The world is not a mere collection of things, but also consists in their relations to, and interactions with, one another. Those relations and interactions are states of affairs, which according to Wittgenstein, are synonymous with facts.
So, I don't read the statement as saying that the world is the totality of facts as opposed to things, but as asserting the inclusion of the relations and interactions along with the things. I think it also points to the fact that things are themselves concatenations of relations and interactions, and are only in a merely formal sense, identities that are transcendent of relations and interactions.. — Janus
Are you asking how they could have missed the Popperian insight that scientific theories are never verified, but are merely falsified, or something else? — Janus
As I said, a lot of positivism is tacit - it’s not defended as a formal philosophy but is implicit.
It’s worth recalling who invented the term ‘positivism’ and why - it was Auguste Comte, who founded sociology. Positivism was a form of historicism, i.e. culture evolved through progressive stages, beginning with animism, then monotheism, metaphysics, and then culminating in the emergence into the sunlit uplands of science. And though they don’t use the terminology, it is clearly visible in nearly all the writings of the scientific atheism of Dawkins, Dennett, Pinker, and others of that ilk. In that sense, positivism remains one of the predominant influences on scientific-secular thinking. — Wayfarer
Logical positivism was one of the things Popper was responding to. The Vienna Circle were mainly active between the wars, and A J. Ayer published Language, Truth and Logic in 1936. And positivism in the broad sense of ‘a philosophical system recognizing only that which can be scientifically verified or which is capable of logical or mathematical proof, and therefore rejecting metaphysics and theism’ is still highly influential even if only tacit much of the time. — Wayfarer
I would say it is an attempt to come to terms with modern physics; substance dissolves under the microscope into fields, probabilities, relations. Things are made of atoms, but atoms are not things. Process and relation are the new 'substances', and so 'atomism' becomes a theory of human understanding (logic) rather than a claim about the world. — unenlightened
Like Banno's red mug(or was it a cup). It had a definite size, shape, color but not position. He sometimes left in the kitchen sometimes on the porch. Because it had those characteristics it was Banno's red cup, but the characteristics themselves do not make the mug. There has to be an object to describe. — Sir2u
Polidinamics simultaneity technology — Carlos Vitor
Well, yes, they are different philosophies of the mind; but, that doesn't negative they're importance at least.My initial thought is that these two lines of thought are so disparate in history that it's hard to compare them. Hume is something of an deacon of the enlightenment (quiet follower who took many enlightenment principles to their rational end), and stoicism is an ancient doctrine we've gleaned through fragments that happen to be left over, and influenced by the ancient Greek milieu concern with invulnerability. Even the words like "control" and "passions" seem to differ to me, because the philosophy of mind and ethics of their day differed. — Moliere
Aren't the criteria multifarious? It seems so to me. We can divide knowledge, roughly, into know-that and know-how -- but it is a rough division when we come to experience knowledge, I think. We can know-how to act in a play, we can know-that when acting we do this that and the other. We can know-that elements behave in a certain way under certain conditions, and we can know-how to demonstrate said knowledge. — Moliere
It seems to me that the criteria of knowledge are highly specific to not just area of study but even time and place. Acting in a Shakespearean play when Shakespeare was alive would be different from acting in a Shakespearean play today. Doing chemistry in the time of Lavoisier differs from doing chemistry now. It all depends on our social arrangements, in a way, which are highly specific. Lavoisier could prove atoms existed through a fairly basic electrochemical reaction, and that mattered to the time because of the conflict between materialism and religion. Nowadays? You are kind of appealing to different groups. We are divided due to our experiences. — Moliere
How does this relate to what is quoted? There is tendency to 'answer' the wrong question, where the words of the question are reinterpreted so that the answer is no longer life-relevant. Profound questions are debased to opportunities to demonstrate cleverness. An industry of gossip about gossip about gossip is born. Meanwhile the real questions continued to be suffered and tentatively answered by words and deeds by everyone, most of whom never found the gossip industry relevant in the first place. And then some of us have a love/hate relationship with this gossip. We pan for gold in a muddy creek, having cataloged many shapes of pyrite, and therefore aware of how little gold there is in the torrent of gossip. — macrosoft
It is this cognitive dissonance that I am suspicious of. Is it a mood or an evaluation on life? Why is that evaluation bad or wrong? Perhaps it is accurate. — schopenhauer1
I'm not saying there can't be real science behind LENR but if you can't explain it then there's nothing to talk about. And if after 30 years you still don't understand the science, maybe you should start making an effort. I'm a lawyer for fuck's sake and I can get around chemistry and physics to some extent. — Benkei
The biggest problem appears to be reproducibility - Mizuno hasn't managed that either. — Benkei
The actual was once the possible. — creativesoul
Would you concur or object? — creativesoul
I'm not so interested as to begin a thread. I may join one already in progress... — creativesoul
Facts cannot be false. — creativesoul
It's an aside. Not relevant to this fact talk. — creativesoul
So facts are representative of all logical possibility?
That can't be right. — creativesoul
I mean, Witt was wrong about stuff too. — creativesoul
So, "logical space" refers to all logical possibility. — creativesoul
I'm a fan of Witt, and I'm a vehement opponent as well. — creativesoul
This discussion is about one particular framework, or so I thought it was... — creativesoul
Logical space?
What's that? — creativesoul
We could if we abandon the meaning of "fact" as states of affairs. — creativesoul
That's one that I've found imperative to understanding this framework as well. — creativesoul
Propositions represent one of two things. Facts and/or relations. True propositions represent real facts and real relations. What do false propositions represent? — creativesoul
Eh, I was trying thinking of a weird scenario with set and setting and how that might influence subsequent experiences with a drug. How the memory interacts with the drug... I'm just in the weeds here though with its relevance to nostalgia. It's all horribly complex in the end anyway. — Nils Loc
Not sure have any direction to go with nostalgia but it is an interesting subject, especially with regards to human fantasy and fiction, even political ideals and national identities (forces behind the "American Dream" and it's good old days). — Nils Loc
A replica is an actual embodiment of a sign, such that it can be interpreted as such within a particular system of signs. The same word can appear many times on a page or screen, and each of these is a replica of that word. The version of this post that I typed and submitted on my computer is one replica of it; what you are reading now is another. — aletheist
Nah, you sound disinterested and hurried. — Nils Loc
Most humans have troubled minds, ceaseless desires, unending thoughts. — Nils Loc
I wonder about dark scenarios though, killing someone's partner or child in front of them and then giving them heroine. Does the initial experience determine whether they develop an addiction, or have an influence on the likelihood of addiction... Maybe the pain relief during such horror would be welcome. — Nils Loc
But that's the point.. — schopenhauer1
