Ask yourself where does this compulsion to disagree come from.
— Olivier5
You should ask yourself that.
I agree with plenty of people on plenty of things. — baker
I hope people in the military in the US don't get vaccinated because it will weaken the position of the government in effectively forcing people to take medication. — I like sushi
I'm actually left feeling quite disturbed in the end and find myself in no mood for good terms. — Isaac
That's also a kind of realism, right? Allowing the other to lead. Reality's going to do what it's going to do, so our dance cannot be completely choreographed but must also be at least partly improvised. — Srap Tasmaner
. isaac points out that such surprise is expensive, so we try to make good predictions that will minimize the expense of revising our model. (And you get institutional momentum there that can lead you to throw out outliers in the data that you should have updated on -- you continue to follow the choreographed dance despite your partner's deviation.) — Srap Tasmaner
Thus the only question of import is, given any particular belief, to what extent is is caused by an external reality and to what extent by internal assumptions. That it is, in some proportion, caused by both, is something we can't help but agree to, so it drops out of the conversation (or should). The actual proportions, in each case, are what matter. — Isaac
A vague proposition that is so vague that it doesn't have a truth value isn't a proposition. A propositional statement is defined as a statement with a truth value that is either true or false.
If no statements, as you've argued, have single truth values, then no statements are propositional. — Hanover
Popper, who had long claimed to have killed verificationism but recognized that some would confuse his falsificationism for more of it,[11] was knighted in 1965. In 1967, John Passmore, a leading historian of 20th-century philosophy, wrote, "Logical positivism is dead, or as dead as a philosophical movement ever becomes".[18] Logical positivism's fall heralded postpositivism, where Popper's view of human knowledge as hypothetical, continually growing, and open to change ascended,[11] and verificationism became mostly maligned.[2]
The consensus seemed to be that, with all due respect to Popper, they do what they want. — frank
My token identity is maintained, despite the flux of my physical body, by the way I think and talk about myself (and the way others think and talk about me). I'm the same person that was alive 20 years ago because that's how I think and talk about myself. That's anti-realism. — Michael
We're interested because we're interested in the metaphysics of identity — Michael
Of course they do. If you and I are at the pub each drinking a pint of beer it matters if I'm drinking from your glass or mine. — Michael
Whether or not he returns on the same token ship as opposed to the same type of ship is the very issue under discussion. — Michael
There is more than one hydrogen atom in the universe. — Michael
There are many Olivers and Michaels in the world. — Michael
The Titanic that was built in Liverpool yesterday isn't the Titanic that sank in 1912, even though they share a name and have the same structure and function. — Michael
Two ships can have the same structure and function, yet they're two ships, not one ship. Again, you're conflating the type-token distinction. — Michael
We can say it's the same ship if we like. If I smash a mirror then the broken pieces are the mirror that I used to use to look at myself. If I smash a lamp then the broken pieces are the lamp I used to use to light up my room. — Michael
Saying that both ships have a mind-independent structure (of the same type) doesn't help you get at whether one of the two ships is the same (token) ship that left. — Michael
Philosophers discussing the metaphysics of identity, and whether or not "it's the same ship" is true and if so whether its truth should be understood according to realism or anti-realism, care. — Michael
It doesn't actually matter, as long as it floats the same way it's functionally the same boat. You can call it a copy of the same structure if you want to, but I don't see what advantage that would bring as compared to calling it the same boat with quite a few pieces changed. And the "copy" wording doesn't really work for living creatures: a tree is not a copy of what it was last year, even though much of its constituents have changed over the year; a person is not a copy of her previous self even though much of her constituents are constantly changing.two different boats can have the same structure. Why is the ship that returns the same ship and not a copy with the same structure? — Michael
There is no mind-independent fact that determines it to be the same ship. A realist is committed to say that it's a different ship, as the material that leaves isn't the material that returns. — Michael
Giant Molecules Exist in Two Places at Once — Ennui Elucidator
Realism argues that truth is recognition-transcendent and bivalent. — Michael
In what sense are structures, as distinct from matter, mind-independent? — Michael
Are you a Platonist?
And in what sense do two different sets of matter have the same structure? And not just the same type of structure, as in the case of the twin ships built to the same specification, but the same token structure, such that the ship that leaves is the same ship that returns (i.e. not just a copy of the original)?
The fact that the mind-independent matter isn't the same and yet the person is the same shows that the person isn't reducible to the mind-independent matter, and so can't be understood according to realism. — Michael
Well, two different ships made from the same schematics would have the same shape and placement of their respective material, and yet they are different ships. — Michael
If we don't see it as the same ship because its parts have been replaced (even with similar parts) then it's not the same ship because we don't view it that way. If we see it as the same ship because its parts have been replaced (with similar parts) then it's the same ship because we view it that way. — Michael
Thank you for writing this. It seems as though people just want to argue for argument's sake. That's fine -- but not when we have literally millions of people refusing vaccinations during a pandemic because of anti-vaxxer claims and massive amounts of misinformation/manufactured doubt.
Irresponsible indeed — Xtrix
-Are a lot of people dying from COVID? Yes. Tragic global event. — Isaac
-Is vaccination good public policy? Yes. Very important message to get across. — Isaac
Risk analysis is not perfect, but it's a damn sight more complex than the naïve presentation of national prevalence statistics we see posted here masquerading as serious analysis. — Isaac
