Clearly, the "harmony", or what you are calling "attunement" is something distinct from the material instrument itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
The tuning of a lyre exists apart from and prior to any particular lyre. The tuning, the harmony, is an arrangement of frequencies that exists even when a particular lyre is not in tune. Although the tuning of a particular lyre does not endure once that lyre is destroyed, it does not follow that the attunement, the Harmony, is destroyed. — Fooloso4
Your use of "attunement" only creates ambiguity between "attunement" as the general principles by which an instrument is tuned, and "attunement" as a specific condition of a particular instrument. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so you dismiss the first of the three arguments, because you do not believe in the theory of recollection. — Metaphysician Undercover
The very fact which you cite, that a person can act to improve one's health, or improve the attunement, demonstrates that the attunement is posterior to the physical body. — Metaphysician Undercover
First, do you recognize that it is the bodily instrument which is either well tuned or poorly tuned? Therefore you cannot say "both a well tuned and poorly tuned soul is still a soul" to be consistent with the argument, because the body is analogous to the instrument, and is what is tuned; it is not the soul which is tuned. — Metaphysician Undercover
Next, do you agree that if the instrument is not well tuned there will be some degree of dissonance, and that dissonance is inconsistent with harmony? — Metaphysician Undercover
(Fragment 51)Men do not know how what is at variance agrees with itself. It is an attunement of opposite tension, like that of the bow and the lyre.
And, since there is a multitude of strings, some may be in harmony and others dissonant. — Metaphysician Undercover
But "soul" by the theory, can only be harmony, it cannot be dissonance. — Metaphysician Undercover
The premise "the soul rules" is proposed as a true proposition, validated by the evidence explained. And, it is specifically proposed as inconsistent with "the soul is a harmony". There is nothing deliberately misleading here. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "harmony", or what you call the "attunement", is explicitly stated as something distinct from the instrument. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "spirited part" is the third part, the medium between body and mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Either the the source is the mind, if the soul is healthy, or the body is the source if the mind is ill. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sometimes it [the soul] chastises them more severely with painful processes based upon gymnastics, or medicine, sometimes more gently by threatening and admonishing, talking to the desires, passions and fears as though they constituted a separate entity.
you claim that the "attunement" is a part of the body of the instrument. — Metaphysician Undercover
Attunement is how Horan translates it. It is how Sedley and Long translate it. It is how Brann translates it. It is how many others translate it as well. The Greek term is ἁρμονία (harmonia) and is transliterated as harmony. — Fooloso4
The tuning of a lyre exists apart from and prior to any particular lyre. — Fooloso4
The myth of recollection is fraught with problems. If we start with the premise that knowledge is recollection then there would never be a time when knowledge was learned. But it cannot be recollected if it had not at some time first been learned. — Fooloso4
To improve does not mean to bring into existence. One cannot improve something that does not exist. — Fooloso4
Right, it is not the soul which is tuned. The soul is the attunement, the arrangement and tension of the parts of the body, not what is tuned. — Fooloso4
When the instrument is in tune the strings are in harmony to each other. — Fooloso4
The more harmonized the soul the less its dissonance. A soul that is in poor health, a soul with a great deal of dissonance, is still a soul. — Fooloso4
A soul that is well attuned, a soul that is in harmony and balance, rules well. One that is in discord does not. Harmonized means that there is not one element of the attunement that rules. — Fooloso4
The attunement is the condition of the instrument. Your being in good or bad health is not something distinct from you, but you are not the condition you are in. — Fooloso4
Where does it say that the spirited part is the medium between body and soul? — Fooloso4
What I claim is that the attunement is not apart from the body, not that it is a part of the body. It is not some part in addition to the parts. — Fooloso4
The tuning of a lyre exists apart from and prior to any particular lyre. The tuning, the harmony, is an arrangement of frequencies that exists even when a particular lyre is not in tune — Fooloso4
Then we have Socrates' description at 92c ... — Metaphysician Undercover
Now are you aware,” he said, “that these are the consequences of what you propose whenever you assert that the soul exists before it enters the form and body of a human being, and on the other hand, that it is constituted from elements that do not yet exist?
But "the tuning of a lyre" is the tuning of a lyre, and that means that a particular lyre is being tuned. — Metaphysician Undercover
First, in Simmias' statement, the harmony or attunement is something which exists "in the attuned lyre", it is not a separate principle by which the lyre is tuned. — Metaphysician Undercover
Someone might propose the very same argument in relation to attunement, and a lyre, and its strings, saying that the attunement is indeed an unseen, non-physical, entirely beautiful and divine element in the tuned lyre, while the lyre itself and its strings are, by contrast, physical objects, with physical form.
Put this into context though. To improve would be to bring harmony from dissonance. This very clearly indicates bringing harmony into existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
To improve an evil person is not to bring harmony to dissonance, because that would imply that the evil person, being dissonant, does not even have a soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
You've said already that the "attunement" in your peculiar interpretation exists prior to the instrument, as the set of principles by which the instrument might be tuned. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, you cannot turn around and say that the attunement is "the arrangement and tension of the parts of the body", and pretend to be consistent. — Metaphysician Undercover
(86b-c)It is as if our body is tempered and held together by hot and cold, dry and moist, and the like, and that our soul is a blend and attunement of these very elements once they are properly mixed with one another in a measured way.
That arrangement and tension is particular to the individual body, and is therefore posterior to the existence of the body. — Metaphysician Undercover
It cannot be more or less harmonized, or in any way dissonant or else it would not be a soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, you are equivocating with "attunement". By what you said at the beginning of the post, "The tuning of a lyre exists apart from and prior to any particular lyre", the attunement is not "the condition of the instrument". — Metaphysician Undercover
Where does it say that the spirited part is the medium between body and soul?
— Fooloso4
Read "The Republic" please. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hmm, the final part of the post directly contradicts the beginning of your post. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if the soul is supposed to be a harmony, or attunement, the tensions of the bodily elements must exist in this specific way in order for that body to be endowed with "a soul"? — Metaphysician Undercover
These consequences do not follow if one does not assert that the soul exists before in enters the body. Simmias' argument is a refutation of this assertion, but poor Simmias has become as confused as you are. — Fooloso4
The tuning of a lyre, that is the frequencies to which a lyre is tuned, and the process of tuning a lyre are not the same. A particular lyre is tuned to those frequency ratios which exist prior to it. A lyre is well tuned when it comes close to matching those frequencies and poorly tuned the more it deviates. — Fooloso4
The relation is between attunement and a lyre. A relation of the one to the other. The tuned lyre is one in which the proper ratio of frequencies is achieved. — Fooloso4
One soul might be more in tune than another but both a well tuned and poorly tuned soul is still a soul. — Fooloso4
To improve would be to lessen dissonance. Again, it is a matter of degree not either or. — Fooloso4
One soul might be more in tune than another but both a well tuned and poorly tuned soul is still a soul. — Fooloso4
It is not a set of principles, it is a ratio of parts. In the case of a lyre it is the ratio of frequencies of the vibrating strings. Those ratios exist prior to the lyre. They are mathematical relations and can be heard. It is this ability to hear them that allows someone to tune a lyre. — Fooloso4
The fact is, an instrument can be more or less harmonized, more or less in tune. — Fooloso4
I am not equivocating. What is confusing you is that you are conflating the process of tuning with the standard by which the instrument is tuned. The tuning of a lyre is that set of frequencies that determine that some particular lyre is in tune. The lyre is tuned, the strings tightened and loosened, in order to come into accord with those established frequencies, that is, the tuning of a lyre. — Fooloso4
The question cannot be addressed without establishing on the one side what an attunement is and on the other the body it is said to be an attunement of. — Fooloso4
What I pointed to was Socrates' description of "harmony", to show you that it is inconsistent with your description of "attunement". By Socrates' description, "harmony" is the last composed and first destroyed. You had said attunement is prior to any particular instrument. — Metaphysician Undercover
I was not talking about any "consequences", only showing the discrepancy between Socrates' description of "harmony, or "attunement", and your interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
... your attunement and what you are comparing it to are not really alike
We might call it some sort of instructions for tuning a lyre, but "the tuning of a lyre" is the act of actually putting the instrument in tune. — Metaphysician Undercover
The tuned lyre has properly tensioned strings according to the size of the strings. — Metaphysician Undercover
A poorly tuned instrument does not have "harmony", or "attunement". — Metaphysician Undercover
But the soul is a matter of either/or. — Metaphysician Undercover
To make "harmony" compatible with "soul" we have to make it a matter of either/or, because that's the way soul is, either a body has a soul or it does not. — Metaphysician Undercover
The size of the string determines how tight it must be tensioned to produce a desired pitch, but it is the pitch and not the size of the string that determines whether or not the lyre is in tune. Those pitches are not determined by the lyre. — Fooloso4
As I said, you do not at all understand the tuning of a stringed instrument. — Metaphysician Undercover
The notes which the instrument makes must be in tune relative to each other, — Metaphysician Undercover
The harmony is not what is played on the lyre it is the condition of the lyre, the proper tension of the strings in ratio to each other that allow it to play in harmony. — Fooloso4
In the case of a lyre it is the ratio of frequencies of the vibrating strings. — Fooloso4
So long as all the strings are properly tensioned in relation to each other the instrument will produce harmony, and can be said to be in tune. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why your interpretation of "attunement", or "the tuning of a lyre" as a standard which needs to be adhered to when tuning a lyre, is simply incorrect. — Metaphysician Undercover
The tuning of a lyre exists apart from and prior to any particular lyre. The tuning, the harmony, is an arrangement of frequencies that exists even when a particular lyre is not in tune. Although the tuning of a particular lyre does not endure once that lyre is destroyed, it does not follow that the attunement, the Harmony, is destroyed. — Fooloso4
Socrates' arguments are directed against "the soul is an attunement", by the description of "attunement" presented in the text — Metaphysician Undercover
(85e-86a)... the attunement is indeed an unseen, non-physical, entirely beautiful and divine element in the tuned lyre, while the lyre itself and its strings are, by contrast, physical objects, with physical form
(86b-86d)He would claim, rather, that the attunement itself must somehow still exist, and the wood and strings must rot away first before anything happens to that. And in fact, Socrates, I think you yourself are aware that this is the sort of thing we actually take the soul to be. It is as if our body is tempered and held together by hot and cold, dry and moist, and the like, and that our soul is a blend and attunement of these very elements once they are properly mixed with one another in a measured way.
You think that Plato does not actually refute the Pythagorean theory that the soul is a type of harmony because he makes a strawman of "harmony", and refutes that instead. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, you did say that. But it is not true. I have played string instruments for most of my life. I have put in the time to study music theory and harmony. I have also set-up guitars and have the specialized tools to do so. Including cutting nuts, adjusting neck relief, and setting intonation I also play upright bass which does not have frets. Here playing in tune requires more precision to get the length of the stopped string right. — Fooloso4
Right again. But those ratios existed prior to the instrument being in tune. The harmony produced is
something that had been produced countless times before by various instruments. The harmony exists prior to this instrument. — Fooloso4
I used the example of standard tuning so an not to confuse you any more than you already were. But you have come around. What must be adhered to is the ratio of frequencies from one string to another. The ratio of frequencies, exists independently and prior to the instrument. Both standard and non-standard tuning must adhere to those preexisting ratios. — Fooloso4
The attunement is not the tuning of the lyre. It is not the tightening and loosening of the strings. For that is physical. It is something that is present when the lyre is in tune. But, as Socrates points out, a man differs from a lyre. To take the analogy further is misleading. — Fooloso4
What is at issue is the preexistence of harmony. — Fooloso4
The attunement is not the tuning of the lyre. It is not the tightening and loosening of the strings. For that is physical. It is something that is present when the lyre is in tune. But, as Socrates points out, a man differs from a lyre. To take the analogy further is misleading. — Fooloso4
“Then, my excellent friend, it is not at all appropriate for us to state that soul is an attunement, for it seems we would be disagreeing with the divine poet Homer and with ourselves.” (94e-95a) — Fooloso4
The weaknesses of Socrates' arguments in defense of a separate soul that enters and leaves the body are the weaknesses of the traditional beliefs of the city of Athens and others about the soul as taught by Homer. But it is not the belief described by Simmias of Thebes. — Fooloso4
Plato doesn't like the analogy because it would imply that the soul (harmony) must disappear when the body (instrument) is destroyed. — Count Timothy von Icarus
There is another absurdity, however, that follows both from this account and from most of the ones concerning the soul, since in fact they attach the soul to a body, and place it in a body, without |407b15| further determining the cause due to which this attachment comes about or the condition of the body required for it. Yet this would seem to be necessary. For it is because of their association that the one acts, whereas the other is acted upon, and the one is moved, whereas the other moves it. None of these relations, though, holds between things taken at random. These people, however, merely undertake to say what sort of thing the soul is, but about the |407b20| sort of body that is receptive of it they determine nothing further, as if it were possible, as in the Pythagorean stories, for any random soul to be inserted into any random body, whereas it seems that in fact each body has its own special form and shape.96 But what they say is somewhat like saying that the craft of {13} carpentry could be inserted into flutes, whereas in fact the |407b25| craft must use its instruments, and the soul its body. — Aristotle, De Anima, Bk 1:3, 407b14, translated by CDC Reeve
If it only presents correlation of close relationship, this seems to leave most positions except Absolute Idealism alive? — AmadeusD
I would think that "physicalism" is quite strict, not allowing for the possibility of an open door. Isn't that what physicalism is, saying that there is no possibility of anything other than the physical? Opening the door would be rejecting physicalism. — Metaphysician Undercover
Me, as a physicalist, saying "the evidence for physicalism could also plausibly still be compatible with non-physicalist ideas" is not me rejecting physicalism. — flannel jesus
Perhaps it is because I come from a more science based perspective, but I would expect a physicalist to be open to physicalism being falsified, as a matter of intellectual integrity. I don't see any problem with leaving the door wide open for evidence which might falsify physicalism. Having left the door open for a long time, and never having seen any evidence falsifying physicalism walk through the door, is why I am a physicalist. That and the explanatory power of relevant scientific understanding. — wonderer1
Do you understand what "evidence" is? Evidence consists of facts which support the hypothesis. Evidence doesn't walk through the door, it must be sought. That's why experimentation is a significant aspect of the scientific method, through experimentation we seek evidence. If you are happy with your physicalism you will not seek evidence to falsify it, and the evidence will never walk through the door. Real scientific understanding recognizes that evidence does not walk through the door. — Metaphysician Undercover
The reality of time is good evidence for the existence of non-physical aspects of our world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Time consists of three parts, past present and future, none of which is physical. — Metaphysician Undercover
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