What I'm saying there is the fact that enables multiple possibilities. So why wouldn't that be an explanation? What other sort of thing would you be looking for as an explanation? — Terrapin Station
What else would we be doing if we're explaining what possibilities are/how they obtain? — Terrapin Station
As I mentioned above, I'm not a realist on laws of physics. — Terrapin Station
On my view, possible worlds are a way of talking about the simple fact that not everything about our world is strongly/causally deterministic. — Terrapin Station
So we can't do possible worlds unless we buy platonism or god? — Terrapin Station
So then, for one, in this context you'd be saying that possible worlds are objective thoughts or ideas? What would that amount to? — Terrapin Station
You'd have to explain how "discrete abstract" makes sense to you (unless you're simply using "abstract" as a synonym for "nonphysical," but I explained why that doesn't work). — Terrapin Station
They're abstract in terms of content, or in terms of semantics (meaning). Content-wise, they range of a number of particulars. That's the whole function of concepts. — Terrapin Station
They do not necessarily reject abstracts as concepts. Hence we have conceptualist nominalists (which is what I am). — Terrapin Station
Abstracts range over multiple instantiations of particulars, whether they're types/universals or concepts. — Terrapin Station
if you believe that abstracts are concepts, you believe that concepts are events in a specific individual's mind, and you're a physicalist on mind. — Terrapin Station
(And likewise, "abstract" doesn't imply "not material.") — Terrapin Station
I already explained the alternative. One can simply posit nonmaterial particulars. "Not abstract" doesn't imply "material." (And likewise, "abstract" doesn't imply "not material.") — Terrapin Station
What part of "nominalists DO NOT say that possibility must be grounded in the material world" don't you understand? — Terrapin Station
It says no such thing as "possibility must be grounded in the material world." — Terrapin Station
The definitions, for example, say that nominalists are necessarily materialists. This is wrong. — Terrapin Station
Nominalism comes in at least two varieties. In one of them it is the rejection of abstract objects; in the other it is the rejection of universals. Philosophers have often found it necessary to postulate either abstract objects or universals.
Hm, a square circle isn't nothing, rather it is an object that is both square and circular. Their existence seems to be impossible. But I think a truly omnipotent being would be able to create one, for nothing is impossible for a truly omnipotent being. — Bartricks
Surely being unable to do the impossible is a restriction? — Bartricks
My own view is that the unmoved mover should be understood in terms of Aristotle's hylomorphism and naturalism and not in Platonic terms. That would be consistent with his rejection of Plato's forms. — Andrew M
Aristotle's immanent realism means his epistemology is based on the study of things that exist or happen in the world, and rises to knowledge of the universal, whereas for Plato epistemology begins with knowledge of universal Forms (or ideas) and descends to knowledge of particular imitations of these. — Aristotle - Wikipedia
Pure potential would be infinite, and this is what is impossible to conceive of as being real. It can't be real, because as I said this would mean that at this time, when there was infinite potential there would be nothing actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point though, is that it is impossible to conceptualize something which is logically impossible. You can say it "prime matter", but you cannot conceptualize it. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe Plotinus uses a system of "emanation", and some other Neo-Platonists refer to a "procession". But this is a participation of Forms, strictly, and I don't think material existence is even necessitated in Plotinus' system. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, we observe that there is actuality, so it is impossible that there ever was pure potentiality. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem with the theory of participation, which Plato uncovered, and becomes evident from The Republic on, into his later work, is that the thing which is participated in is passive, as the thing participating is active. — Metaphysician Undercover
it’s rather the potential to be.
— AJJ
Well, no. This sounds good, but in the next paragraph
(Stanford.edu) Nor is it the denials of any of these; for even denials belong to things accidentally.
— tim wood — tim wood
Or I guess that it has no actuality is the better way to put it.
— AJJ
But here I think you've got it, and said it shortest and best! — tim wood
In other words: pure potentiality.
— AJJ
Whose words? — tim wood
The traditional interpretation of Aristotle, which goes back as far as Augustine (De Genesi contra Manichaeos i 5–7) and Simplicius (On Aristotle’s Physics i 7), and is accepted by Aquinas (De Principiis Naturae §13), holds that Aristotle believes in something called “prime matter”, which is the matter of the elements, where each element is, then, a compound of this matter and a form. This prime matter is usually described as pure potentiality
And what is the being of "pure potentiality" if you trouble to make sure that it has no being? — tim wood
For it is something of which each of these things [that it is not] is predicated, whose being is different from each of its predicates (for the others are predicated of substance, and substance is predicated of matter).
I understand matter as the continuity of time itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle assumed "matter" as the principle of continuity of existence. Ultimately, it accounts for the fact that the world cannot be randomly different from one moment to the next. — Metaphysician Undercover
So in his Physics, Aristotle wanted to be able to explain what we all observe, and say, that a thing remains being the same thing despite the fact that there are changes to it. Matter is the underlying thing which persists, and does not change when a change occurs, and assuming the reality of matter allows us to say that the same thing persists from one moment to the next, but it changes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore, to discuss what Aristotle meant by "matter" is a mug's game, because he did not mean any thing by it! — tim wood
The world isn't grounded in the active intellect for either Aristotle or Aquinas. — Andrew M
"prime" matter? Is prime matter different from matter? — tim wood
That is, that matter, or prime matter - It - does not exist at all. And this is what I have seen represented as Aristotle's idea of matter - except that Aristotle apparently did not have a lot to say about matter, and such views are thus made up - inferred - from what he did say. — tim wood
Is the Scholastic view similar? In a much as the Scholastics held that universals possessed an extra-mental reality, it seem likely that they probably held that matter existed. — tim wood
Above as well we have the compatibility of The Forms, and form(s). If the forms are of the world, and The Forms are not, but are ideal and perfect, and the world is imperfect and imprecise, then how exactly are they compatible? — tim wood
There is, however, a clear distinction between reading Aristotle and reading what other people say about Aristotle. — Fooloso4
Or perhaps their interpretation lends the clearest insight.
— AJJ
That is possible but how do you know it is the clearest insight without reading Aristotle? — Fooloso4