But my philosophy always prioritises the relation as fundamental; the observer and the observed are both united and only exist in the observation. The observation is reality; the observer and the observed are 'aspects'. — unenlightened
Science is the selfless observation of the world, and one cannot have a selfless observation of the self. — unenlightened
Science operates on the assumption that atoms do not understand atomic theory - in general that the objects of scientific study are not altered by the theory on has of them. At the quantum level, this becomes difficult because the act of observation itself affects the observed and this leads to the uncertainty principle. However, in psychology, the objects of observation are themselves observers, scientists, and psychological theorisers. Their theories of psychology radically affect their own psychology. — unenlightened
And that's one of the reasons so much of the philosophy of ethics is baloney. — T Clark
I've said this before - psychology is not psychotherapy. — T Clark
Psychology is the scientific study of behavior. — T Clark
But you're right, some, but not all, forms of psychotherapy do involve self-examination. — T Clark
Ethics and morals are heavily influenced by psychological factors, and they weren't ignored either. — T Clark
Psychology is not "examining one's life." It is the study of (mostly) human behavior. — T Clark
There's only a "paradox" if you insist on the truth of contradictory premises, such as:
P1. objects have a set of attributes that are necessary to their identity (essentialism)
P2. no specific number of items is necessary for a collection of items to be a heap
P3. heaps exist
The "solution" is to reject one of the premises. I reject the first. Essentialism isn't the case. — Michael
Another possible route to knowledge of the boundary locations is blocked by the fact that our knowledge of the application of a vague term is inexact. Inexact knowledge is governed by margin for error principles, viz., principles of the form ‘If x and y differ incrementally on a decisive dimension and x is known to be Φ (old, blue, etc.), then y is Φ’.[2] For example, where knowledge is inexact, we can know of a blue object that it is blue only if objects whose colors are incrementally different are blue as well—hence, only in clear cases. In contrast, in the borderline or “penumbral” region of a sorites series for ‘blue’, where the boundary lives, some shade of blue is only incrementally different from, indeed may look the same as, a shade that is not blue; and we cannot know where this difference lies. Consequently, if we classify the former shade as blue, that classification is correct by luck, and so does not constitute knowledge. (On the plausible assumption that seeing that something x is blue is sufficient for knowing that x is blue, it follows that some blue things are such that we cannot see that they are blue, even under ideal viewing conditions.)
The virtues and the appeal of the epistemic theory are significant, and it has earned its share of supporters. At the same time, the view may be hard to accept. Even its proponents grant that epistemicism is intuitively implausible; and it seems to multiply mysteries. As a first approximation, the epistemicist says that
vague terms have unknowable sharp boundaries that are fixed by an unknown function of their unknowable (i.e., not fully knowable) patterns of use. — SEP
You are misusing bivalence. — Banno
"Heap" is a label we put on a phenomenon we observe in the world. The word is artificial, human-made. Is that what you mean by phenomenological? — T Clark
How is it not context? — Tom Storm
Can you show me a specific example of how this language imprecision cause harm or an insurmountable problem? — Tom Storm
We starting confusing ourselves when we lose track of the difference between the world and the words we use to describe it. That's what we're talking about when we talk about paradoxes. — T Clark
It's context. If someone says to me; 'I'll give you heaps of money." I might ask, "How much is heaps?" But if someone says, "There's a heap of wood in the back yard for the fire", I probably will be satisfied by this. — Tom Storm
An untidy collection of objects, place on top of each other. — Banno
But you understood that, and as a competent speaker of English you use the word correctly, as well as in jest.
SO what is the confusion? — Banno
SO give an example of that confusion. — Banno
My own instinct is that language has usage, not meaning and for everyday functioning such words have been more than adequate. — Tom Storm
To refer back to Pegasus and Husserl … spot the difference in meaning between these two sentences:
- I can imagine a limbless Pegasus.
- I cannot imagine a Pegasus without limbs.
These are on the surface contrary. Technically speaking what I am saying by ‘without limbs’ here is that I cannot ‘unknow’ an animal that has limbs and then except them that way. Pegasus is a flying horse, a horse has legs, and if I saw a horse without legs I would notice it didn’t have legs or assume they were hidden from sight because horses have legs.
Does that make sense? — I like sushi
I don’t think it is really ‘anthropomorphic’ to say something like ‘the Sun rises’ as that is merely an expression of what we see rather than imbuing the Sun with human qualities. It is also a ‘fact’ that it rises and not a ‘fact’ (because the Earth merely rotates - depends on context).
One of the most interesting things I like to look at is how we’ve repurposed and measured ‘events’ into something called ‘time’. — I like sushi
Anthropomorphism is basically a psychological point. You used the term in a context I’ve never seen before. — I like sushi
Have you looked into the linguistic uses of the various antonyms at all? I wasn’t describing anything as a ‘relational pair,’ but some could argue that in part all ‘items’ must be relational pairs to some degree maybe? — I like sushi
Is any of this getting at what your interest is? Anything relevant? — I like sushi