Yep, you are. But you are making a conclusion about realism from that. What is your argument for that conclusion? — Banno
Objective features of the world change, and yet the ship that returns is the ship that leaves. It's not the same physical stuff, but it's the same thing. That it's the the same thing is a conceptual/linguistic imposition, a way we view and talk about the world. That's anti-realism. There is no mind-independent fact that determines it to be the same ship. A realist is committed to say that it's a different ship, as the material that leaves isn't the material that returns. — Michael
If we don't see it as the same ship because it's now a plane then it's not the same ship because we don't view it that way. If we don't see it as the same ship because its parts have been replaced (even with similar parts) then it's not the same ship because we don't view it that way. If we see it as the same ship because its parts have been replaced (with similar parts) then it's the same ship because we view it that way. — Michael
On the one hand we have the realist who says that statements are made true by objective features of the world, but what objective features of the world must obtain for the ship that leaves to be the ship that returns? Presumably that the mind-independent material stuff that leaves is the mind-independent material stuff that returns. Which in this case doesn't obtain, and so the realist must commit to "the ship that leaves is the ship that returns" being false. However that might not be a commitment the realist is willing to make, and so they must accept an anti-realist account of "the ship that leaves is the ship that returns" being true; that it's true because we think of the ship that leaves as being the ship that returns. — Michael
Speaking very roughly, just to get started, realism holds that ...stuff... is independent of what we say about it; anti-realism, that it isn't. — Banno
That's specifically the issue - does it count as one ship or two?
And "count as..." is a lexical marker for issues of convention. — Banno
There is no mind-independent fact that determines it to be the same ship. A realist is committed to say that it's a different ship, as the material that leaves isn't the material that returns. — Michael
It doesn't actually matter, as long as it floats the same way it's functionally the same boat. You can call it a copy of the same structure if you want to, but I don't see what advantage that would bring as compared to calling it the same boat with quite a few pieces changed. And the "copy" wording doesn't really work for living creatures: a tree is not a copy of what it was last year, even though much of its constituents have changed over the year; a person is not a copy of her previous self even though much of her constituents are constantly changing.two different boats can have the same structure. Why is the ship that returns the same ship and not a copy with the same structure? — Michael
It doesn't really matter, other than in your mind experiment. They are the same model, bhave the same way; not distinguishable. Who cares which is which? — Olivier5
Philosophers discussing the metaphysics of identity, and whether or not "it's the same ship" is true and if so whether its truth should be understood according to realism or anti-realism, care. — Michael
I think of it as about mind-independent structure and behavior. That's more practical in my experience. — Olivier5
Saying that both ships have a mind-independent structure (of the same type) doesn't help you get at whether one of the two ships is the same (token) ship that left. — Michael
In my definition, structure has to remain similar if not absolutely identical. — Olivier5
As per your definition, note that you are not able to distinguish between a pile of wood pieces and a functional ship. As long as the material stuff is the same, it's the same thing, but what if the structure has changed and the material hasn't? Is it still the same ship then? Is a pike of wood piece taken of a ship equal to a ship? No it ain't. — Olivier5
We can say it's the same ship if we like. If I smash a mirror then the broken pieces are the mirror that I used to use to look at myself. If I smash a lamp then the broken pieces are the lamp I used to use to light up my room. — Michael
Things are not defined by their constituents, therefore, but by their structure and function. — Olivier5
Two ships can have the same structure and function, yet they're two ships, not one ship. Again, you're conflating the type-token distinction. — Michael
Only types are definable though, tokens are not. You cannot define THAT particular atom of hydrogen. For any practical intent and purpose, it is the exact same atom of hydrogen than any other atom of hydrogen. — Olivier5
You can identify ships of a same kind though, by their name. The ship that left last week bears a different name than the one built today. Ergo they are recognizably and functionally different. — Olivier5
There is more than one hydrogen atom in the universe. — Michael
There are many Olivers and Michaels in the world. — Michael
The Titanic that was built in Liverpool yesterday isn't the Titanic that sank in 1912, even though they share a name and have the same structure and function. — Michael
Indeed, but they are all identical (isotopes aside) in terms of structure. — Olivier5
They are of course two different glasses in terms of their material constituents and space occupied but people don't actually care for such considerations when they define and recognize things. — Olivier5
So, if you apply the word "same" at token level, Theseus left with a ship and came back with another, but if you apply the word at type level, he came back with the exact same ship that he left with. — Olivier5
Of course they do. If you and I are at the pub each drinking a pint of beer it matters if I'm drinking from your glass or mine. — Michael
Whether or not he returns on the same token ship as opposed to the same type of ship is the very issue under discussion. — Michael
May I ask: who is is interested in token sameness, and why? — Olivier5
We're interested because we're interested in the metaphysics of identity — Michael
Identity is a rather complex question and approaching it through reductionism is not useful, i believe. We living organisms are ships of Theseus, as already explained, and I don't think that we are our atoms because those keep changing all the time. Tokens are by definition replaceable. — Olivier5
There’s certainly a sense in which I’m not the same person I was 20 years ago. I’ve grown and changed as a person - new behaviours and attitudes, likes and dislikes, experiences and memories, and so on. And my material body is not the same that I had 20 years ago, with almost every cell dying and being replaced over time.
But then there is also a sense of continuity, and a linguistic practice of referring to my old self as being my old self. Unless you want to argue for something like a persistent immaterial soul, you can’t make sense of the truth of this by referring to some alleged mind-independent state-of-affairs that such considerations and claims correspond to. It can only be understood according to an anti-realist account (of meaning and truth).
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