”there's no reason to believe that any of the antecedents of any particular ones of those implications are true.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Then there is no point in proceeding, as I am engaged in the search for truth. I have no interest in hypotheticals that explain posits that might not even be true to begin with.
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But I suggest that an intrinsically, independently existent physical world is fiction, not truth.
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Then what’s true about this physical world, and the describable realm in general? The abstract-implications are facts. That’s something factual. If labeled as propositions, they’d be true propositions. That’s where there’s objective metaphysical truth in the describable realm.
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I’m not picking on you or singling you out. The Materialists, too, want to believe in an objective, intrinsic, independent “existence” and “reality” (whatever that would mean) for this physical world. I suggest that this physical world’s metaphysical basis is much more tenuous. …different from what we traditionally have been taught to assume.
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This isn’t physics. It’s metaphysics. Don’t expect or assume concrete, objective, intrinsic, independent “existence” and “reality” for the things of the physical world, just because, as animals, we’re designed to deal with the physical world rather than investigate metaphysics. We still have to deal with it, of course, but we don’t have to believe the traditional notion of it.
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Even in physics, there have been times when fact is drastically different from previous assumption (relativity & QM, for example). Why expect metaphysics to be more tradition-adhering?
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”Godel showed that, in any logical system complex enough to have arithmetic, there are true propositions that can’t be proven.” — Michael Ossipoff
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He showed many things. The inability to prove consistency is one of them.
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Consistency doesn’t even need proving. It’s a tautology, a truism.
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“A proposition can’t be both true and false” can be worded as:
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“A proposition isn’t be true if it’s not true.”
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That’s a tautology.
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I don’t know what Godel proved, other than that any logical system complex enough to have arithmetic has true but unprovable propositions. But he certainly didn’t prove that consistency is unprovable (except maybe in the sense that tautologies don’t
need any proof).
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Obviously it can’t be proven that future physics observations will be consistent with today’s known physics. In fact it’s pretty much a sure thing that it won’t.
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Is that the kind of consistency that he was referring? …or just the possible existence of true but unprovable propositions in any logical system complex enough to have arithmetic?
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In any case, whether or not you agree that logical systems have to be consistent, you’ll agree that they have to be at least as consistent as a person’s life-experience has to be. And, if so, even if you’re right about consistency being unprovable, that doesn’t count against Ontic Structural Subjective Idealism.
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Your life-experience story is self-consistent because there are no mutually-inconsistent facts, or propositions that are both true and false” — Michael Ossipoff
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My point is this is an unjustified faith claim. Perhaps part of my Hypothetical Life Experience Story (HLES) assumes I did something that violates the laws of physics (which you think is impossible).
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If there’s a seeming violation of the laws of physics, if there’s a violation of today’s laws of physics, then they aren’t laws of physics anymore. Usually, when that happens, subsequent physics will explain and encompass those previously seemingly anomalous observations.
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For example, that was the case with the relation between black-body radiations wavelength and energy; the result of the Michaelson-Morely experiment; an the seemingly anomalous component of the rotation-of-apsides of the orbit of the planet Mercury.
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For example, in my HLS, I may have made a decision which I think was free and you think is precluded by the laws of physics.
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No, I don’t know of decisions that are precluded by the laws of physics. …unless you’re talking about a decision that required information not available to you. Say you found out via clairavoyance that there’s a 20-dollar bill on your roof, and so you decide to go up and retrieve it. If there’s no bill there, there certainly was no violation of laws of physics. If there’s a bill there, but your clairavoyant believe that it was there was entirely coincidental with its being there, then that, too isn’t a violation of laws of physics.
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If that happened, no one can prove that your accurate clairavoyance wasn’t a coincidence, so no one can prove that laws of physics weren’t violated.
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Now, suppose that you proved that you can reliably tell what number someone has written on a paper that you haven’t been shown, or that you can reliably predict every Lotto number?
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That would be more convincing, especially as your uninterrupted series of successes increases.
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Does that prove that the laws of physics have been violated? No, not even then. It just means that the laws of physics weren’t what physicists thought that they were, and that they need updating, as has so often been the case in the past.
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Wouldn't that be an implicit contradiction for you?
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No, for the above-stated reasons.
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Or in my HLES I visit a glacier that should not have existed given how global warming works in my HLS.
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Several possible explanations:
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1. A climate-theory needs revision. That would be very unlikely to require revision of a law of physics. (Of course you could conceivably observe something that
would require revision of a physical law.)
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2. Your memory of that experience is mistaken. It’s known that memory isn’t entirely reliable. Ask crime-witnesses.
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3. You hallucinated.
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4. There was some sort of mirage.
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I and some other people saw a tall white cliff, across a bay. …where there is no cliff. We were observing a superior-mirage of the white beach, caused by a temperature-inversion.
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So, it is important to have some justification for thinking that a HLS is self-consistent.
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The justification is that “A proposition that’s not true isn’t true” is a tautology, and needs no proof.
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As a result of Godel's work there can be none.
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See above.
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I didn’t say that Realism is inconsistent. But your experience is subjective, …” — Michael Ossipoff
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My point is not that realism is consistent, but that there is an ontological justification for its consistency, while there is none for your HLESs.
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There’s the logical justification that I’ve describe above.
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As for subjectivity, all knowledge is both subjective and objective.
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There’s nothing about experience that would be inconstant with the objects of your physical experience not having an intrinsic, independent objective concrete “existence”, whatever that would mean (I try to always qualify my use of “existence” in that way.).
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Faraday, Tippler and Tegmark said the same thing.
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There is no knowing without both a knowing subject and a known object.
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Of course. Your experience of the objects in your experience isn’t at all inconsistent with it all being a hypothetical experience-story, such as I’ve described.
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I am happy to agree that experience is subjective because that is not an argument against it also being objective.
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Of course it isn’t. Parsimony is an argument against an independently, intrinsically, objectively and concretely existent physical world.
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We’ve discussed how I don’t claim that you postulate a brute-fact, but your metaphysics says that there can be an
apparent brute-fact in the describable realm…something in the describable realm (like a physical universe) that has no explanation or reason within the describable realm.
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But there’s a metaphysics that doesn’t require such a thing.
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I asked you some questions about what you mean by “real”, “existent”, etc. If you’re sure that you’re satisfied with your answers, then alright.
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”But I think we agree that your experience can’t be inconsistent.” — Michael Ossipoff[/i
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Good. But, why do you think this?
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Because “There can’t be a true and false proposition” means:
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“A proposition that’s not true isn’t true”
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…and that’s a tautology, and, as such, doesn’t need any proof.
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I think it's consistent because I see it as an experience of being. What do you think is the reason for its consistency?
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See above.
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I live in a world that is actual
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Of course. That’s a truism, by the way I define “actual”:
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“ Part of, or consisting of, the physical universe in which the speaker resides.”
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If you mean something else by “actual”, then of course my question is ‘What do you mean by “actual”.
If you’ve already answered that question, and if you’re really sure that you’re satisfied with your answer, then alright.
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Of course, if we use the following useful definition of “actual”:
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“Consisting of, or part of, the physical world in which the speaker resides.” “ — Michael Ossipoff
Or if we say that something is actual if it can act in any way.
Sure, and, by that definition, everything you experience is actual, because, in your HLEF, it acts on you in some way.
It all comes down to the matter of parsimony that I discussed above, and the matter of whether you’re completely sure that you’re satisfied with your answers to my questions.
I’ve been emphasizing that I can’t prove that the universe in which we reside isn’t your independently, intrinsically, objectively existent physical universe. I merely point out that it’s a metaphysical brute-fact in the sense that you’re positing something that can’t be explained within describable metaphysiscs. (I realize that what you posit isn’t a true brute-fact, without any explanation at all. –just not within describable metaphysics.
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In either case, I do not live in a world that does not exist -- as you suggested.
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I don’t make assertions using the word “exist”.
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I merely assert that there’s no reason to believe that this physical world has “existence” different from that of abstract-implications. There’s no physics experiment that can prove, establish, suggest or imply that it does.
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You can say that this physical universe exists, because it can act on you and inform you (which it would be able to do, as part of your hypothetical experience-story), but that’s an unsupported theory, and an unparsimonious one.
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”That’s why, in 1840, physicist Michael Faraday pointed out that there’s no reason to believe that this physical world consists of other than a system of mathematical and logical structural-relation. …with the Materialists’ objectively-existent “stuff “ being no more real or necessary than phlogiston.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Faraday was a great physicist, but that did not qualify him as a philosopher. Mathematics is an abstraction that cannot be applied unless there is something beyond itself to apply it to. It is what the abstract relations describe (that in which they are instantiated) that Faraday forgot.
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As I answered in my “brief preliminary reply”, Faraday was well aware of that assumption, and he pointed out that there’s no reason to believe it.
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”I know it is actual because it acts to inform me.”—dfopolis
”Of course…in your experience-story. “— Michael Ossipoff
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I do not disown my experience
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I didn’t mean to suggest that you should. It’s valid, as experience.
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, but I'm making two additional points (1) In acting to inform me, objects act and so meet the condition to exist simpliciter,
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Of course, and objects in your dream act on you in a dream, and, in the dream one often believes in the objective realtywhat seems to be happening, and the intrinsic, independent objective existence of the objects in the dream.
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I don’t deny that objects of this physical world act on you in your experience-story. And yes, of course they exist in the context of that story.
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(2) if we did not share common experiences, we could not communicate.
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Of course your experience of being in a physical world requires, for consistency, some mechanism for your physical origination in that physical world. In this case, that’s achieved by parents. …and, more broadly,by there being a species to which you belong. Of course there must be other members of that species, and of course they experience the same physical world that you experience, since they, like you, are part of that world.
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Among the infinity of HLEFs, there’s inevitably one for every one of the characters in your HLEF. But you don’t experience or directly-know their experience, of course. They’re there because, the consistency of your experience-story requires other members of your species to inhabit the planet on which you reside.
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Michael Ossipoff