Or the very example you used, you associated a sound with thunder. Only that it wasn't thunder, it was a truck. The sound appeared to you as belonging to thunder. Sounds appear or are represented (if you prefer this word) by us as belonging to certain objects automatically, but they need not produce these specific effects in us. — Manuel
Wittgenstein is literally asking why should one be afraid of contradictions in mathematics. What you or the author are saying, I don't know. I would answer that mathematics as we know them are built on the LEM, so the reason why we should be afraid of contradictions in mathematics is to keep that body of work alive and well. — Olivier5
I am trying to point out sensations, the way ice feels to our fingers, the way thunder sound to our ears, etc. A horse pulling a carriage produces a sound which I would not initially associate with such objects, that these objects could sound this way. They could sound completely different from what they appear to me. — Manuel
The issue is that of resemblances. Reid points out that if you are walking down a street and hear the sound of a horse pulling a wagon and then you turn around and look at it, the sound produced does not resemble the objects producing it. — Manuel
We can do this for almost all of our senses, with the apparent exception of sight. It makes no sense to say (for example) that the red sensation I get from this apple does not resemble red. And so on. — Manuel
I don't read this in the only (?) direct quote provided in that article, which reads as follows:
“Why are people afraid of contradictions? It is easy to understand why they should be afraid of contradictions in orders, descriptions, etc. outside mathematics. The question is: Why should they be afraid of contradictions inside mathematics?”
(emphasis mine)
Also from the article (though not a direct quote):
In relevance to this essay, Alan Turing (1912–1954) strongly disagreed with Ludwig Wittgenstein’s argument that mathematicians and philosophers should happily allow contradictions to exist within mathematical systems. — Olivier5
Except that Wittgenstein rejected the idea that words represent reality and maps represent territories. — Joshs
That's because you take the whole question of 'can the liar's paradox break bridges' a bit too literally. The real question hidden behind this tag line is: should math allow contradictions? I.e. should we get rid of the law of excluded middle in math, or would that lead to poorly designed bridges? — Olivier5
Why yes. What's in our mind at some point translates into real material structures like bridges, that are designed by someone using mathematics. If you allow contradictions to spread uncheck in engineers' minds and in their math, you may well end up with poorly conceived bridges. — Olivier5
Wittgenstein made the point in Philosophical Remarks (IIRC), that whilst such inconsistencies would lead to physically untrue predictions if applied blindly, there is no reason why the occurrence of such events would discredit uses of the system for which inconsistency plays no role. And since it is impossible to predict the existence of mathematical inconsistency before it arises (due to the the second incompleteness theorem), there is no reason to fret about the possibility a priori. We only need to patch our systems as we go. — sime
Mathematics are in our mind, and science and technology too. — Olivier5
Please, explain what you think I said, and how you think your idea of good child-rearing is different from mine. — Athena
So, could the liar paradox cause a bridge to collapse?
— Banno
On balance, I think the answer might be yes.
The real harm will not come in unless there is an application, in which a bridge may fall down or something of that sort [] You cannot be confident about applying your calculus until you know that there are no hidden contradictions in it.
— Turing
And it's yes in part because of Turing. Nowadays engineers will to some degree rely on software to design bridges. It is fact that software complexity has created enormous challenges, and that it is not nearly so simple to verify correctness as one might wish. (In some fields like aircraft design there are strict, explicit standards for the provable correctness of programs, and still ... 737.) — Srap Tasmaner
I found myself, as an anarchist...uh...Libertarian, dismayed by the force of Fukuyama's reasoning, wondering if any serious challenge could ever be made to the democratic nation-state, or if any eventuality might break what I view as the soul-crushing monotonous security provided thereby. — Michael Zwingli
I reduced the quote to memory many decades ago. — James Riley
I would argue that while fears about the end of history have often arisen, especially in connection with religious beliefs, the threat is different at this stage in history because there is a major threat of mass destruction through nuclear warfare. Also, with climate change there is so much concern about the way humans have destroyed the planet and the view that the planet may be uninhabitable for future generations. — Jack Cummins
A weed patch in front of the house, on the other hand, is proof of one's failure in society. Success = nice grass; failure = weeds. I have weeds in my lawn. I agree with Veblen: large chemically dosed lawns are bullshit and ought to be stamped out. Screw the middle class lawn mower. — Bitter Crank
We're learning about T/Daoism in my Eastern Philosophy class, and I'm a little disturbed by its prescription of acting "with nature," i.e."going with the flow," "letting what will be, be," etc. I think this can bring contentment with existence, but the individualist in me says I don't want to settle for "chopping wood and carrying water" - leading a simple, unremarkable life. — Satyesu
Does Western philosophy comment on Advaita specifically? If so, what is the general consensus on Advaita in Western philosophy? — Paul Michael
You know, like Athens and Sparta. When Persia began invading and Athens imitated Sparta to some degree. Athens expecting all men to defend the country and in return giving them a say in government, but it did not start taking care of everyone's needs as Sparta did. — Athena
I have some really crazy ideas — Athena
Eighty percent of non-religious individuals of Western-European culture you would ask about this - in my urban living area at least - would decry the Judeo-Christian moral set and fully maintain the order of the other at the same time. Surely there must be some type of explanation for this change, which I'm not fully gasping. — kudos
Is it expressly social, political, technological, anthropological, etc.? — kudos
From my own observation the West seems to be in this sort of transition process moving from cultural institutions and structures of individual life derived from these 'unclean' histories to a sort of ideologically automated version. Another way of putting it would be tying up the histories into a type of self-sustaining loop that negates the full extent of their intended meaning but still allows them to survive in a symbolic form through practice. This is done in such a way that over time they would almost certainly become deteriorated and lost or at least alienated from their original meaning. — kudos
But maybe there is a greater theory of everything: one that explains not only physics but any question proposed to it, something that could explain consciousness, possible diseases, the types of technology we could produce and everything the universe is capable of manifesting - a “singularity” that would revolutionise our understanding of all things. — Benj96
In a universe where everything is ineffectual does this make moments precious and worthy of reverence or do we require a more apathetic approach? — Benj96
I don't think so. Space expands (inflates like a balloon, or warps) and is not "created". — 180 Proof
I see it as irrelevant if Jefferson himself believed personally and individually in a G-d. The basis of the matter is there is nothing evidently binding the liberal idea to religion, but we can then not easily conclude that these two are fully separate and distinct.
You seem to consider it an accident that there are themes and references in the writing that refer explicitly to a Creator. There is still undeniably something implicit in the writing that implies religious ideas and contingencies. For instance, the concept of liberty itself. Why should we have had this idea without carrying along with it a notion that we were each a valued individual with a personal internal relationship with G-d, each deserving as such a right to our own freedom of will? Before this notion much of the West lived in a state that was a great deal less centred around freedom of private individual desires and choice and a little more deterministic, wouldn’t you agree? I think if you didn’t you’d be a little out of step with the commonly held vision of what the lifestyles of antiquity were like. — kudos
You seem to consider it an accident that there are themes and references in the writing that refer explicitly to a Creator. — kudos
Judeo-Christian ideological baggage — kudos
My issue with this is that people with religious morality often seek to change laws and behaviour of others - presumably to please God. We don't just have to consider the Taliban or the Wahhabi Saudis in this enterprise, there are Western Christians working to turn the clock back on science education, gay rights, women's rights, capital punishment, euthanasia - what have you. — Tom Storm
In my daily experience there are common references to the familiar adage of 'all men and women are created equal.' — kudos
It's an old story that one of the biggest obstacles to space travel is our primitive technology. — TheMadFool
I can have macaroni cheese as often as I like! — unenlightened
if someone were to say
"you must severely spank your kids every day, or they'll turn into immoral losers, and, besides, they probably did something wrong anyway"
then I'm thinking most would say that's not the right thing to do, i.e. passing judgment, a bad starting point. — jorndoe
We might say that, in principle, autonomous moral agency is a prerequisite for (would-be) autonomous actors. — jorndoe
I'm totally envious of your non-judgmental prowess. — unenlightened
Man, I think you're just envious of Bezos.
After I started doing WHM breath work and reading Yogic books, I feel happy and totally non-judgemental. :) You should try that, too. Also add some Sowell / Friedman, as you don't seem to understand that people like Bezos, Gates, Zuckerberg ( while I'm totally not a fan of those guys ) did a huge and valuable organizing work for which they are rewarded. — stoicHoneyBadger
I'd say you are trying to make the facts fit your theory when they clearly contradict it. Once the self is expanded to include others, you really have stretched the concept of self-interest way past its breaking point. The only question of interest, is the psychological one, why many people like to cling to the bankrupt notion of the inevitability of self-interested behaviour. — unenlightened
