I need to think about this some more Aaron, but my immediate take is that the difference between seeing John instead of seeing Pooh, that is the perceptual error, is a difference within the context of perception between what I thought I saw and what I discover, on further investigation, that I had really seen. — Janus
A more neutral descriptor might be 'need for a conceptual anchor' where the need is less a personal need of the thinker that something impersonally generated from within the conceptual game. — csalisbury
I do think the conceptual analysis holds, as a kind of historical-philosophical narrative, even if you strip out the desire stuff, but I'm not sure. — csalisbury
So am I understand this as having no epistemological consequences? In what sense, then, is it a response to Descartes? — Snakes Alive
As on poster in this thread pointed out, the odd thing about this debate is that none of the positions is without problems. — Marchesk
I agree that we need a concept of stasis (as well as concept of unity and identity) in order to think about change; I haven't been arguing against that. I have been arguing against reifying such concepts, and imagining that there are real entities which correspond to them. — Janus
And a state of everythingness is effectively a state of nothingness anyway. — apokrisis
Say it is temperature that is fluctuating; there is no changeless entity: temperature that is fluctuating; the fluctuating is temperature, since temperature is never changeless. — Janus
I would say there are changing unities, identities and wholes in nature; but I wouldn't say they are "out there" in any absolute sense. — Janus
Wrong question. If nothing has yet been prevented from being the case, then what isn't the case? — apokrisis
Not exactly, I am saying that changeless unity, changeless identity, and changeless wholeness are mental abstractions. — Janus
Alternatively, change could be fundamental and somethingness is what we get when unbounded fluctuation is stably bounded. — apokrisis
The identity of entities is that which is understood to endure, but the notion of changeless endurance is an abstraction. — Janus
What does 'identical' mean to you? Because even I may not agree that the mind and the nervous system are "identical." — Uber
I'm not quite sure what point you're making here. That because we don't have a model for something physical, then it's not physical? — Uber
Should physicists believe that high-temp superconductors are not physical because they don't yet have a 'model' for explaining such phenomena? — Uber
So the details still need to be finished, but the general idea is already there: consciousness is an emergent physical state. — Uber
A superfluid state can be very different from the helium atoms that collectively interact to produce the state, but we don't then conclude that superfluids are not real or physical. — Uber
Thanks for the reply. It seems that you are of the view that I cannot really get what I am asking for. You might be right. — PossibleAaran
Perhaps. That sounds like quite a strong argument to me. One issue which I am thinking of is this. Classical Physics can be interpreted in an Idealist fashion, so as not to posit anything which exists unperceived. Doing so would not conflict with any of the available evidence. Presumably then, the Idealist interpretation of classical physics would work just as well as the Realist one would. It is just a contingent truth that we happen to use the Realist interpretation. But then, couldn't this argument of yours be made in favour of Idealism? The fact that the Idealist interpretation works so well is best explained by the hypothesis that it is correct - that things do not exist unperceived. — PossibleAaran
I do take the scientific method to be reliable (dropping issues about "the" scientific method). But it seems to me perfectly possible to interpret the findings of science in an Idealist way, without doing anything that contradicts the evidence. That classic scientific theories assume that things exist unperceived is a kind of bias of those theories. It isn't needed to make sense of them, so far as I can tell. It just requires imagination and the willingness to entertain views which are different to what we ordinarily accept. — PossibleAaran
In another sense, I 'know' that P only if there is some reliable method by which I could establish that P. Note that reliability is a de facto concept. A method can be reliable even if I have no way of proving that it is reliable to anyone who doubts it, and even if I couldn't prove it to even a single person. For a method to be reliable is merely for it to be a method which, when used in the right circumstances and in the right way, produces beliefs which are true more often than not. — PossibleAaran
It is true that classical physical theories assume that things exist unperceived, but this is hardly a justification of that claim. — PossibleAaran
The theories predict that 'if objects disappeared when unobserved then there would be observable consequences'. What would those consequences be? It seems like the hypothesis that things only exist when perceived has all of the same predictive consequences as the hypothesis that they exist also unperceived. Perhaps I have missed something. But if so, it would be good to be clear about what. — PossibleAaran
Aquinas is saying that a phoenix has an essence (or, put differently, that there is a phoenix essence - "what a thing is") even though phoenixes don't exist. That becomes the basis for his distinction between existence and essence. — Andrew M
This would have been foreign to Aristotle, who held that valid (formal) distinctions can only be made on the basis of existents (particulars). — Andrew M
It is not the form that exists (or not), it is the particular. — Andrew M