So no fundamental indeterminism, no pilot waves, no non-locality, no other worlds, and no weird collapse.
...
We just can't precisely measure the molecular arrangement of the screen. — Marchesk
It is a hidden variables approach, just not of the particle, and its non-classical. — Marchesk
Horses, were themselves, an industry. The largest horse market, in Chicago, could handle 30,000 horses. — Bitter Crank
Nonsense. Instead of having to start with either a whole, or the parts, things start with the more foundational step of the beginning of their actual separation. — apokrisis
But it kills the kind of mechanistic regress you are talking about because the first step is already irreducibly complex in being a symmetry-breaking relation. — apokrisis
So how did you get to know what 2 means? — Agustino
Yeah, and we could make alternative orders, only that they're not so useful at describing our reality. — Agustino
1+1=2 isn't a relation, it's a description of a relation. — Agustino
We learn to count by putting objects together, and saying, one, two, etc. — Agustino
It’s interesting to me that when taken verbatim, the same can be upheld for a metaphysics of presentism. I’m not confusing your metaphysics with that of any presentism. It’s just that for presentism to be consistent, the present will logically contain both past and future. — javra
In simple terms, for example, when two or more sentient beings in any way interact, their frame of spatiotemporal reference will synchronize, and this may be further argued to result in the past being fixed, the present being a reality of active interaction, and the future being a realm of possibilities contingent on the fixedness of the past in conjunction with the interactions of the present. — javra
But the relation described by 1+1 = 2 can't be invented. — Agustino
It is arguably a category mistake to exploit problems of fundamental physics or worse even metaphysics in order to dismiss notions such as the present. — jkop
I am currently pouring myself a coffee. The starting of the pouring is in the past, and the end of the pouring is in the future. That's stated as if you don't comprehend the most rudimentary aspects of how to use the language you're communicating in.If it's currently occurring there's no part in the past — Terrapin Station
I answered what the present is when you asked me the first time. The present is the changes/motion that are occurring. — Terrapin Station
So on your view, you don't exist at present, and you can exist in the future? — Terrapin Station
I've said it hundreds of times now. When things begin, both parts and wholes would be maximally vague. It is in their co-dependent arising that they together dispel the mists of unformed possibility to revealed their mutually supported actuality. — apokrisis
Gravity? You mean space-time curvature I hope, and no, space-time is real. — tom
As far as I know the role of mathematics in science is by default considered to be that of modeling a certain part of reality: — Babbeus
Your mind only knows what you (presently) intend to type. Something can (and sometimes does) interrupt you before you actually type it. When we debated whether final causes can be in the future, you took the position that this intention is the final cause of the outcome, and on that basis insisted that it must always be temporally prior to the outcome. Have you changed your mind about that? — aletheist
Your mind has the capacity to imagine what would be produced in the future, if certain conditions come about; and only some of these are within your control. Unless you are omniscient and/or omnipotent, you cannot guarantee in the present what will be in the future. — aletheist
Claiming that the future is already actual amounts to determinism. — aletheist
So you'd say that awareness isn't in the past because you'd say it's in the past and the future? — Terrapin Station
It seems more accurate to say that your activities of moving your body are responses to a prediction of what would be in the future, given your awareness of your sensations and some assumptions about what they entail. — aletheist
I don't see how you can draw this conclusion. All the things which I have experienced, all the things which I have sensed, are in the past. I am fully aware of these things even though they are all in the past. What principle do you use to deny that I can be aware of things in the future? What principle allows you to say that being in the past is actual, but being in the future is not actual?The future is not yet actual, so you cannot (strictly speaking) be aware of it yet. — aletheist
You have it back to front. — apokrisis
We have current raw experiences. I feel warm. My back is sore. — andrewk
One's interpretation of one's raw experiences as emanating from a tree may be mistaken. One can also have an illusory memory of a raw experience of a visual pattern or roughness against one's fingers. But one's current experience of the pattern or the roughness cannot be mistaken. — andrewk
The physical constraints that might in retrospect be recognised as the "primeval ecosystem" can be "crisply informational" for purely accidental reasons. — apokrisis
So - remembering that we are talking about the development of the coding side of the biosemiotic relation - the syntax might seem physically definite in the primeval condition, but the semantics is still maximally contingent. And being uncertain or indeterminate, that makes it spontaneous or vague. — apokrisis
What comes first is a vague state of semiotic relations. So chimps grunting in contextually meaningful, yet ungrammatical fashion, is at least some kind of messaging system. — apokrisis
At any rate, so MU and Real Gone Cat, are you claiming that your awareness is in the past? — Terrapin Station
Are you saying, "Oh look-a tree" in the past? — Terrapin Station
Okay, but that's what I'm talking about--the present mental content, whatever it is. — Terrapin Station
I definitely took the bait — m-theory
What you can't be mistaken about is (1) your present phenomenal experience as your present phenomenal experience, and (2) your present evaluations/assessments as your present evaluations/assessments. — Terrapin Station
I don't think we can be mistaken about our current experiences, but we can be mistaken about past ones. — andrewk
Worry about a deeper conspiracy. — Bitter Crank
Hate to say it, but Pattee is just talking about the necessity of vague beginnings. — apokrisis
So the argument is that the primeval "ecosystem language" (and note Pattee is talking specifically about the code half of the dichotomy here) would have condensed out of vaguer, analog, conditions in the same way that the formal grammar that (used to be) taught every kid in school is a "written down" distillation or idealisation of the more informal habits to be found in spoken language. — apokrisis
So what shapes a switch? Is binary logic "real" in your book? (I say yes - as real as any physical circuitry it engenders.) — apokrisis
However the more I learned the more my hopes have been replacing with growing suspicion that the horizons open by complexity science led to desert filled with mirages. — miosim
If the sentence is meaningless, then it can't be true. — Marchesk
But we do say things like that on occasion. For example, "This party is not a party", meaning it's a party in name only. I'm pretty sure I have said something akin to "this chair is not a chair" when being forced to sit on something uncomfortable that served as a chair. I've also said, "I'm not myself today", which would seem to be a violation of the law of identity, but clearly it's not meant to be taken in literal terms. — Marchesk
Also, there is this very big counter to the claim that the liar sentence is without meaning:
"This sentence is meaningless."
Which would be true if the liar sentence is meaningless, but then we get ourselves into another regress. — Marchesk
As I understand it (not well at all) the relationship between the ozone hole and climate warming is rather complex. CFCs are a green house gas, yes? I don't think ozone depletion is a major factor in warming. — Bitter Crank
H2O precipitates out easily, the atmosphere can only hold so much under usual conditions. — Punshhh
