Does that make you a subjectivist too? — Posty McPostface
Yes, "justice" is an abstraction. What more can I say? — Posty McPostface
Justice is an abstraction of the mind. Sure, we can disagree about it; but, the atomic meaning is apparent when we want to communicate it to another. — Posty McPostface
People unnecessarily make trouble for themselves. — Michael Ossipoff
So, hence, words have atomic meaning. — Posty McPostface
How so? We all stand on the same ground more or less. — Posty McPostface
What is the ground without bedrock beliefs and truths? — Posty McPostface
Understood. Yet, those atomic relations stand out from the rest. They are what ground meaning. — Posty McPostface
Oy--we're probably complete opposites on that. I'm a subjectivist on meaning. Meaning is something that happens in individual's heads. And each individual will necessarily have non-identical meanings compared to other individuals ("strictly" non-identical, since nominalism is the case; they can be similar, but they won't literally be the same meaning). — Terrapin Station
What is "meaning holism"? — Posty McPostface
What do you mean by that? — Posty McPostface
If we are engaged in making sense of the world by imposing our a priori structure on it (''falsifying'' the world, as Nietzsche puts it), it seems to follow that the world as we experience it and the world as it is cannot be one and the same thing. — philosophy
Yes, ideas are particular brain states. — Terrapin Station
These reactions tell us about the observer, how they think about the work in question. — Terrapin Station
I'm struggling with this disagreement between Kant and Hegel regarding things-in-themselves and would really appreciate some help. — philosophy
I don't at all agree with distinctions like that, though — Terrapin Station
In my view--I'm a nominalist and a physicalist--only material particulars and their particular, dynamic relations exist (with the dynamic relations supervening on however the material stuff is situated and however it moves). — Terrapin Station
I read all of that and I haven't the faintest idea what any of the alternate senses of "exist" are that you might be proposing. — Terrapin Station
In other words, it defines the ineffable and ephemeral, encapsulates them such that it cannot be paraphrased, or broken down further. And allows this to be shared. — Lucid
Seems glib, but it's the only correct answer in my view: depends on the artist. Different artists have different goals, sometimes different goals for each work, or even different multiple goals for each work.
Any statement of the form "The goal of art is x," where x is some single or small list of things, is going to be way off-base re what's actually going on when people create artworks. — Terrapin Station
I don't think art is mainly about objective truths, I think it's more about transcendent subjective truths. — Tomseltje
A work of art shows us something exceptional of the mind of its creator, something fascinating about what it is to be human - something we could not see alone; and it is something which brings joy and awe to the act of seeing it. I do not do drugs, but I know well the mind-expansion I feel when contemplating great art.. — Tim3003
Great works of art exert power that is not diminished over time, power that goes beyond the normative bounds of any observer. I think this is only possible if force of these works reaches certain objective truths about the world that, if we have sufficient knowledge and emotion, can't be avoided because their power consists in their spontaneous ability to continue to generate new or deeper thoughts, newer more meaningful narratives in observers. — Cavacava
The thought of a thinker is just another thought — Evil
Yes I bet people do throw around the accusation that some dispute is terminological quite loosely. But that's pretty lazy. It seems to me that there are various ways of a dispute being defective, and being 'terminological' or 'merely verbal' is just one of them. — Welkin Rogue
What are your thoughts about attitudes, macrosoft? Can they be changed, and how?
An attitude is everything after all. — Posty McPostface
Ok, glad you're not suicidal. Joking aside, life is pretty good nowadays. We don't have to worry about being drafted in some war. We have most of our needs (apart from housing) readily supplied. Opportunities abound for a good life. We enjoy a great deal of freedom. I suppose, too much freedom to some extent. — Posty McPostface
I mean, that it's unavoidable and always present. One cannot escape the confines of mortality. If one attempts for the greatest of goods, such as contentment and satisfaction, that's all that can be asked for in the end. — Posty McPostface
Or they become satisfied with what they have? — Posty McPostface