You said you had a retort but you seem to agree with me lol. I am aware it is clickbait but that was just to get people to start talking. It's the kind of clickbait where it's not REALLY a lie but kind of a half lie. I agree with everything you wrote except I think you are massively underestimating the number of people that are "Metaphysical prigs" as you put it. I'd even say most people ACT as metaphysical prigs at least. — khaled
The Tractatus was a good work. — Posty McPostface
What are your thoughts about solipsism? — Posty McPostface
Interesting. What do you have to say about Wittgenstein's flawed approach in the Tractatus? — Posty McPostface
I agree with most of what you have said. I don't think fact making is really a big issue then. Or how do facts obtain in reality? — Posty McPostface
I think logic can lead to the wrong answer: GIGO. But if logic is part of our make-up because it provides a survival advantage, then our theories may also seem right to us because believing them provides a survival advantage, not because they're true. — frank
No longer? What changed? — frank
Could I rephrase this thought in terms of Kuhnian paradigms? Philosophy as a "precise science" is philosophy as prosecuted by 'technicians' within a given paradigm; philosophy as something broader is a discussion between individuals occupying different paradigms (or, within a single individual entertaining multiple paradigms). This picture would suggest that the latter kind of philosophy is much more vulnerable to merely verbal disagreements, insofar as different 'paradigms' involve different systems of language. — Welkin Rogue
How, then, did Hegel account for experience at all? — philosophy
One could trace the etymology of the word chair, the use of it in different texts, dictionaries, situations, manufacture, marketing, and ergonomics instructions. On the contrary, the physical item “chair” does belong to the world of practical and aesthetic use, design, and production. Therefore, when one is in front of this given chair, it is not just about visual and tactile perceptions of it, one deals with a set of implicit cultural, economic, and social practices. — Number2018
But, according to the totality of things being facts, then all we have are symbols, models, and theories which we can devise about the world. — Posty McPostface
I don't know what to make out of that superficial distinctions you have made. Thoughts — Posty McPostface
Giving an account of why logic is innate would be structured by logic. Is that a problem? — frank
I'm thinking of an account that says logic is divine, and so bound to lead to right answers. What's the alternative, I wonder. — frank
I'm more questioning the value of challenging the boundaries of the group consensus. I'm wondering what such challenging actually accomplishes beyond conflict. — Jake
So if everyone could arrive at the same level of emotional maturity, we would all automatically have the ability to distinguish the logical from the illogical? — frank
How would you explain the innateness of logic? — frank
↪macrosoft So you believe logic is innate? — frank
But then why do we teach students to detect illogical arguments? — frank
Their logic textbooks were accidently misprinted and now they're all wrong about what's logical and what's not. — frank
By the fact that understanding and communication do not at all work via literally sharing meanings. — Terrapin Station
Why do you think that it's important for philosophizing to be consistent with the way that most people talk about something? What if the way that those people talk about something is based on incorrect beliefs — Terrapin Station
The response is only thought insofar as we're talking about things like "this is pleasurable"/"this is more than pleasurable" etc.
I suppose you're otherwise referring to non-mental physiological responses they might have, or actions they make take--like if it's a painting and they walk to view it at a different angle, etc — Terrapin Station
Hmm, this is ambiguous. Don't you agree that because I have two hands (fortunately) that the external world exists? — Posty McPostface
Yeah, or the stuff we can all agree on that we stand upon. — Posty McPostface
I mean to assert that things are really just facts that we can agree on. There are also bedrock beliefs we can agree on. — Posty McPostface
But, I have expressed holism by stating that the totality of the world are facts. — Posty McPostface
Sounds that people can make with their mouths, things they can type or handwrite, body motions they can make, etc. are not at all the same as ideas they have. Those things are correlated to ideas, but they're not the same as them. — Terrapin Station
Indeed. But, what's wrong with stating that the world is the totality of facts and not things? This seems elementary to me. — Posty McPostface
Ideas are mental phenomena. As such, they occur "in persons' heads." They're literally brain states that the person has--it's what it's like to BE that brain (or rather those parts of that brain), in those dynamic states. — Terrapin Station
Are you a Tractarian by any chance? The world is the totality of facts not things. Therefore, we must analyze the state space we both inhabit. This can only be done through perfect asymmetrical information sharing. — Posty McPostface
Some people think that meaning is llterally "embedded" in objective stuff. For one, I'd guess that you're familiar with Putnam's work on meaning, no? — Terrapin Station
At any rate, when people "share ideas," they're of course not doing that literally. — Terrapin Station
And how does this relate to semantic holism that is an attitude? — Posty McPostface
Hmm, one cannot be certain of wants; but, needs are apparent. What does that mean to you? — Posty McPostface
I mean to highlight that we both share needs and not wants. We can agree that I'm thirsty if I'm dying out of dehydration. Not so much about wants. — Posty McPostface
Meaning occurs only in individual's heads. It can't be shared in any manner. It's something inherently mental. — Terrapin Station
Communication does not at all require literally sharing meanings. That's not how it works. — Terrapin Station
On my view there is ONLY private language.
(I'm not a Wittgenstein fan. At all.) — Terrapin Station
Well, I'm lost on what we disagree on here. We seem to be saying the same thing to some degree. — Posty McPostface
But, I suppose there are hinge propositions or a priori truth that we must deal with first, and guarantee the intersubjectivity of meaning. — Posty McPostface
But do numbers exist? — Purple Pond
Cool. I thought so myself. I just have a gripe with our lack of agreement on what abstract concepts such as "justice", is. — Posty McPostface
But, that doesn't mean that method's fail us every time. — Posty McPostface
A private language in principle could not exist. — Posty McPostface
Haha, I understand. So, the point of your posts is to highlight that we can't have an attitude independent of meaning obtained in an abstract sense? — Posty McPostface