Why isn't it a language if you don't understand it on the later occasion? Where is the requirement coming from that in order to be a language, you have to understand it in perpetuity?
Imagine that some virus strikes Earth that rapidly spreads and gives everyone a cognitive fog. A symptom of it is that there are many words in all natural languages that no one understands any longer.
Did we not have languages in that case? — Terrapin Station
If it's not a derail, I'd be interested to know what you think wisdom is, and how it might be discovered or attained? — Pattern-chaser
No, you have not. Solid, mineral, Earth. All terms that refer to observations. — Echarmion
A rock is never not a rock. — Echarmion
No, in that case you are under an illusion. Your observations no longer conform to the observations of the majority of other observers, and so other observers will, by and large, conclude you are wrong. — Echarmion
There won't be any rocks for you, since you'll be dead. Presumably, there will still be rocks for other people. Unless you're crazy, and everyone is playing along and agreeing with you that sure, rocks exist, so as to not disturb you. — Echarmion
Can you feedback to me what I've said multiple times about what you seem to be suggesting here, which once again seems to relate back to absolute certainty?
— S
Yep. First line of the OP.
There is a rock
— S — Mww
I grant the practical aspect for knowledge is more suitable for the man on the street, who would perhaps think me wacky for maintaining we cannot know about the rocks. — Mww
But if I asked that man on the street if there were any frozen French fries left in the freezer case at the local Piggly Wiggly....what do you think he’d say? He being an honest man and all. — Mww
We both know you keep harping on my “extreme empiricism” because you refuse to accept the correctness of my idealism for this particular foray into the sublime. All you gotta do is acknowledge that the only way to know it is true those rocks are still there is to send us back to look.
I’m sure the rocks would be glad to see us. Well.....me anyway. You they’re probably quite unhappy with. — Mww
My metaphysics has no problem with allowing the existence of objects without experience of them. Just like you, I find it reasonable to think those rocks are going to be there all else being equal. I said as much way back in the beginning, sentience is not a requisite for existence. Dunno why you can’t get that through your head. My metaphysics does not allow empirical knowledge of conditions for which any experience whatsoever is impossible, re: the future, impossible or inconceivable objects, spiritual objects, supernatural objects. If you agree with all that, yet insist you know rocks will still be there, or it is in fact true rocks will be there, in the future, then your metaphysics is catastrophically wrong. — Mww
But have you demonstrated this supposed necessary dependency, or merely asserted it? Oh, you've merely asserted it. I see. And that's reasonable because...?
Necessary dependency, necessary dependency, wherefore art thou, necessary dependency?
You can't just assume some idealist principle like "to be" is "to be understood" and at the same time claim to be reasonable. — S
You’re getting closer and closer. YEA!!!!
What you listed as possible negation of the existence of the clock pertains in principle to the negation of the existence of the rocks. Because no one can prove none of those things did not happen, he cannot know the rocks, or clocks, are still there, because one of them might have happened.
Somebody gimme a damn mic!!!!! — Mww
ROFL. Excellent comeback. — Mww
Given that a "rock" is defined by the way it looks like, feels like, sounds like etc. how is anyone supposed to talk about rocks? Can you provide us with a definition of a rock that doesn't consist of subjective impressions? — Echarmion
See 1:30. You are pre-enlightened Bart Simpson. — Baden
I ran out of mics. — Mww
This argument was never refuted because it was never presented. — Mww
...it can also not be distinguished from non-rock, and seeing as this violates a condition of its meaning rock... — Baden
Similarly, rocks can neither exist nor not exist under the first scenario's speculative conditions. — Baden
“Rock” is nothing but a human-developed word contained in a human-developed language given to a human-developed concept given to a human-perceived real thing. — Mww
I agree with half, disagree with the other half. — Mww
If I was a rock in a world where humans had just disappeared, I would ask myself...how am I to be known? I can be remembered, sure, but what intelligence is there that knows of me now? And to be remembered is to be known as I was, not necessarily as I am. If I should be buried in an earthquake, the humans that were here wouldn’t know what happened to me, so why is that any different from not knowing about me if there wasn’t any earthquake to begin with?
Woe is me....without something that knows, I am unknown. Here in my world, or anywhere else. — Mww
Yeah, well, the counter-argument’s going to be...it’s a hypothetical scenario and as such, POOF!!! All the humans are gone, so nobody is there to set a clock anyway. But if that’s true then what does an hour have to do with anything. The only way it could mean anything is from the perspective of a third party observer who CAN tell time. — Mww
..."an hour" is a human being telling time. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the alarm is not sensed, the indication for the duration of an hour is not intelligibly given. If there is no intelligible indication given for an hour, there is no reason to think there would be an intelligible indication given for the duration of a day. If not an hour or a day, then no intelligible division of time at all follows. If no division of time, then there would be no indication of time itself. Humans “tell” time; no humans, no time “telling”. No time “telling”, no temporal reference frame, time itself becomes nothing. — Mww
Set an alarm clock of some kind for an hour, kill off all the humans.......what does the alarm sound or look like? — Mww
Who is going to determine this point in time an hour after we all died? — Metaphysician Undercover
Not rejecting subjectivity shows hope.
What argument? I haven’t seen subjectivity mentioned once in 12 pages.
I asked “what is blue” and got a bunch of scientific fluff. What will I get if I ask “what is subjectivity?” — Mww
There aren't any rocks, and there have never been any rocks, outside of human minds. — Echarmion
I’ll be damned. That paragraph right there, is a synopsis of what I and U.M have been saying for 6 pages. Rough around the edges, but that’s to be expected from one thinking like an idealist of some degree but refusing to admit to being one. Failure to grasp the understanding that EVERY rational human is just that. It is the dualistic, comparative nature of the intellectual beast. Get used to it.
This part hasn't been neglected. Go back and count the times I’ve said it doesn’t matter. — Mww
Correct; it is possible to be right on one level and wrong on another about the same thing. You’re doing it. Wrong on a whole ‘nuther level. The subjective level, where a priori knowledge lives, and resides over knowledge not given from direct experience. The a priori allows retention of knowledge of rocks after the experience of them, but not the existence of rocks without the experience of them, which is empirical knowledge. The a priori domain is the exact OPPOSITE of “extreme empiricism”.
The way things are going, the longer M.U. and I keep pissin’ you off, the closer you’re going to get to seeing we are right. But again......it doesn’t matter. — Mww
Suppose I decide that I will tailgate any car such that the numbers on its plate add to a prime. — Banno
So was the rule I followed that their number plates added to a prime, or that their ancestry was Slav? — Banno
There can't be private criteria for the private rule because? — Terrapin Station
That's it. Nietzsche could have no criteria for correctness in his moral principles. — Banno
Ethiopians say that their gods are flat-nosed and dark. Thracians that theirs are blue-eyed and red-haired. If oxen and horses and lions had hands and were able to draw with their hands and do the same things as men, then horses would draw the shapes of gods to look like horses, and oxen to look like oxen, and each would make the gods’ bodies have the same shape as they themselves had.
While philosophers generally would like to proclaim their objectivity and disinterestedness, their instincts and prejudices are usually what inform them.
no, your rule was not private when you did not kick the puppy and it became an external behavior. morals and rules are internal in that they are unique to that individual reality but exhibited by behavior externally. — Aadee
Kinda wondering what the puppy did? :wink: — Aadee
True. I do remember you saying that several pages ago, and I suppose your discussion of overly-high standards is continuing that. My stupid brain always thinks people just need to hear something in a different way and my view will suddenly make sense - whether it is my ego's fault or their biased thinking, I should have learned by now that it is unlikely to work. — ZhouBoTong
This is the part of this discussion that has baffled me the most. They do not seem to even care if there ideas have explanatory power. It seems if they are right, and I KNEW IT, it would still change nothing about how I live...so, so what? — ZhouBoTong
I would also suggest that "experience" is about as subjective as it gets (can I ever have an identical experience to you?), so I am not sure how this follows:
all empirical knowledge absolutely depends on experience for it’s proof
— Mww
, unless we begin to summarize meaning like I have been suggesting. — ZhouBoTong
Interesting read, but I gotta tell ya, man......
“....All I hear is
Radio ga-ga
Radio goo-goo
Radio ga-ga....”
....not quite, but you get my drift, right?
Anyway. Leading on, re: pg 8. You reject idealism in any way shape or form, so do you reject subjectivity as well? If not, what is it? — Mww
If knowledge doesn’t require certainty or at least very strict criteria, how do we trust our theoretical science? How do we know it’s dangerous to step into a lion’s cage at the zoo? Sometimes reasonable to believe is all we have and other times reasonable to believe might just get you killed. — Mww
When I think about dinner tomorrow I am thinking NOW about dinner tomorrow. The other context is thinking TOMORROW about dinner tomorrow, which is meaningless. That’s what you wanted us to do....think rocks TOMORROW (because we were deleted an hour earlier is the same as thinking about something an hour later) about rocks tomorrow (an hour later). — Mww
If I do interpret statements in a way that lead to a falsehood, the falsehood belongs to me or the statement. If the latter, the onus is on my co-conversant to rectify it, if the former the burden is to inform me of my misinterpretation and the onus is on me to rectify it. Six of one etc, etc, etc......
What I’m doing is a problem for the experiment, granted. That I’m over-analysizing, probably. But you did ask for opinions, after all. And yes, I know what opinions are like......
Anyway. Ever onward. — Mww
But S claims that the measurement of time, "an hour" in the op, could occur without a human being to measure it. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think I see our problem. I think every time you use the word "true", you mean something like "it can only be that way 100% of the time in any situation that anyone can conceive of" which I will think rarely occurs (I would say definitions and math is about it - language itself creates ambiguities, and even witnessed events go through an interpreting agent). However, when S or I (or most people out there that do not know the philosophical word idealist) use the word, we just mean "true enough for all practical purposes." — ZhouBoTong
First, I was leaving the argument with that as the major premise to you because you brought it up, and second, I don’t think S is ready to accept the absolute ideality of time with respect to human experience. — Mww
