• jorndoe
    3.2k
    Propositions might fall into these categories:

    • that something is (∃, existence)
    • what something is (quiddity, essence, substance)

    I can confidently claim that the Sun exists. Whatever exactly it may be, it can be shown and felt. Answering what the Sun is, becomes more involving. An exhaustive answer may not be attainable, just some (sufficient) characteristica. In this case the former (that) is implicit in the latter (what).

    When something is (only) defined, the roles can be reversed. In that case it becomes questionable that something exists, as per the definition of what it supposedly is. Other than the definitions themselves, things cannot be defined into existence, as it were. The ancient astronaut hypothesis will have it that extraterrestrials visited Earth thousands of years ago, and meddled in human affairs. So, these beings are defined sufficiently for the hypothesis — what they supposedly were — but that they were, is more questionable.

    • showing that something is → now let’s find out what it is (and/or what it is not)
    • defining what something is → now let’s found out that it is (or not)

    Presumably anything existing is something in particular (at the very least self-identical), and anything that’s something in particular would have to exist, so the two kinds of propositions are tightly related. (And, there are both ontological and epistemological elements involved.)

    Yet, that and what are not identical. We often express what by predication (e.g. “the apple is round”). Following contemporary mathematics/logic, Kant (“existence is not a predicate”), Quine (“to exist is to be the value of a bound variable”), and others, existential quantification is properly formalized as

    p = ∃x ∈ S [ φx ]

    where p is a proposition (that may be true or false), φ is a predicate (without unrestricted comprehension), x is a (bound) variable, and S is a set. Exemplified in ordinary language, the proposition states that an apple exists in the world, that’s round. The ∃ and φ symbols are not interchangeable (besides, if they were, then apparently we could have something already, except it does not exist, which seems like nonsense). In general, anything that exists is self-identical, and existence is that which can have no complement (∁ existence = ∅). Long story short, thatwhat.

    Dictionaries and encyclopedias are inherently circular. Look up entries for “elephant” and “run”, take each of the words used, and look them up as well, etc. Eventually you’ll visit entries already visited. There are no running elephants in dictionaries and encyclopedias, though they are intended to give (sufficient) accounts of what the entries are (including fictions). We invariably strand on showing running elephants, or perhaps evidence of a stampede, or whatever, if we’re to conclude that they are. (Subsequently we could turn to abstracts, categories, self-reference, words themselves, Platonism and such, if we must, but that’ll have to wait for another day.)

    Certainty (error-free knowledge), to the extent there is any, seems resigned to the former category (that):

    • something exists (whatever it may be, since the contrary is self-contradictory)
    • I’m not omniscient (since otherwise I’d know that I were)
  • jorndoe
    3.2k
    This was a note I'd typed in elsewhere, but wanted to run it by the grumpy forum'ers (yes you) for trial-by-fire. :D
    Perhaps not so much for the history of the words (e.g. Scholastic use of quiddity or whatever, though that's cool too), but for more contemporary use.

    Is that versus what a valid, legit or useful vehicle for analysis of claims, statements, propositions?
    If yes, then what might be good examples (excluding the Sun, aliens, round apples, and running elephants)?
    Or is it all just humbug and feeble nonsense?
  • TimeLine
    2.7k
    Why versus, you puritan you? That is useful as a concept without predefined levels since the descriptions can be richer and ultimately exploited to satisfy multi-dimensional predicates; perhaps an unidentified infectious disease? But, does there really need to be a ‘versus’ between ontology and taxonomy? I don't know, I'm too sleepy to go any further than that.
  • jkop
    660
    perhaps an unidentified infectious disease?TimeLine

    Right, the harmful effects of something contagious and invisible to the naked eye was identified long before knowledge of the existence of germs and viruses had been established.

    It occurs to me we often derive or hypothesize that things exist from identifying what they are. Do we ever identify or hypothesize that something exists regardless of what?
  • jorndoe
    3.2k
    Say, for The Black Death, the that was the malady/suffering, or what we'd call symptoms (regardless of any micro-organisms per se).
    The Flagellants had their own ideas of what the malady was, much different from later medicine.
    I suppose the history here is an example of
    • showing that something is → now let’s find out what it is (and/or what it is not)
    eventually giving means (or an understanding) of how to relieve the malady/suffering/symptoms.

    But, does there really need to be a ‘versus’ between ontology and taxonomy?TimeLine

    The two are definitely related (maybe "co-dependent" or something), yet propositions sometimes fall into one and not the other.
  • jorndoe
    3.2k
    Do we ever identify or hypothesize that something exists regardless of what?jkop

    I think multiverse hypotheses categorize roughly as
    • defining what something is → now let’s found out that it is (or not)
    though the hypotheses may have come about from established theories.

    And dark matter more like
    • showing that something is → now let’s find out what it is (and/or what it is not)
    At least in the sense that we already know there's something "missing" to account for.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.