Thus, in my humble opinion, we would be doing ourselves a great favor by reminding ourselves that the word "myth" is a synonym for "it was just too complex". — TheMadFool
Over millennia, the metaphysics might've altered in such a way that souls became nonviable entities and disappeared [species have gone extinct when the environment transformed and became hostile to them (fossils)]. Thus, what was true in the past is false in the present. — TheMadFool
As you will have realized by now, my objective is to raise doubts about the well-hidden assumption that the metaphysics of the world doesn't change. — TheMadFool
I'm not sure I'd even see it as a paradox, but just as different ways of thinking. — Janus
If proper nouns or names, like John, refer to particular things, then nouns or general terms like 'tree' 'cat' 'mountain' and so on refer to particular kinds of things. So, I don't see why those kinds of names can't be understood as rigid designators of particular kinds in a way analogous to how proper names are seen as rigid designators of particular entities. — Janus
What does it feel like to be pouring out such thoughts on a laptop at 02.16hrs ?
Bloody crazy. You know what I mean ? — Amity
If John is terribly burned or otherwise disfigured he may become unrecognizable, but measurements or DNA testing could still establish his unique identity. John's ashes are not really John, but are just John's ashes; the remains of his body after cremation. — Janus
"Real' gains traction only in a particular contrast.
A metaphysical speculation that attempts to use the word without such a particular context fails to gain traction. — Banno
For example, when Maxwell proposed the existence of an invisible and counterintuitive "field", to explain the weirdness of electromagnetism, he was practicing Philosophical Meta-physics. Today, we are accustomed to the concept of "fields", even though we have never seen one. What we observe are the effects of the field on certain kinds of matter, such as iron filings. We "see" those fields with the inner "eye" of imagination — Gnomon
Platonism about mathematics (or mathematical platonism) is the metaphysical view that there are abstract mathematical objects whose existence is independent of us and our language, thought, and practices. — Gnomon
Peirce divided metaphysics into (1) ontology or general metaphysics, (2) psychical or religious metaphysics, and (3) physical metaphysics. — Gnomon
Meta-physics includes the properties, and qualities, and functions that make a thing what it is. — Gnomon
Analysis of language is indeed a legitimate topic for philosophy. But if that language is too specific & reductive, we soon lose the general & holistic meaning of the words. — Gnomon
as if you had to have the concept "laptop" before you encountered a laptop or hear anything about it.
You can't see the problem there? — Banno
As argued, if this were so we would never learn; we would require the concept in order to recognise the concept.
So that's wrong. — Banno
The concept is not a thing in the head, but a capacity to do stuff. — Banno
You did learn to count. — Banno
Think carefully about that. The same applies to everything else of which you conceive. If it is true, then we have no explanation for how we might learn anything.
And yet we do learn.
SO it seems something has gone astray. — Banno
Well, I don't know of any cases of disembodied minds, if that's what you are asking -- although there are many folk who claim there are such things, their examples strike me as wishful thinking. — Banno
I'd say certainty rather than faith. That serves to step away from the hegemony of religion. — Banno
Ah, but if you didn't have the concept, what is it that you would be missing?
I suppose it would be the ability to talk about and use the laptop as a laptop. — Banno
Spot on. Mass and mind do not seem to be related in this way. As if we could measure the mass of your love for your mother.
Talk of mass does not fit talk of mind. — Banno
If mind is matter, and consciousness is mind, then when one is unconscious, one ought be lighter, because one would lack the mass of one's mind. — Banno
Is it? What sort of thing is a concept? — Banno
One cannot type on a concept-of-laptop; one types on a laptop. — Banno
DO you lose weight when you go to sleep? — Banno
Can you explain this distinction to me? Are mental entities things like desires or beliefs? — Banno
However, I do appreciate this quote - very much - and would like to know more about it - source ? — Amity
The Aeon chucklehead article by Nakul Krishna, edited by Nigel Warburton — Amity
If that's all there was to it, the problem would have dissolved a long time ago. It is an inquiry into how two seemingly unrelated domains, matter and thought, are related. This is about as unlinguistic a metaphysical question as you can get. — hypericin
There is simply no ontology which dictates the boundaries of words. These boundaries are ultimately human contrivances. — hypericin
For example, the Quarks that are supposed to be the building blocks of sub-atomic matter, "have never been observed empirically" (Science), but are inferred theoretically (Philosophy). Hence, I would say that Quarks & other hypothetical particles are meta-physical — Gnomon
Yet not all of them have any "substantive" effect on the material world, but may have "significant" effects on the human Mind (memes). Metaphysical questions are not resolved by practical experimentation, but only by philosophical argumentation, or mathematical calculation. — Gnomon
I had severe mental cramps when I briefly studied that many years ago. Fodor's L.O.T. Language of Thought ! I have avoided it just as much as metaphysics. Until now. — Amity
As related to metaphysical questions and concepts of identity and self in social experience. What our categorisations of reality are based on. — Amity
people in a position of marginalization are prevented from creating concepts, terms and other representational resources that could be used in order to conceptualize and understand their own experiences, especially those having to do with being in that position of marginalization — SEP: Feminist philosophy of language
