But they might say that when you look at a cup, what you are seeing is the cup — Banno
You need more than just identifying a table as a table in visual perception. — Corvus
(40)If, to take a rather different case, a church were cunningly camouflaged so that it looked like a barn, how could any serious question be raised about what we see when we look at it ? We see, of course, a church that now looks like a barn.
Actually if you read the OP you will see that Epicurus had a strong notion of unnatural human desires. — Leontiskos
I’m saying that those aspects of Wittgenstein’s philosophy are not propositional but still conceptual. — Luke
Yes, the sun. One type of thing. — Antony Nickles
It is unclear what your "this" is referring to. — Antony Nickles
My guess is that you are imagining every example leads to a conclusion about our approach to everything (that there is only one form of skepticism: the problem of a foundation for a particular criteria for knowledge). — Antony Nickles
I take you to be framing it that he only has one "picture of knowledge", and, for that matter, that there is only one sense of "certainty". — Antony Nickles
That is to say that I don't find where this is relevant to the matter at hand. — Antony Nickles
‘Disappointment with criteria – Cavell, Rush Rhees, and skepticism’. — Antony Nickles
And it is satisfied in the case of the sun (as with believing it is raining outside), because we can know whether we are right or not when the sun comes out (or checking on the rain). — Antony Nickles
a picture of knowledge. — Antony Nickles
T 6.36311 That the sun will rise to-morrow, is an hypothesis; and that means that we do not know
whether it will rise.
T 6.37 A necessity for one thing to happen because another has happened does not exist. There is only logical necessity.
255. The philosopher's treatment of a question is like the treatment of an illness.
— ibid. 255
Not what you want to hear riding the gurney. — Paine
The real discovery is the one that enables me to break off philosophizing when I want to. a The one that gives philosophy peace, so that it is no longer tormented by questions which bring itself in question. - Instead, a method is now demonstrated by examples, and the series
of examples can be broken off. —– Problems are solved (difficulties eliminated), not a single problem.
Not propositional, but still conceptual. — Luke
PPI 251. We find certain things about seeing puzzling, because we do not find the whole business of seeing puzzling enough.
PPI 257. The question now arises: Could there be human beings lacking the ability to see something as something a and what would that be like? What sort of consequences would it have? ... We will
call it “aspect-blindness” - and will now consider what might be meant by this. (A conceptual investigation.)
PPI 261. The importance of this concept lies in the connection between the concepts of seeing an aspect and of experiencing the meaning of a word.
Does the project to dissolve as many problems as possible actually do that? — Paine
I'm anxious about relying on the concept of nature. — Moliere
(43)It [philosophy] is concerned with plotting the bounds of sense.
(45)What philosophy describes are the logical relations of implication, exclusion, compatibility, presupposition, point and purpose, role and function among propositions in which a
given problematic expression occurs. Philosophy describes the uses of expressions in our language for the purpose of resolving or dissolving conceptual entanglements.
I do not know what to make of ‘from quantity to quality’... — Banno
Not at all sure where this is going. — Banno
You are committing the fallacy of affirming the consequent, claiming that because reason is ordered to truth therefore (all) truth must be derivable from unaided reason. — Leontiskos
You stitched four clauses together and added a double serving of non sequitur for taste? This is why I don't often respond to your posts. — Leontiskos
So Fooloso's assumption that anything that comes from Aquinas must be revelation-based is not only faulty reasoning, it is also almost exactly backwards. — Leontiskos
The ubiquitous account is that something has left the body, implying a dualism. My point was that it is of equal validity to say that the body no longer does what it once did, avoiding the dualism. — Banno
the simple fact that a dead body is different to a live one. — Banno
Quite often it is ordered [...] to what can be made to seem to be true...
— Fooloso4
Yes, as often as Sophists operate. — Leontiskos
Who said anything about revelation? — Leontiskos
the Aristotelian tradition. — Leontiskos
But as a Christian — Leontiskos
The intuitive opinion follows Aquinas in claiming that the human being is intrinsically ordered to truth — Leontiskos
Summa Theologiae, — Leontiskos
You're engaged in axe-grinding. — Leontiskos
You can attempt to give an argument for such a conclusion if you like. — Leontiskos
I'll take your word for it, although I recall reading a similar account elsewhere, with Plato writing differing accounts for various audiences. — Banno
Just as Socrates spoke differently and said different things to different people, Plato manages to say different things with the same words.
Socrates spoke differently to different people.
The two depictions of the soul in the Republic and the Phaedrus do not match up. Different stories for different occasions. Socrates says the he speaks differently to different men depending on their needs.
Socrates spoke differently to different people depending on their needs.
What's curious is the way in which talk of division or of a spirit leaving the body comes so easily. — Banno
I want to draw attention to what is a visceral difference between how one sees a living and a dead body. — Banno
We brace ourselves against this with ritual, seeking some sort of continuity or normality. But our grief recognises the loss. — Banno
I figure that saying: "When we do philosophy" includes all the efforts Wittgenstein is making as much as it includes views he is resisting. — Paine
It seems like the wide variance of interpretations are a function of how that gets answered. — Paine
Reason is surely teleological. — Leontiskos
It is ordered towards truth. — Leontiskos
gather you are asking about what happens at the point of death. — Banno
The language "divided in two" is loaded with dualism. — Banno
The common prejudice is that at death something leaves the body. — Banno
I don't think that's right - rather the body stops doing stuff it once did. It no longer works in the same way. — Banno
I mean individuation — Banno
When does one have the thought that a machine already contains its possible movements in some mysterious way? Well, when one is doing philosophy.
Though we do pay attention to the way we talk about these matters, we don’t understand it, but misinterpret it. When we do philosophy, we are like savages, primitive people, who hear the way in which civilized people talk, put a false interpretation on it, and then draw the oddest conclusions from this.
And what lures us into thinking that? The kind of way in which we talk about the machine. We say, for example, that the machine has (possesses) such-and-such possibilities of movement; we speak of an ideally rigid machine which can move only thus-and-so.
... We talk as if these parts could only move in this way, as if they could not do anything else. Is this how it is? Do we forget the possibility of their bending, breaking off, melting, and so on? Yes; in many cases we don’t think of that at all.
But my point was that perhaps there is a difference in kind. — schopenhauer1
And the same goes for any other mental image (M) that one has; it is the image of (M) and of nothing else. — Luke
Or, the Eiffel Tower may be slightly different to how you imagined it, but you say it's exactly how you imagined it. — Luke
Moreover, why suppose that a mental image is required in order to use the name "Eiffel Tower" correctly — Luke
Comparing my mental image to what I mistakenly think is the Eiffel Tower does not correct the problem.
— Fooloso4
You seem to be suggesting that you can "correct the problem" by comparing your mental image to (what you correctly think is) the Eiffel Tower. — Luke
What object is being referred to at PI 389? — Luke
And the same goes for any other mental image (M) that one has; it is the image of (M) and of nothing else. — Luke
Not necessarily, because it depends on how you would conceive of, or define, "something". — Metaphysician Undercover
Father Copelston's Thomistic misreading of Spinoza — 180 Proof