perhaps this discussion will help you to see why someone such as I would come to the conclusion that the problem of universals dissipates if one deals with it as a language issue. — Banno
You and I presumably do agree on what is green and what is red, in the main; is it because we have learned to identify some essence of red that permeates certain things, or is it just simply that we have learned how to use the word "red" in our English speaking community? — Banno
Could it be that what red things have in common is just that we have learned to use the word "red" when talking about them? That what they have in common is our use of a certain word? — Banno
Sometimes we don't. At the edges, we do differ as to our opinions of which colour word is appropriate. — Banno
Fine. WHat I am trying to establish is, is the example a suitable one for the problem of universals? — Banno
In which case, is this a question about what it is that certain sports cars and sunsets have in common, or is it a question about hw we use the word "red"? — Banno
Is the problem that of working out what a universal refers to? What sort of thing? — Banno
That's the sense in which Wittgenstein's philosophy is more like Protestant than Catholic mysticism, but it still has that mystical side to it. — Wayfarer
I am awfully sorry, Marchesk, but in my favourite universe when someone introduces a topic, they describe the situation in their own words, and not simply insert a link to a (probably) very lengthy script. — god must be atheist
That is, universals were an attempt to solve a problem that the ancient Greeks had with their understanding of nature. — tim wood
Philosophy is not language on a holiday; rather it is language put to the hardest possible work. — tim wood
but the functions exist prior to the language and that can be examined for philosophical analysis. — Forgottenticket
A lot of times in philosophy, I stumble upon something I came up with before on my own but didn't know the communal terms to describe it. — Forgottenticket
It is a very different approach from those who tell you where and when things went south. — Valentinus
What IS the problem? Shouldn't we spell out in plain, simple language, what the problem is, before attempting to solve it? — god must be atheist
I don't understand this. I frankly admit it. What's universalism? Nominalism? Conceptualism? Platonism? — god must be atheist
I think starting from the presumption of radical private-ness and separation is one of the less fruitful ways, since it's logic leads straight to epistemological solipsism. — Janus
e live in an inter-subjective world such that the mental lives of others are beyond doubt, — Janus
I don't get this. We don't look at minds at all. — Janus
omething that scientists can work with. That is, differentiating sentient creatures from non-sentient creatures (which we can point to) and providing testable hypotheses for explaining those differences. — Andrew M
So you're not positing nonphysical properties of some nonphysical substance, but nonphysical properties of physical substance? (Remember that I'm asking you about this in terms of ontology) — Terrapin Station
t would have to be some sort of substance, object, etc., no? Even if you're positing nonphysical objects, substances--whatever that would be. — Terrapin Station
"properties have to be properties of something. Do you agree with that?" — Terrapin Station
Sometimes I get the impression that what folks mean by "nonphysical(s)" is something like, "We're just not going to bother doing ontology and we're instead going to talk about things in 'functional' terms per common language." — Terrapin Station
Think of light as the TV screen. We don't see objects. We see light, which explains the optical illusions of mirages and bent sticks in water. We look at the TV to indirectly get at the football game in another city. We don't see the game, we see the TV, which transmits information via causation. — Harry Hindu
When looking at a distant star, the light takes thousands of years to reach your eye. The star could have exploded yet the light is still traveling across space and interacting with your eyes. When you see the "star" what is it that you are attending in your mind? — Harry Hindu
didn't ask about location. I asked about shape. Why do minds take the shape of brains when I look at them? The mind can still be located in the head, but why the shape of a brain in the head? — Harry Hindu
Why does the mind take a shape in another mind at all? — Harry Hindu
s there no room for indirect realism? — Harry Hindu
You seem to think the only viable options are dualism or naive realism. — Harry Hindu
Do minds have shapes? — Harry Hindu
Why do minds take the shapes of brains when I look at them? — Harry Hindu
I think we also have no warrant to assume dualism simply because we cannot answer a question which seems on analysis to be incoherent. The assumption of monism or physicalism may be equally flawed. Our models simply have their limits, and we have no way of deciding if or how they might accord with the human mind-independent real. — Janus
Youre not answering the question and I dont know if id agree that shape is a property of objects. It certainly is a property of our perception of objects. — Harry Hindu
So is imagination an example of nonphysical substance on your view? — Terrapin Station
I guess I'm asking about the ontological differences and similarities between a part and the whole? — Harry Hindu
Im not sure I understand the problem. Why would you expect a part of the world, ie appearances, to be the same as the entire world? What do you mean by "the same"? — Harry Hindu
Yes, things aren't always as they seem. We agree on that. However the distinction doesn't imply dualism (i.e., of ontologies or worlds). Adopting dualism is a philosophical choice. — Andrew M
This is assuming that appearances aren't part of reality. How does that make any sense? — Harry Hindu
The world of the solipsist is one and the same with the self of the solipsist. What does this mean? It means that doubt cannot arise, because the world of the solipsist is full of certainty. To present this issue another way, epistemologically the solipsist is hermetically sealed off from anything beyond what constitutes their 'world'. — Wallows
There may be no ontological identicality either simply because all things are, as far as we know, always changing. — Janus
It's semantic identity, which doesn't change over time or in different instantiations. I would go as far as to say that there is no identity other than semantic identity. — Janus
f a robot has a similar shape and therefore behavior as you, then why not suppose that it has experiences as well? It seems to me you think that one's hardware (carbon-based vs. Silicon-based) is what determines whether or not there is an experience, and similar behaviors by different hardware are only the result of simulated consciousness. — Harry Hindu
OK, Grandin says she thinks in images, but she can't be forming simultaneous images of every roof she's ever seen. — Janus