It never glows--even in bright light--and you have to hold it over your head yourself. — Bitter Crank
I think 'avoiding burning fossil fuels' should unquestionably be a major policy goal. — Wayfarer
And those later objections have been swept aside. Cantor was the first to rigorously define the continuum in 1870s and all the dissenters have been forgotten. — tom
I think you'll find that Peirce got into the act somewhat later than Cantor, after being inspired by Cantor. — tom
And, in the history of Real analysis, set theory, etc, Peirce is a dead-end. Cantor's ideas have been extended and developed, Peirce's have been abandoned. — tom
If we covered the entire world in windmills I don't know what the effect would actually be. — VagabondSpectre
that kind of expression plays right into the hands of petro-chemical industry scare-mongering. — Wayfarer
What we are inquiring into is ... what it means to be continuous, and what it means to be discontinuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
The conclusion is that it is nonsense to talk about "the infinite divisibility of a line". — Metaphysician Undercover
The continuum was discovered via set theory! — tom
I do not see a way that mathematics, which relies totally on manipulation of discrete, can describe in any form, continuity. — Rich
No matter how many numbers one pulls together, in any manner one tries, it will never be able to describe the nature of complete and full continuity. — Rich
The only way to understand nature is to fully and completely remove symbolism from the investigation. — Rich
If our purpose is to identify things, which is what we are discussing here, identity, then allowing that there are differences which do not matter, defeats our purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
The act of dividing something demonstrates that the thing divided is not continuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've read enough Peirce, and secondary sources, to know what he was talking about. If you think that what I said is wrong, then please correct me with more accurate information, I would welcome a chance to upgrade my understanding. — Metaphysician Undercover
Uniqueness would still be defined relatively. Inidividuation or identity is a difference that makes a difference ... We have a difference that is distinctive as part of a context and so can go on to be remembered as changing its developing history. We have the uniqueness of some difference that actually made a difference to the whole. — apokrisis
Actuality is being defined in terms of a difference that makes a difference. This is quite in contrast to a tautology where the actual is simply a difference. — apokrisis
Peirce employs this notion, of a difference which doesn't matter, to support the proposition that a continuity is divisible. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we can divide a continuity, at 2 for example, such that we have <2 and >2, then there cannot be any real difference between <2 and >2 or else that difference would indicate that there was no continuity here in the first place. — Metaphysician Undercover
Peirce proposes that we can assume a difference which does not matter, such that <2 and >2 may be identified as different, but because this difference doesn't matter, <2 and >2 can be said to be the same, so that there is no real difference between them, and there is continuity through 2. — Metaphysician Undercover
A continuity cannot have a point of difference because this would make it discontinuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Measurements are always approximations and it is why measurements specifically and mathematics in general (because of its discrete nature) are very poor tools for understanding nature. — Rich
If you are prepared to say, that two things with the exact same identity, are not in fact the exact same thing, (according to the identity of indiscernibles), because of some differences which do not matter, then you only defeat the purpose of identity, which is to distinguish one thing from another. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is only by claiming that there is a difference between them, which does not matter, that you can say they are two distinct things, rather than necessarily one and the same thing, as stipulated by the "identity of indiscernibles". — Metaphysician Undercover
My car is the same object as your car, because they are mass produced and identical. Your desire is to claim that the factors which differentiate them (the differences of the particular) do not actually differentiate them, and identify them as distinct, as those differences are unimportant. — Metaphysician Undercover
The purpose of the law of identity is so that we can distinguish one object from another, and come to know that object as the thing it is. To claim that we can overlook some minor differences such that numerous objects may have the same identity only defeats this purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
For the purpose of understanding the nature of nature, we need precision otherwise we miss the boat. — Rich
It is alright to say that a book, for practical purposes, has the same identity before and later. But it is more precise to say that the book has changed and continuously changes so that it is never is the same in duration. — Rich
God has infinite attributes. To only be one would be a contradiction with God's very nature. — TheWillowOfDarkness
God is infinite. God cannot be said to begin or end at any point. It's anything but vague. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Realising the necessity of potential, Spinoza also points out potential cannot be "firstness." Why? Well, because it never begins nor ends. — TheWillowOfDarkness
When we seek the truth, differences never cease to matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
A difference, by its very nature, as a difference, is a difference, and therefore it must be treated as a difference. If one adopts the perspective that a difference may be so minute, or irrelevant, that it doesn't matter, and therefore doesn't qualify as a difference, then that person allows contradiction within one's own principles (a difference which is not a difference), and the result will be nothing other than confusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we allow that some differences do not matter, then we allow that two distinct things can have the same identity. Since giving two distinct things the same identity is a mistake, then in relation to identity, there is no such thing as a difference which does not matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
Failure to hold fast to strong logical principles allows vagueness to creep into the logic. Such vagueness hinders our ability to determine the truth. Therefore, if our purpose is to determine the truth, we must uphold the principle of identity to the strongest of our capacities, and assume that every difference matters. — Metaphysician Undercover
But since the principal purpose of identification is to identify the particular, distinguishing it from other similar things, you negate the capacity to fulfill this fundamental purpose of identity, with that process, the flip. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the difference is that now I have made the natural relativity of the question of identity explicit. — apokrisis
While I am at it, do you agree or disagree with my other "first cut" definitions of "contextual" that parallel what Peirce wrote about "vague" and "general"? — aletheist
But contextuality leaves it open whether the further possibility is 1ns or 2ns. It could a future condtional (the coming battle with the Persian fleet) or it could be some event already fixed by a determination (what will I discover when I finally check my ticket for the lottery drawn last week?). — apokrisis
Of course then along came relativity to demonstrate all this classical definiteness was relativistically contextual and quantumly indeterminate. That is why Peirce gets credit for foreseeing the physical revolutions about to come. — apokrisis
Deriving conclusions from information that is already present in the premisses. Also known as deductive reasoning.What is "necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
Arithmetic is an obvious example, such as 2+2=4.What sort of necessary reasoning is commonly associated with quantity? — Cabbage Farmer
Syllogisms are an obvious example, such as "All men are mortal, Socrates is a man, therefore Socrates is mortal."What sort of necessary reasoning is not commonly associated with quantity? — Cabbage Farmer
I am following Charles Sanders Peirce in suggesting that all necessary reasoning is fundamentally mathematical reasoning. He defined mathematics as the science of drawing necessary conclusions about ideal states of affairs by means of diagrams, which are representations that embody the significant relations among the parts of their objects.In what broad sense is mathematics "the application of necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
We can apply reasoning to real states of affairs, but typically we do so by modeling them as ideal states of affairs. We have to identify the significant parts and relations of the actual situation and create a diagram accordingly within an appropriate representational system, whose rules govern our transformations of the diagram.Can we apply reasoning to real states of affairs, or only to hypothetical and ideal states of affairs? — Cabbage Farmer
Only to ideal states of affairs, since we can never be absolutely sure that real states of affairs are completely deterministic.Can we apply necessary reasoning to real states of affairs, or only to hypothetical and ideal states of affairs? — Cabbage Farmer
Your paraphrase seems about right.Do you mean to say ... — Cabbage Farmer
The representational system is a set of rules, such as Euclid's postulates for geometry. It is ideal because it may or may not accurately capture aspects of reality; for example, non-Euclidean geometry is more appropriate in certain cases. The model is a diagram constructed and manipulated in accordance with those rules, such as a sketch of a triangle and any auxiliary elements that must be added in order to carry out a particular proof. It is ideal because the actual drawing includes features that are irrelevant to the problem at hand, such as the thickness of the lines and their deviation from being perfectly straight.What is the difference between the "model" and the "representational system" that governs subsequent transformations of the model? How are each of these terms related to the definition of "hypothetical or ideal states of affairs"? — Cabbage Farmer
Isolating assumptions can be quite a challenge, especially for more complex situations, such as a computer model of a structure that I analyze in accordance with the principles of mechanics in order to ascertain whether all of the members and connections are adequately designed for the forces to which they might be subjected. It is the whole package that validates the conclusions - the representational system and its assumptions, the individual model and its assumptions, and their correspondence (in some sense) to the actual state of affairs. As I like to put it, engineers solve real problems by analyzing fictitious ones, which involves simulating contingent events with necessary reasoning.How do we isolate "assumptions" that guide the definition of model, representational system, and states of affairs? Is it the assumptions, or the whole package, that determines the aptness of the conclusions obtained? — Cabbage Farmer
The representational system is often grounded in past inductive investigations; i.e., science. We have learned from collective experience that making certain assumptions and applying certain rules generally produces results that are useful. Learning how to create appropriate models is part of the personal experience that is required to develop competence in a particular field, since it often involves exercising context-sensitive judgment, not just following prescriptive procedures. Again, the modeler must be able to ascertain which parts and relations within the actual situation are significant enough to warrant inclusion in the model.What role does measurement play in your account? Or more generally: How are "aspects of reality" translated into formal signs in the model, or into bits of "necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
The behavior of matter much more closely conforms to exceptionless laws of nature than the behavior of people, even taking their habits into account. As such, necessary reasoning is much more likely to be useful and effective in modeling and predicting the behavior of material things than the behavior of intelligent and willful people, who are quite capable of deviating from their habits at any time.It's not clear how this follows from anything you've just said about "necessary reasoning". Isn't human behavior part of nature? Aren't human behaviors "natural phenomena"? — Cabbage Farmer
No, Peirce vigorously rejected both dualism and materialism/physicalism; he wrote, "The one intelligible theory of the universe is that of objective idealism, that matter is effete mind, inveterate habits becoming physical laws."Have you signed up for special troubles associated with dualism? — Cabbage Farmer
That is fine. Hopefully these additional responses have helped clarify my thoughts for you.Accordingly, I'm not sure what difference you've gestured at here, and what relevance it may have for our conversation about the uses of mathematics. — Cabbage Farmer
If we are now talking cosmology, it is the Universe that is indifferent to any difference that doesn't make a difference in being beyond the needs of its genenralised purpose. — apokrisis
1ns can't be the true initial conditions of existence as Peirce's own logic makes necessary. — apokrisis
So again, 2ns in Peirceanism is about the emergence of crisp possibility or determinate degrees of freedom. — apokrisis
This of course is what I deny. There is only relativity, never the absolute. — apokrisis
X is being made its own context. That is the tautology here. The assertion is being made that the context is crisply existent too - thus bringing out that which Peirceanism would seek to deny. — apokrisis
The upshot then is that the statement is true only to the degree that either term is true. — apokrisis
If x is contextual, then it is not necessarily true that _____.
A sign is objectively contextual, in so far as, leaving its interpretation indeterminate, it relies on some aspect of the actual situation to complete the determination. "That house is on fire." "What house?" "That one over there."
The contextual might be defined as that to which the principle of identity does not apply. This object from one point of view, or at one time and place, is not the same as this object from another point of view, or at another time and place.
Another way to put it is that if generality and vagueness are real yet not actual, then the actual would be the not real. — apokrisis
Existence, then, is a special mode of reality, which, whatever other characteristics it possesses, has that of being absolutely determinate. Reality, in its turn, is a special mode of being, the characteristic of which is that things that are real are whatever they really are, independently of any assertion about them. — CP 6.349, 1902
Existence can approach but not reach the perfection of discontinuous actualisation that the principle of identity demands. — apokrisis
I don't think it is essential to arrive at one perfect word. — apokrisis
But if vagueness is the best term for 1ns, and generality the best for 3ns, then another term for 2ns (after hierarchy theory) would be specificity. — apokrisis
I mean 2ns looks the most like the regular reductionist notion of the atomistically and mechanically determinate - in simply being Newtonian action and reaction. — apokrisis
The logical atom, or term not capable of logical division, must be one of which every predicate may be universally affirmed or denied ... Such a term can be realized neither in thought nor in sense ... In thought, an absolutely determinate term cannot be realized, because, not being given by sense, such a concept would have to be formed by synthesis, and there would be no end to the synthesis because there is no limit to the number of possible predicates. A logical atom, then, like a point in space, would involve for its precise determination an endless process. We can only say, in a general way, that a term, however determinate, may be made more determinate still, but not that it can be made absolutely determinate. Such a term as "the second Philip of Macedon" is still capable of logical division - into Philip drunk and Philip sober, for example; but we call it individual because that which is denoted by it is in only one place at one time. It is a term not absolutely indivisible, but indivisible as long as we neglect differences of time and the differences which accompany them. Such differences we habitually disregard in the logical division of substances. In the division of relations, etc., we do not, of course, disregard these differences, but we disregard some others. There is nothing to prevent almost any sort of difference from being conventionally neglected in some discourse ... This distinction between the absolutely indivisible and that which is one in number from a particular point of view is shadowed forth in the two words individual {to atomon} and singular (to kath' hekaston); but as those who have used the word individual have not been aware that absolute individuality is merely ideal, it has come to be used in a more general sense. — CP 3.63, 1870
"That is why I said the contradiction lies in the genesis of specificity. Peirceanism says it is a contextual deal. The laws of thought say it is brutely tautological. — "apokrisis
Or x = not not-x is true. That employs the context to derive the specificity via a dichotomy. — apokrisis
Love the argument, Tom; but I have to say I agree with Pierre-Normand that what you have shown is that the totality of facts is uncountable, not that it is impossible. — Banno
A sign is objectively general, in so far as, leaving its effective interpretation indeterminate, it surrenders to the interpreter the right of completing the determination for himself. "Man is mortal." "What man?" "Any man you like." A sign is objectively vague, in so far as, leaving its interpretation more or less indeterminate, it reserves for some other possible sign or experience the function of completing the determination. "This month," says the almanac-oracle, "a great event is to happen." "What event?" "Oh, we shall see. The almanac doesn't tell that." — CP 5.505, c. 1905
The general might be defined as that to which the principle of excluded middle does not apply. A triangle in general is not isosceles nor equilateral; nor is a triangle in general scalene. The vague might be defined as that to which the principle of contradiction does not apply. For it is false neither that an animal (in a vague sense) is male, nor that an animal is female. — CP 5.505, c. 1905
Anyway 2ns would stand in relation to the law of identity as this same kind of protest - I am not constrained by that constraint which is said to be required to produce the brutely particular. — apokrisis
It is possible to consider it so, but for me, it's more an ethical commitment. — Agustino
It's the same as I asked above - do you think there is a necessary link between philosophical/metaphysical commitments and theism, or can one be a theist pretty much regardless of their other philosophical commitments ... — Agustino
But obviously this entails that it's very difficult, if not impossible, to bring someone to God by yourself - through your own work - it will ultimately have to be God who brings them. — Agustino
So I personally don't believe in the effectiveness of "arguments" for God ... — Agustino
There are no such shorter lines until you posit some points of division. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you understand the difference between continuity and contiguity? — Metaphysician Undercover
If the long line consists of shorter lines, then it is necessary that there is a boundary between the shorter lines, so that it actually consists of shorter lines. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's simple Aristotelian logic. Anything divisible necessarily consists of parts. Every part is individuated, or separate from every other part. A continuity has no such separations. Therefore a continuity is indivisible. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now if the terms 'continuous', 'in contact' [i.e., contiguous], and 'in succession' are understood as defined above - things being 'continuous' if their extremities are one, 'in contact' if their extremities are together, and 'in succession' if there is nothing of their own kind intermediate between them - nothing that is continuous can be composed 'of indivisibles': e.g. a line cannot be composed of points, the line being continuous and the point indivisible ...
Again, if length and time could thus be composed of indivisibles, they could be divided into indivisibles, since each is divisible into the parts of which it is composed. But, as we saw, no continuous thing is divisible into things without parts. Nor can there be anything of any other kind intermediate between the parts or between the moments: for if there could be any such thing it is clear that it must be either indivisible or divisible, and if it is divisible, it must be divisible either into indivisibles or into divisibles that are infinitely divisible, in which case it is continuous.
Moreover, it is plain that everything continuous is divisible into divisibles that are infinitely divisible: for if it were divisible into indivisibles, we should have an indivisible in contact with an indivisible, since the extremities of things that are continuous with one another are one and are in contact. — Physics VI.1
Now a continuum is that which is divisible into parts always capable of subdivision ... — On the Heavens I.1
Interesting. I'm a theist as well, but I've always found it hard to stake belief in God on metaphysical commitments. — Agustino
Are you a Christian theist? How do you view the theism-metaphysics connection? And if belief in God is related to your metaphysics, do you ever fear that you may find something which will shake that belief? — Agustino
Based on what are you making the connection between behaviour and metaphysics - or even belief? — Agustino
As Paul says in the Bible - "I do not do the good I want to do. Instead I keep on doing the evil I don't want to do" — Agustino
