What then of the points that make the circle. Are they not the smallest possible straight edges? — apokrisis
A point is the limit to a line - the zero-D terminus that has greater local symmetry than the 1D line which is having its own symmetry broken by being cut ever shorter, and eventually, infinitely short. A point is simply a line that can't be cut any shorter. — apokrisis
Then for a line to be either straight or curved is itself a question embedded in the 2D of a plane at a minimum. So curvature, or its lack, is determined by the symmetry breaking of a more global (2D) context. A line becomes "straight" as now the locally symmetric terminus of all possible linear wigglings. — apokrisis
Straightness is defined in terms of the least action principle. A straight line is the shortest distance to connect two points. You may be familiar with that story from physics. — apokrisis
They are minimal length lines. But are they straight or are they curved? Or would you say the issue is logically vague - the PNC does not apply? No wiggling means no case to answer on that score. — apokrisis
That's funny, given a circle is the most fundamentally symmetric type of unit. It stands as the limit to an infinite regress in terms of the number of sides to a regular polygon. — apokrisis
In math, there are at least some moves that are universally considered invalid. — schopenhauer1
All that needs to occur is that a higher amount of constraints that needs to take place math than in philosophy. — schopenhauer1
I could not solve a mathematical problem with a treatise on "being" for example. However, a metaphysical argument might be framed as a problem of "being", a problems of propositions/linguistics, problems of a priori synthetic knowledge, problems of empirical data gathering, etc. etc. It is framed too broadly for even a consensus on what a valid answer looks like (unless you fall within a camp with another philosopher who shares that point of view, but that doesn't negate that philosophy itself is much broader outside this compartmentalization). Thus I said earlier: — schopenhauer1
But my sentiment I'm trying to convey here is that the models and demonstrations you speak of have a lot of constraints as to what kind of methodology can be employed to solve a particular mathematical problem. Philosophy does not have these constraints (unless your philosophy is to put certain constraints on, but then the argument about what constraints to put on would still be contested and so on). There is a certain consensus in the math community about what counts as even in the realm of what is valid for an answer. — schopenhauer1
But this is because the very nature of philosophy is how unconstrained it tends to be. — schopenhauer1
Remember that in maths, a unit is defined by the identity element - a local symmetry that can't be broken by whatever operation broke the global symmetry. — apokrisis
So geometry begins with the fundamental thing of a zero-d point. Dimensionality cannot be constrained any more rigorously than a dot, a minimal dimensional mark. Having found the stable atom, the concrete unit, the construction of dimensional geometry can begin. — apokrisis
So in the mathematical realm where 1 is the identity element - the unit that is unchanged by the kind of change that more generally prevails - it is both part of that world and separate from it. It has that incompatibility which you point out. And that is because it is a re-emerging symmetry.
Globally, a symmetry got broke by the very notion of a division algebra. Division, as an operation, could fracture the unity of the global unity that is our generalised idea of a continuous wholeness - some undifferentiated potential. But then divisibility itself gets halted by reaching a local limit. Eventually it winds up spinning on the spot, changing nothing. A second limiting state of symmetry emerges ... when our original notion of unity as a continuous wholeness finally meets its dichotomous "other" in the form of an utterly broken discreteness. — apokrisis
If mathematical physics tells us that existence is the result of broken symmetry, then who are you to disagree? — apokrisis
However, the claim still remains- demonstrable results and consensus make mathematical creativity/novelty different than philosophical creativity. — schopenhauer1
I asked them (21yrs old and 18yrs old) if they would support the reimplantation of the draft if necessary. After a bunch of defining who, what, where and why it came down to one simple factor. They would agree with the draft but those drafted would only serve on our shores. The future generation is not buying into nation building or arms races. It is about self preservation through a mutli layer system of defenses. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Or put otherwise: there is no 'ultimate symmetry', the breaking of which explains individuation; it only seems that way after-the-fact, once you've illegitimately abstracted the concept from the conditions which gave rise to it; Symmetry is always-already broken in some way: there are generalities and particulars, and even stratified hierarchies of such divisions, but they develop from the 'bottom-up', even if, once so developed, the higher levels attain a consistency of their own (e.g. category theory as a 'response' to problems in algebraic topology). Explanation occurs in medias res, and not sub specie aeternitatis. — StreetlightX
(1) Measures of length (every number corresponds to a measurable length, like a table-leg) and
(2) Expressible as ratios ('every number can be expressed by a ratio, like x/y'). — StreetlightX
Further, among the points that B&C stress is that it is not at all 'discovery' that is at stake, but what they call - following Wittgenstein - concept-determination: "what is going on here is best described neither as ‘discovery’ nor as ‘invention’ of something entirely new. There are facts to be revealed, and creativity to be exhibited, but what is crucial is the opening up of different aspects of something ... which prompts a choice that sooner or later ‘catches on’... and proves fruitful." — StreetlightX
the 'choice' to allow imaginary numbers (the square root of negative numbers, like √-1 — StreetlightX
By way of a footnote, the discovery and acceptance of the concept of zero was resisted by Western mathematicians for a long period of time, for religious and philosophical reasons. As is well-known, the incorporation of zero into maths - indispensable for decimal notation - was first accomplished by Indian (or possibly Chinese) mathematicians, who had no such inhibitions. — Wayfarer
To me? There is no "fair share" in helping others and maybe that is a fault of mine, that keeps me from seeing what you are seeing. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
This as I noted is one of the downside risks of helping others but I don't know that it is a result of being duped so much as it is that expectations are set up for others. The expectations are based on our own beliefs mixed with those who are fighting to be free and often times the two do not survive without the other there. Which is why I believe the USA should maintain the DMZ long after the two nations peacefully become one. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I will ask her your question and report back to you the honest answer I receive. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
May she safely return home to her family after she returns a home to another family in that "distant land". — ArguingWAristotleTiff
In the expression "It is certain", what does 'certain' add to the statement if not some attitudinal report, otherwise what's the utility of word 'certain', you could just say 'It is'. — Cavacava
think your position is untenable. We are talking about certainty and uncertainty. How things are in themself can't be known, no objective viewpoint is possible. — Cavacava
Think of "we" as a meeting point between "us" and "them", or "you" and "I" where we can agree or disagree with one another on some points but "we" agree to go forward. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
But that is not the prevailing thought that guides the average American, as I consider myself to be, nor the average soldier of which I have family. My feeling is that we are not "owed" anything, when we willingly offer help to whomever around the world needs help in fighting for their freedom. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I do not agree with you that the only reason we "invest" our own blood and toil, is for a financial profit. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I know that some find it hard to believe but Americans actually do believe in helping others fighting for their own freedom, for their own liberty. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
On a personal note, my Uncle willingly served the United States Army for 33 years beginning with enlisting for Vietnam and ending with Desert Storm. He certainly didn't choose to devote his life to fight for the capitalists of any region. No. He served for one reason and one reason only and that is his dedication to help those fighting for liberty. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
No, I don't see this, since as I pointed out, what is going to count as impossible is going to change depending on the circumstances just as much as what is possible. — MetaphysicsNow
Firstly, the criteria I mentioned for possibility are not random in the least. One set of criteria constrains the possible within the bounds of the known laws of nature. Another set releases that restriction but applies the laws of classical logic. Those are not random criteria, but clear and precise ones. — MetaphysicsNow
Secondly, nothing you say about the impossible rules out their being infinite impossibilities. — MetaphysicsNow
Possible" and "impossible" are terms that come together as a package or not at all. — MetaphysicsNow
This is precisely the issue in reverse though - what are the criteria for impossibility? Are we talking about physical impossibility, logical impossibility.... Each will have different criteria presumably, just like "possibility" under my contention. — MetaphysicsNow
Propositional attitudes are reports using attitudinal verbs like believe, hope, is certain, in 'that' sentences. I tell you that I am certain or uncertain can you deny my report? Sure you can deny the "that" part of it but not the attitudinal part, no? How things are as they are, can't be known, Kant showed this, so then reports of this type have to be how they are for the reporter. — Cavacava
there is no need to replace any word of mine with a word you "twisted" to find more fitting. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
In other words, successful CEO's are Master Delegators and lead as a "We" not as an "I". Hence the well thought out choice of bringing Giuliani on board and the power of Bolton's intimate knowledge, of the very chaos he has been put in the position to manage and to that degree, I can see that as Peninsula dominance until we leave. We have been heavily invested in blood and toil for the past 60 years so we need to distrust but verify and that could take a decade or more. Together, as a United Front, there is no world issue that cannot be entertained AND understood by the Executive branch of our current government common as well as the common man. And that is appreciated. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The difference in meaning between "I" and "it" was not at issue; the question was whether "certain" means something different in "I am certain" than it does in "We're every last one of us certain". — Srap Tasmaner
I noted the pragmatics issue, that "I am certain" might count as a report. I don't think we'd want to say that by being used in such a report "certain" gets a different meaning. What should we say about the difference between a report and, I guess, "an observation"? — Srap Tasmaner
Certainties are not undoubted facts. — Banno
You've shown there's a grammatical difference, in the same way there's a grammatical difference between
Socrates is wise
Wisdom is instantiated by Socrates
Nowhere did you show there's a difference in meaning. — Srap Tasmaner
A little like jkg20, I'm beginning to get a little lost, since what is unknown is not commonly what is unintelligible. Supposing I don't know what my birthday present is because it is wrapped in paper. Suppose that what is wrapped in that paper is the latest iPhone. That I do not know that my birthday present is an iPhone does not make either the iPhone nor the fact that it might be my birthday present unintelligible to me (indeed I may even hope or imagine that my birthday present is an iPhone) . — MetaphysicsNow
jkg20 said of me, more or less, that when I use the word "possibility" in the abstract, it just stands for "criteria for what is possible". That's pretty much correct, and I do not see how it commits me to the unintelligibility of possibility or possibilities. The criteria will vary in varying circumstances - sometimes we will be interested only in what is physically possible (i.e. the criteria will include the idea that whatever is possible has to conform with the known laws of nature). At other times, perhaps when writing science fiction, we may want to think beyond those constraints, but still wish to insist that what we are imagining is a possible future, and in that case our criteria would be limited to excluding only logical contradictions (at least, to exclude obvious logical contradictions, some logical contradictions can be deeply buried). In both kinds of cases, laying down the criteria of possibility allows for an indefinite number of perfectly intelligible possibilities. Perhaps it also allows for an infinite number of possibilities, I don't know, it doesn't seem to me to matter much one way or another. — MetaphysicsNow
As a matter of English usage, you might be right, but even if you are, it's only for the nouns: the adjective that goes with both "certainty" and "certitude" is "certain".
I still don't see a philosophical point. — Srap Tasmaner
No, but then again I don't think "how things are" can be known, only how things are for us can be known, which is where propositional attitude comes into play. What can or can't be subsumed as attitudinal in a proposition. — Cavacava
I tend to think it is b) and, if the only thing that can't be doubted is that every thing is absolutely contingent, then contingency itself is non-attitudinal...I guess my thought is that if anything is absolute, it is absolute de re. — Cavacava
He never holds back his opinion, he trusts few and he cannot be bullshitted. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
You suggest that certainty is an undoubted fact, but what does that entail, what is an example of undoubted fact. I doubt any undoubted facts, I think all facts are contingent, that all facts could have been otherwise. If so, does this reduce all certainty to certitude and does this mean that un-certitude is also an attitude. — Cavacava
I think all facts are contingent, that all facts could have been otherwise. If so, does this reduce all certainty to certitude and does this mean that un-certitude is also an attitude. — Cavacava
But if you think that possibility is completely unintelligible, then given that what is unintelligible cannot be meaningfully talked about, you seem to be commiting yourself to have been talking nonsense whenever you discuss modality. — jkg20
Possibilities are real to the degree that some logic, some principle of intelligibility, constrains an unformed potency. — apokrisis
One can start with the premise that if one were omniscient then no logical fallacies would arise in the reasoning process of a person or entity.
Therefore, every logical fallacy arises due to gaps in knowledge.
Thus, the best method at our disposal in discovering objective truths is science. — Posty McPostface
But, science cannot discover the truth or validity of highly subjective ethical or moral claims.
Then, what method is the most appropriate at discovering the truth and validity of ethical claims, which philosophy is best known for? — Posty McPostface
Now what's the point you're making? — Srap Tasmaner
The first thing to note is that certainty is an attitude. — Banno
I think there is a distinction to be made between certitude, which is an attitude, and certainty, which is an undoubted fact. — Metaphysician Undercover
Both are attitudes. So now we are in agreement. — Banno
There seems to be some element of talking past each other here between you and MetaphysicsNow. Perhaps you are right that because there are infinite possibilities we (as finite beings) cannot survey all of them at once. However, I think MetaphysicsNow is suggesting that this is to some extent irrelevant because it does not impact our abilities to entertain any specific possibility. — jkg20
"Possibility" is ambiguous between your two usages. For you it appears to be the sum of all possibilities. For MetaphysicsNow it appears to be just that which defines something as being a member of that group of infinite things. — jkg20
MetaphysicsNow is perfectly correct that possibility is intelligible if he means by "possibility" what I believe he means. — jkg20
Would you both agree with that? — jkg20
You can have a fully consistent theory of modality that retains the law of excluded middle. You can also have one that rejects the law of excluded middle, but retains the law of non-contradiction. Let's call the former kind of modal thinker a BigEndian and the latter a LittleEndian Concerning the example for Aristotle, BigEndian and LItteEndian are totally in agreement that we cannot know or decide which of the statements "There will be a sea battle tomorrow" or "There will not be a sea battle tommorrow" is true the day before the event. The BigEndian will simply insist that this is only an epistemological fact, and does not entail that neither one nor the other is in fact true. Certainly, this requires a particular brand of realism about future events, but then BigEndians (and generally speaking everyone who favours classical logic) will be a realist about most things. The LittleEndian has a (perhaps more sophisticated) view of the interplay between epistemology and metaphysics that ties together in some way what can be known/decided and what exists. There is no simple way to decide whether the BigEndian or LittleEndian is correct. — MetaphysicsNow
In all cases, a modal realist is not going to allow the existence of non-real possibilities: all possbilities for a modal realist are equally real, although they might not all be equally likely. — MetaphysicsNow
Your points about infinity and possibility are not clear to me - modal realists of any kind can quite happily accept the idea that there are an infinite number of possibilities and that does not render possibilities unintelligible. — MetaphysicsNow
We can play around with the level of certainty we want in knowledge - 70%, 80%. 90%. 99%.
Uncertainty is inescapable but levels of certainty can be achieved. — TheMadFool
and the universe will chug along just fine without perception. — Marchesk
Possibility does not pose a problem for intelligibility if what is possible is constrained by the laws of whatever logic you happen to prefer. — MetaphysicsNow
How? Are you confusing actuality with reality? They are different notions - indeed it is precisely the difference between them that modal realists like Lewis take advantage of. — MetaphysicsNow
Keep on inventing things I never said. I'll sit back and watch you win arguments that are just against yourself. — apokrisis
It all starts with habits of constraint on degrees of freedom. Then it adds the twist that logic - information - is also "real" here. — apokrisis
I argued that either further more particular constraints decide the matter, or it then becomes an accidental outcome. — apokrisis
and provided that the law of non-contradiction holds, possibilities are always going to be intelligible. — MetaphysicsNow
No I do not see that, because it is a contentious position you cannot just help yourself to. — MetaphysicsNow
Perhaps we can do without the law of excluded middle (intuitionist logics for instance) but the law of non-contradiction is a great deal more difficult to do without and provided that the law of non-contradiction holds, possibilities are always going to be intelligible. — MetaphysicsNow
Your hypothesis is that (i) there is a thing called the will, (ii) the will is not subject to causal laws (iii) the will causes human action. This is a substantive hypothesis, it is not an apriori truth by any way shape or form. — MetaphysicsNow
The question, then, is in any given case what leads up to the will causing a given human action or prevention of human action (nb, there is also the question how the causal mechanism between will and action works, but that is a different question). — MetaphysicsNow
You also seem to be implying that there is no rational account for that either. That seems to rule out any kind of research program into how the will is supposed to get in on the act. — MetaphysicsNow
(nb, there is also the question how the causal mechanism between will and action works, but that is a different question). — MetaphysicsNow
