein lies the problem. In this sense touching is like seeing. — tim wood
You're defining seeing, and touching, as the entire process, and presupposing that what ends up in your mind is what's out there. — tim wood
What we have learned to call a tree is out there. All we have to work with is perception of the tree (whether by seeing or touch or any other sense) - in short, an image. — tim wood
I suppose the image is more-or-less accurate within the limits of my perception; I do not suppose it is the thing perceived (nor do you, I gather), — tim wood
nor do I suppose my image is exactly accurate, with respect to the thing - the tree - itself. — tim wood
It's that "direct experience" that's throwing me. The only way I make sense of it is if the "observables" are the raw material of the perception, before it is put into order by the mind - but in no way to be confused with the thing itself. In this sense we do have direct experience of the "observables": we create them! As to direct experience of the tree, I'm with Kant (as I understand him): as a practical matter the tree is green and leafy and rough to the touch, and if it's a pine then it has a distinctive smell, and so on. And I don't doubt that the tree really is this way. — tim wood
As to knowing it in scientific sense, then no. — tim wood
You offer an account: something that was outside comes inside, as qualia (fix this if I'm wrong), and the qualia - the "what it's like to see red" - is(?) the knowledge. Is that it? — tim wood
There was a time when there was a "projectionist" theory of perception. As you recognize above, people realized that we don't actually see the tree. — tim wood
So I find two flaws in the notion of qualia as an account of knowledge. 1) That qualia is the experience of what it's like to experience something (clearly not the experience itself, or the experience of the thing itself). And 2) even if it were, then how does it become knowledge. That is, how does the qualia itself establish knowledge and understanding? — tim wood
We can't both have and not have direct experience of externals. We agree we can't (we don't see the tree itself). Because we can't, we can't know about the world. — tim wood
#2 isn't quite right. What colour is the book if you turn out the lights, or if you're using a sodium lamp, and so forth? The point is that what you get from the book is reflected light, but nothing of the book itself. — tim wood
People may agree that the book is red, but what does that tell us about red in-itself? — tim wood
For example, you say, "What would existents look/be like without properties?" I know what you mean. The trouble is that the remark, which I think makes perfect sense most of the time, doesn't make sense here. — tim wood
This begins to look like the pre-Kant problem: if what you know is in your head, then how can you know about the world? If it's in the world (I.e., empirical/observational) then how can you know how it works? I say pre-Kant problem, because Kant resolved it. — tim wood
Sore, you decree this from above, with no explanation. Why not, explanations are totally subjective. — tom
Meanwhile in reality, explanations of a certain broad category may be tested and compared objectively, by experiment. The other class of explanations may be criticised and compared using objective criteria like the one I gave earlier. — tom
I'm sorry, but there are objective criteria regarding what makes a good explanation, and what makes one explanation better than the other. In fact, we have a rather well-developed method for deciding between explanations. It's called science.
Here's the objective criterion as to whether an explanation is good/bad: An explanation is good/bad if it is hard/easy to vary while still accounting for what it purports to account for. — tom
Question: what exactly do you mean by qualia? — tim wood
The book is red. Completely ordinary and unremarkable statement, but the way we're looking at it we have to question it. Where is the red? What is (the) red? There are three questions to be asked and not just the third one that you ask. Is it? What is it? And qualia, what kind is it? — tim wood
Red seems to be a something. I, myself, have no idea what. What do you say red is? The question is, is it something in itself? Does red exist? I think maybe it doesn't. — tim wood
What are properties? — tim wood
How do you know there are properties? — tim wood
And it doesn't do to just "disagree" with the planet's greatest thinkers. — tim wood
No. I mean that their ideas, their arguments, have to be dealt with. If you dismiss them out-of-hand, well, you can, but your arguments can't. — tim wood
No. It looks like you're missing the point of taking an intuitive approach. You seem to be assuming that only an analytical approach could warrant disagreement. — Noble Dust
Correct. Within the context of this thread, the destination would be "a view of the beauty of humanity which humans themselves cannot see, in the same way that humans see a certain beauty in bird which birds themselves cannot see." — Noble Dust
Or rather, the destination (instead of route in my reply) — Noble Dust
I can't imagine how you could have. — Noble Dust
It seems to come down to the fact that you're taking an analytical approach, while I'm not. I think your analysis would probably indicate that you're more correct from an analytical standpoint. But the whole concept that I presented is both aesthetic/artistic and intuitive (as well as open to analysis, as everything of course is); so the same goes for my intuitive approach; I've gone into detail about it from that angle, and you haven't responded within an intuitive approach at all, whereas I've attempted to interface with your analytical approach. My approach begins with intuition, not with analysis. Good discussion though, I'm not trying to shut it down, feel free to continue. — Noble Dust
That's sure a get-out-of-jail-free card, for anything whatever. 'Works for me!' — Wayfarer