If you believe in a deterministic universe and that people don't have free will, even knowledge isn't "potential", because what will happen is defined in advance and there is only possible outcome. Potential is merely an illusion, a mental construct for people who don't have complete knowledge of the universe. — Kenshin
However, when we see high rates of suicide among a particular demographic, like middle aged, white, unemployed, working class men, then it points towards social dysfunction -- on the part of society and maybe on the part of some of the men. — Bitter Crank
My interest is in what truth is.
...
As to definitions, I fail to see what they have to do with truth. — tim wood
What I'm looking for is an understanding of the generalization of this singular case, so I can use it (the understanding) to inform and answer the question, what is truth (if it's anything). The purpose of this example is to kick free of distracting notions of verifiability, indeterminateness, definition, justification, etc., which all seem to presuppose truth, and focus on just truth itself (again, if that's possible).. — tim wood
Not quite. It's probable that every ordinary language proposition has multiple interpretations. Given an interpretation, there is a truth function associated with that interpretation. It is the value of that truth function for that interpretation that I hold is not variable. This implies, and I accept, that different interpretations could have different and inconsistent truth values. — tim wood
I think truth must have "contact" with something real, that bridges subject and predicate, and makes the proposition true. I think you're stuck in a relative subjectivism. Your position may facilitate critiques of how truth works, or how knowledge may work, or what certain limits of knowledge are. But for the question of what truth is, your position seems to destroy it. — tim wood
In some respects, potential merely indicates a lack of knowledge. For with all knowledge, one might know exactly what will or won't happen, so the concept of potential becomes irrelevant. — Kenshin
The absolute core is Love. — Agustino
"Asceticism" (if by this one means restraining greed, lust, selfishness and the like) is part of Love. — Agustino
Morality and virtue are also parts of Love. — Agustino
If the facts of extensive psychological research were known and understood, many cherished models of "free will" (among other things) would be considered absurd, and simply collapse. — Galuchat
Structural models of the human mind based on memory, knowledge, and processing capacity, dynamic models which simulate cognitive and intuitive processing (e.g., interpretation and mental modelling), and formal domain ontologies containing knowledge, are all being constructed and contribute to the field of artificial intelligence. — Galuchat
We have a behavioural definition, and we have an associated brain state, unsurprisingly, but we still don't have a cause, and it is the lack of physical cause that makes it a classical mental illness. Exit science, muttering 'give me more research grants'. — unenlightened
You run close along the line of saying everything is in the mind. But I don't think that's you. Is it? I half agree with, and in that half, completely. That is, I think truth is a creature of mind. And I agree that nothing out there in physical reality is either true or truth. But I think you're putting both halves in mind and nothing out there. And maybe you're right, but that's radical, don't you think? And if you agree, don't you think that kind of radical understanding of truth needs rigorous demonstration? — tim wood
I'm looking for the something out there that grounds truth, makes it a) possible, b) sensible, and maybe c) singular. Let's take a brick of the yellow metal, gold. Clearly everything that is understood about gold is in the mind. But are you willing to exchange what I call real dollars for my mental gold? Of course not. There has to be something out there in reality that corresponds to the gold, that just is gold as understood. That you might be interested in exchanging for, at a good price. — tim wood
Any discussion about how we know it's gold, or how we know anything, is here simply the wrong discussion. — tim wood
Generalizing, I think that for each true statement, there is something out there that corresponds to it, and grounds it. "There is a horse," is true if there just is a horse there, and not otherwise. And let's not be distracted by or get lost in notions of real v. fake horses, or how we know it's a horse, or are just mistaken, and so forth. We presuppose we can determine if a horse is there - the question being is it there, or not. — tim wood
With true statements about ideas, that themselves have no physical counterpart, I'll simply retreat to the notion of demonstration, which can always be rendered in a physical form. That is, the thing not strictly in the mind can be "out there" in the sense of the demonstration of ideas, and must be in the sense of the horse. So far, all this seems simple, intuitive, practical. — tim wood
Meaning is out of court, here, except in the practical sense. If you're going to argue that we cannot really know anything, then I invite you back to the horse and the gold: at some point we know as a practical matter, and correctly, that the horse is a horse and the gold is gold. — tim wood
True-ness is the quality - truth - of a single true proposition. Qua itself, it cannot be interpreted in various ways (except in error). The proposition itself may give rise to different truths, but each in itself is univocal with respect to that truth. — tim wood
Now, it may be we're saying the same thing. Let's check. In this context I presuppose that indeterminateness is in the mind, and that it can be resolved into one or more determinatenesses, given appropriate effort. And there is no truth until that task is completed for at least the indeterminateness in question. — tim wood
If it cannot be resolved, then no truth can come from it (other than, perhaps, that it's unresolvable). — tim wood
I have a new version of truth (grown from this discussion): truth is the capacity for a proposition to be grounded, in a practical sense, outside the mind, whether in exemplification or demonstration. Which seems just another way of saying that truth is the collection of singular true-nesses. — tim wood
Our languages were developed from everyday concerns and perceptions. They were not designed for metaphysical inquiry, and we should keep that in mind when we use them for that purpose. — Mariner
Also, Psychology (a science by virtue of the method it employs to acquire knowledge that can be rationally explained and reliably applied) is very broad (i.e., not limited to a clinical application). — Galuchat
Do you not agree that the actual is some numerical subset of all the possible forms of organisation plus all their possible material accidents? — apokrisis
The mutual definition of the categories themselves is a different issue - which I also highlighted. — apokrisis
It would be usual to distinguish between every thing potential and every thing actual. One would be a subset of the other. — apokrisis
We sure do, and not a slight difference either. "...completely arbitrary,...assumed, ...existing only in the minds which assume them." As I read you, this is your bottom line. The ultimate reality of truth is just no reality at all. — tim wood
How do you square this with any notion of reality? Let's look a little deeper: a rock hits you. You're angry (say), at what, at whom, for what? It's all just completely arbitrary assumptions on your part that exist only in your mind.It must needs be that you are angry at, and can be angry only at, yourself (never mind the problems with that notion). Nor are you rescued by the possibility of the existence of indeterminacies; after all, such indeterminacies can only be conjectural. — tim wood
I say, on the other hand, that true-ness is a real property, of propositions. — tim wood
So we come to an elemental recognition: true-ness is a function of meaning. Probably we knew this all along, but just failed to make it explicit. Where I think you have gone astray is by descending into sub-minimal considerations. I'm thinking that a sign of that confusion is when the real becomes unreal, it's "turtles all the way down," or when the ordinary becomes impossible. Does this put us on one page? — tim wood
The grass and plants are always grateful to get watered. — Bitter Crank
May laws have been violated, crimes committed, without our knowledge? Yes, as trees may have fallen without our knowledge. But I don't think this is a useful inquiry. — Ciceronianus the White
You seem to have some difficulty with the claim that a person may commit a crime and yet be found "not guilty" by a jury. — Ciceronianus the White
If a person commits a crime that person is responsible for the crime, and is therefore guilty of committing the crime. — Ciceronianus the White
OJ was found not guilty. Many believe that he nonetheless is guilty because they believe he is responsible for the crime having taken place--he committed the crime. This seems quite clear. The determination being made, or not being made, is whether a crime was committed, not whether it is "wrong" to commit the crime. — Ciceronianus the White
So the question I last placed stands despite us not knowing whether or not life first - else, independently - appeared on planet Earth. — javra
What alternative(s) are there to explain life’s appearance given a time when life did not physically exist? — javra
Hi MU. We're a bit at sixes and sevens, but I'm not sure if it's a real disagreement or just a lack of clarity. I'm going for clarity. Also brevity. You packed in a lot. If I try to answer all of it, the posts very quickly become unwritable and unreadable. — tim wood
2) ...
But you want to call it the indeterminate. Why? Is it your argument that while an indeterminate may exist that there is no way that we can from indeterminate to rock? If yes, then there's nothing that truth can be true about, because we cannot get from the indeterminate to the rock. — tim wood
3) I suggested testing the rock as a way to validate the claim it's a rock Because it's a rock by assumption, no test is necessary: your remark about the testing I'm glad to have, but while interesting, it's irrelevant. — tim wood
5) Maybe here you can agree or clarify: I think by "subject matter" you mean mental contents. By the same expression I mean the thing spoken of, called here the rock. You misread me above - or, always possible, I misspoke: 6) For there to be truth, for truth (as proposition) to mean anything substantive, it must relate to the thing itself, and not the mere idea of the thing. — tim wood
The question before us is, given that there are true propositions, is there a single genus we can identify that captures in a single notion what makes all of them true, that we can reasonably call truth? My answer from above, that I think you have actually not addressed, for being distracted by tangential questions, is, "...truth is the name of a kind of relationship that can exist between subject matter (things, understood broadly) and propositions (by reference, one to the other). The relationship comes into being when a proposition says something true about a subject matter, to the extent that it is true." — tim wood
This experiment has already been done, using Earth as the disk. — noAxioms
As to the issue of evidence: In one line of argument, it consists of the same evidence that dinosaurs existed, or that saber-toothed cats existed (still can’t figure out how they could capture any prey with those teeth … but our reality evidences that they existed all the same), or—to be more fastidious—the same evidence that three generations ago existed. The metaphysical and epistemological justifications can become both debatable and difficult in their details, but, via one allegory, even if the world started last Thursday all evidence would yet indicated the existence of a last Wednesday as well. Last Wednesdayism would in turn indicate the existence of a last Tuesday, so on and so forth. What is today has a history in what was yesterday. Though an indirect answer, I hope this made some sense. — javra
Yes, of the two alternatives you describe, this one sounds closer to my position. — andrewk
I place the authority of all authors at naught, and I would encourage others to do likewise.
I do not accept Singer's words, and I would encourage others to do likewise. — andrewk
Singer is not your guru. I am not your guru. Nobody is your guru except you. You are your own guru. It is good to listen to what others have to say, as it helps one to think more widely and clearly. It exposes one to ideas, perspectives and channels of reasoning that one may not have previously experienced. But I believe that it is best for one to decide for oneself.
Since I am not your guru, you should not just accept that last sentence. If I were you I would think about it and decide for myself whether to accept it. — andrewk
BTW your allusion to Thoreau's 'On the Duty of Civil Disobedience' is timely. I have been meaning to read it, and will bump it up my reading list as a consequence of this discussion. I suspect I will not agree with many of his conclusions as - based on Walden - his temperament seems to be much less communitarian than mine. But who knows? And in any case I expect it to be an enriching and entertaining read. — andrewk
BTW BTW apropos of an earlier discussion: did you read 'The Death of Ivan Ilych'? I just finished it. It's a short and easy read. I'm still working out what to make of it. I'm glad I read it. — andrewk
Stripped of the loaded language, I can accept your formulation. That is, I believe that it is reasonable and consistent to choose, after serious ethical consideration, to disobey a law that one is convinced is unjust, while still believing that, in the absence of gross injustice, laws should be obeyed. — andrewk
Peter Singer has written about this at length. He argues that one should obey the law except where there are gravely serious reasons not to do so. In a nutshell, his argument is that we all benefit when nearly everybody obeys the law. That benefit can only be outweighed by very strong considerations in the opposite direction, usually in relation to a grossly unjust or otherwise harmful law. Such exceptions occur only rarely, but they do occur. — andrewk
If you want to call that 'disrespect for the law' then go ahead. But that looks to me a meaningless bunch of words, that is unable to account for why Singer scrupulously pays his taxes, does not litter, drives within the speed limit, etc. — andrewk
But again, this is at a crossroads with the hidden cline of behavior between nonlife and life which, for example, is required to explain how life could have developed from nonlife. — javra
I'm surprised that you have such a binary, black and white view of things. Do you not know of any people whom you mostly respect, but who have done one thing that you regard as stupid or mean? Are all your feelings about people either unconditional respect and obedience or complete dismissal? — andrewk
Presumably this rock is just here, even if no mind ever existed. Do we agree on this? Then you, or someone,comes along, and before you can talk about the rock, you must have something that grounds your talking about the rock. Let's call it perception, apperception, synthesis, knowledge, idea, whatever. I agree that rock somehow has to be in mind before we can talk about it. This mental content is what I understand you to mean by "subject matter." We ought to step carefully here: it is possible that you hold that the mental content, the subject matter, is all there is and is merely a sign of itself - after all, if it's all mental content, etc., then we need an account of how we get to the rock, which is not easy to come by. — tim wood
My position is that the rock is real. Likely all we can know about it comes through synthesis of whatever, as above, but that synthesis is grounded in the separate thing we call a rock. I defend this through our ability, basically, to question the rock. We can test it. "If you're a rock, you'll react this way to my test." Granted, when it comes to most rocks, the tests applied can be primitive. But the same approach, with appropriate sophistication, works (eventually) for anything and everything. — tim wood
On your idea of truth, then, if truth is to be anything more than mere tautology (A=A), the mental content must refer to something outside of and apart from itself. — tim wood
In sum, it seems to me that truth cannot lie in the relationship between subject matter, understood as mental contents, and what it represents. I still, then, like my definition better than yours. Please hammer again! — tim wood
That goes too far for me. Look at my Gandhi example. Did he have no respect for the law? Of course not. He was a lawyer! He just had no respect for the race laws of South Africa. — andrewk
The higher law that for Gandhi and others overrules the race law is his ethics. That does not require a belief in God. For some people such a belief is involved, while for others it is not. This is vanilla meta-ethics. I assume you are very familiar with all this and do not find it controversial. — andrewk
By the way, I don't think my use is that unusual. I place very little credibility on dictionaries for philosophical discussions, but since you have referenced one it may help for you to consider the first definition under item 2 in this Oxford Dictionary definition: 'having done something illegal'. Or, if one prefers Cambridge, we have here: 'Responsible for breaking a law'. That law could be that one has to report any sightings of Jews to the Gestapo, and a saint could be guilty of breaking that law (and some were). — andrewk
I didn't blame you, and I'm sorry that you thought I did. I can't see anything I wrote that implied that. Recognising the existence of a Verbal Dispute is a way of resolving an apparent disagreement, not a way of allocating blame. I find it very helpful, and usually both parties benefit. — andrewk
In the law, though it's entirely possible that a person may be found not guilty of a crime and yet have committed it.
I'm not sure what you're asking. Are you asking why people believe that someone who has committed a crime is guilty of committing a crime? — Ciceronianus the White
Yes. That is how I use the term. I understand that it is not how you use it. Are you familiar with David Chalmers' very useful notion of a Verbal Dispute? That is what this is. — andrewk
They won't necessarily feel bad about it. When I say they 'recall having committed the crime' I mean they recall having done the alleged act, not that they also judge the act to be bad. They may even, as in Ellsberg's case, judge the act to be good. — andrewk
As I pointed out above, you and I are using the key words differently. Replace 'crime' by 'act' and 'guilty of' by 'actually did' and you will have an accurate translation of my statement from my personal language to yours. — andrewk
Gandhi is another example that comes to mind. In my language he 'was guilty of the crime of burning a racial identity card' and I revere him for that and no doubt he felt good about having done it. In your language he 'performed the act of burning a racial identity card'.
There is no difference in meaning. Only in the words used to convey the meaning. — andrewk
Second try: truth is the name of a kind of relationship that can exist between subject matter and propositions. The relationship comes into being when a proposition says something true about a subject matter, to the extent that it is true. — tim wood
The relationship comes into being when a proposition says something true about a subject matter, to the extent that it is true. — tim wood
I said what I believed is that a tornado is the product of semiosis. As a dissipative structure, it is formed almost entirely by constraints outside of itself. It has no self-stabilising level of memory. So it can't "practise" semiosis. — apokrisis
I was using 'guilty of the crime' with the meaning of 'had done the crime', whereas you were using it with the sense of 'felt bad about having done the crime'. Etymologically, yours may be more accurate, as I suppose that guilty derives from a root of 'feeling guilt', which is feeling bad about our actions. — andrewk
I think my meaning may be closer to common use though. When we say that a convicted person is actually innocent, we mean that they did not do the alleged act, not that they don't feel bad about it. Consider somebody that is convicted of the crime of breaking an unjust law. They may be a moral hero in our eyes for standing up to injustice, and may be in their own too. I would not say that Daniel Ellsberg was 'not guilty of breaking official secrecy laws' but I would say that I greatly admire him for doing so. — andrewk
Isn't that because intent is central to guilt? If a person kills another because he or she is in a florid state of psychosis and thinks the other is an evil alien then that person will often be found 'not guilty by reason of insanity'. If a person commits an act with right intention which has bad consequences, they may or may not be guilty, depending on circumstances. I find it hard to see many circumstances in which a person is 'unknowingly guilty' of a crime, but then, that presumes that persons are always sufficiently self-aware and well-informed to make that judgement themselves. — Wayfarer
So it says that the animate and the inanimate are alike in being hylomorphically semiotic. There is formal and final cause acting by way of top-down constraint to shape substantial being. And what is new here is proposing a mechanism - semiosis - by which that interaction generally happens. — apokrisis
And generally, all inanimate systems - especially those that grow, move, self-organise and self-optimise to meet the global purpose of the second law - can be understood as dissipative structures. Which means they must be informationally negentropic to be able to maintain the entropic flows that sustain them. I mean, keep them inanimately alive. — apokrisis
