Why does anyone still continue to study this nonsense? — lambda
- Philosophers are still unable to determine whether they're dreaming or not.
- Philosophers are still unable to provide a non-circular justification for the reliability of their cognitive faculties (senses, memory, reason, intuition, etc.)
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in free will.
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in the existence of other minds.
- Philosophers still can't offer any reason to believe in the existence of a mind-independent external world. — lambda
And another problem is that "it would be possible for the object to come into existence as an object other than the object which it is," doesn't make any sense in my opinion. I wouldn't say that was possible. As I noted, it might at least appear to make some sense on a view that substances are some sort of mysterious, amorphous somethings that are later bestowed with properties, but I don't really think that view makes a lot of sense in the first place, and there's definitely no reason to believe it in my opinion. — Terrapin Station
That part I don't agree with at all, however. I'd have no idea where you're getting a notion from that "necessarily" implies a cause. For example, if necessarily A = A, presumably then you'd think that there must be a cause for that. I just don't know why you'd think that. I suppose you see modal logic as significantly resting on causes then? That would be an unusual view. — Terrapin Station
One option for you is to try to explain how the idea of nonphysical existents makes sense. — Terrapin Station
Don't you see that things like identity and non-contradiction must have a cause? If there was no reason why A = A, or why contradiction was unacceptable, then we wouldn't accept these as fundamental principles. It is because these are reasonable, i.e. there is a reason why they are acceptable, that we do accept them as fundamental principles. It is not because we accept them, and agree on them that they become fundamental principles, it is because they are acceptable. Therefore there is a reason for identity, and non-contradiction, and that is that they state something real and true about the world, and this is why we accept them. So these principles have a real cause of existence, the cause is the way that the world is. The way that the world is causes the existence of these principles. If the world were otherwise, such that it were not describable by these principles, we would not have developed these principles.I'd say that it's simply a matter of identity (that is, A=A) and non-contradiction (that is ~(P&~P)). I wouldn't say that has any cause. — Terrapin Station
Probabilistic language relates to the measurement of the system, not its ontology, which is what the Schrodinger equation describes. — Andrew M
You'd have to copy and paste the argument you're referring to. — Terrapin Station
The argument from Aristotle is that all objects are particulars. Each and every object exists as the particular object which it is, and nothing else. When a particular object comes into existence, it necessarily comes into existence as the particular object which it is. It is impossible that it is other than what it is. Therefore what it is, or the object's essence, must precede the object's existence. If it did not, it would be possible for the object to come into existence as an object other than the object which it is, and this is contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
There's a problem with this argument.
"All objects are particulars."
I agree with that.
"Each and every object exists as the particular object which it is, and nothing else."
I agree with that.
"When a particular object comes into existence, it necessarily comes into existence as the particular object which it is. It is impossible that it is other than what it is."
I agree with that, too.
"Therefore what it is, or the object's essence, must precede the object's existence."
I disagree with that however. First off I disagree with saying that what the object is has anything to do with "essence." You could, however, be saying that you're just defining "essence" as "what an object is," without any of the other typical associations that "essence" has, and that would be fine, but in that case, saying that what an object is must precede the object's existence makes no sense. The object can't be whatever it is prior to it being something (existing) in the first place.
"If it did not, it would be possible for the object to come into existence as an object other than the object which it is, and this is contradictory."
This seems to me like it's probably buying that substances separate from properties can make sense (which is something I disagree with). — Terrapin Station
But I don't at all buy that the fact that a particular is the particular it is implies that there's some prior determining factor for that. I don't think that's been established at all. — Terrapin Station
C'mon, man Don't start to get patronizing. I could easily be patronizing to you, but that's not something I'd do unprovoked. — Terrapin Station
This is all fine, but it has nothing to do with the idea that an object could somehow be something other than the object it is. You'd need to support that particular idea (that it could even make sense). A suggestion as to how you might support it is by giving an example of it (that hopefully makes some sense). — Terrapin Station
Are spatial and temporal relations the only relations that you consider to be real? — aletheist
Are they? That seems more like nominalism than realism. I lean toward the latter, as I believe you do, and was merely suggesting that there is a distinction between haecceity and essence. It may be just another Peircean terminological preference on my part, like limiting "existence" to actuality. — aletheist
A big "Huh???" there. That seems like quite a non sequitur. — Terrapin Station
I don't buy that there are immaterial, nonphysical existents period. In my view, the very idea of nonphysical existents is incoherent. — Terrapin Station
At T1, X wouldn't be anything if it has no material presence. — Terrapin Station
That's due to the simple fact that what properties are in the first place is identical to (dynamic structures and relations of) matter. Properties are simply what matter/those dynamic structures are relations of matter are "like," the qualities they have, the way they interact with other things, etc. You can't have that if you don't have the dynamic structures and relations of matter in question. — Terrapin Station
There's no reason to wonder why something comes to be as some particular and not something else unless we can even make sense out of that idea. — Terrapin Station
Agreed, I was just suggesting an example that is more familiar to most people than haecceity; especially since I tend to think of the latter as the distinct property that only actual things have, so that I am not inclined to equate it with essence myself. Instead, it is the brute "here and now" aspect of any individual thing that reacts with other individual things. — aletheist
Quantum interference effects are real and are predicted by Schrodinger's equation. You won't find any mention of possibilities or probabilities in the Schrodinger equation. — Andrew M
Okay, but it's important to clarify that nothing belonging to the object exists prior to the object, nothing that's at all a property of the object, because the object in no way exists prior to the object. — Terrapin Station
So then we could say that the essence or haecceity of an object can exist prior to the object, in this particular, idiosyncratic sense of those terms, as long as people exist and they imagine that there could be something like a particular object (and then once an object obtains, people count it as that particular object), but this would only go for a very small percentage of objects (people don't pre-imagine most of the objects in the world), and it would only be the case that essence or haecceity exist prior to the object in question relative to the object in question. That is, essence or haecceity wouldn't precede existence in general/unqualified, because it turns out that people have to exist in order for them to imagine things. So existence comes first in general. In the history of the world, there's nothing like this sense of essence or haecceity until life begins and people evolve, so that we can have people who imagine objects and then who count objects that obtain or that they become aware of after their imagining, as the objects they imagined — Terrapin Station
Was Aristotle even a substance dualist? He thought the soul and body were of the same substance, so he couldn't be? — AcesHigh
No. The words refer to the idea you have, your imagination of it. — Terrapin Station
Only real superposition states can cause real interference effects. — Andrew M
That's not what you're saying with "essence precedes existence," though, is it? — Terrapin Station
It's unintelligible how the human mind skips the 99% of bad moves - without doing any calculation - and focuses on calculating just the 1% potentially useful moves. And yet, what the human mind does when it does this is intelligent - even though it appears foolish. — Agustino
Yes it appears intelligent to me because I think it is good, even though I can't specify how it is good. — Agustino
Not really. For example, I believe that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead as specified in the New Testament, and yet I maintain that such an event is incomprehensible and entirely unintelligible to me. Yet it appears intelligent to me to believe in it because it resonates with my soul - there's no real rational reason for it. — Agustino
So what about MW does not make sense, or is mistaken, on your view? — Andrew M
Is this for real? Is this for example about deception: — Agustino
Explain this to me please. The act may be intelligent to me, but not also intelligible. For example, I don't understand how specifically it will help me, but yet I still believe it will, and hence it appears to be intelligent to me. — Agustino
Okay, but if the object in question only comes into existence at T2, then that particular object doesn't have its essence (or haecceity) at T1, right? — Terrapin Station
How does this follow? Nietzsche and me are challenging precisely this - that something has to be intelligible in order to be intelligent. I disagree - it doesn't. — Agustino
But acting unintelligibly isn't necessarily acting unintelligently. — Agustino
This has nothing to do with hiding your true motives at all. I don't see how you'd draw that conclusion... In fact I do see how it follows. It follows only if we both accept the premise that what is intelligent must also be intelligible. — Agustino
How is it deception? Why is it that an action is deceptive if it's not intelligible? It's deceptive only for the person who expects and demands that you act intelligibly, but to say so, is merely to assume that one should be the kind of logician Nietzsche criticises. — Agustino
Ah--so you're just getting at the idea of platonic forms, basically? I don't at all buy that ontologically. Only dynamic structures/relations of matter exist, and they're all particulars. (I'm using "exist" there so that it encompasses everything there is in any sense.) So if there was haecceity, or essence, or anything like that, it would necessarily be dynamic structures/relations of matter. Or it would BE a particular object. In my ontology there are no (real) abstracts. Abstracts are concrete mental occurrences--that is, particular concepts held by individuals. — Terrapin Station
Which is what I'm referring to by (1) (It was my formulation after all!--you can't tell me what it was referring to contra what I had in mind!). There is no object to have haecceity prior to the object ___ing to have haecceity. (I used a "blank" because I don't want to fill in a word that you'll misunderstand--whatever you call it. The object has to ____ in order to have haecceity) — Terrapin Station
As a nominalist, what's inexplicable is that anyone would have difficulty with why an object is that particular object versus whatever else it could be in their view.) — Terrapin Station
There can't be a something of an object prior to there being the object in question. — Terrapin Station
Right, you're saying that (1) obtains prior to the object coming to be, which is what makes it contradictory. There's no object to have an essence prior to the object coming to be. — Terrapin Station
That's better known as haecceity. If in your definition, "essence" is the same as "haecceity" I'd say that there is "Metaphysician Undercover 'essence'," but I'd add that's it's incoherent to say that it's anything other than the object itself, so it can't exist (or subsist, or whatever tortured verbiage we'd need to use to refer to it) aside from the object, and I'd also add that it's every single property of the object itself (which makes it not map well to "essence" in its conventional definition rather than your definition). — Terrapin Station
That I don't at all agree with. I wouldn't say that we reproduce it at all, and we certainly wouldn't reproduce every single property of it. Rather than reproducing it, we perceive it (from a particular reference point only), we either file it with respect to concepts we've already formulated and/or we formulate new concepts about it, etc. — Terrapin Station
You'd not be able to reproduce every single property of it. — Terrapin Station
Take other examples. Someone falling prey to his cognitive biases may consistently perform action X better than someone who doesn't. Yet this seems befuddling and strange - indeed unintelligible. But acting unintelligibly isn't necessarily acting unintelligently. This raises a significant problem. We typically consider our actions, and plan our life whether in mundane affairs, or in more daring goals - at least in modern society - by attempting to be intelligible at all costs. But if what is unintelligible isn't necessarily unintelligent, then does it not follow that we are cutting ourselves off from options which may be intelligent? How must we change the way we operate in order to profit, rather than be harmed from unintelligibility? — Agustino
Again, I don't want to quibble over Descartes - it's really not important, that's not the topic of this thread. Descartes served merely as an example - merely as the representative figure for modern philosophy - he's not known as the Father of it for nothing is he? — Agustino
This is akin to saying that the heliocentric model makes accurate predictions but it's an ad hoc assumption to suppose the model implies that the earth orbits the sun. — Andrew M
(1) is the object being something--an object with an essence. So (2) contradicts (1). — Terrapin Station
I'm an anti-realist on essences. Essences are merely a way we think about objects--basically they're our conceptual abstractions, our universals/type categories. So yeah, that's different than an object itself, since objects themselves have no essences. — Terrapin Station
Of course directly shared experience might be nonsense, but experience is obviously shared via language or we would be unable to communicate effectively about anything. — John
Personally I think your analyses are anything but true, but if you are happy with them, that's up to you. — John
There is no point continuing this, I think. You insist that something must be either internal or external; subjective or objective. I don't think in those terms; for me objectivity consists only in inter-subjectivity; which is neither external nor internal. I don't see knowledge as merely the "experience of subjects" that is your prejudicial reading of what I have said; I see knowledge as the shared experience of subjects. — John
What I will say though is that the idea is not rightly thought of as an object, the ideas cannot be objectified, because then this leads to the familiar silly questions about 'where they exist', 'is the idea of green itself green', 'is there a perfect form of ugliness' and so on. The point is we can talk about beauty, goodness and truth in terms of how they are in our lives, how we think about them, how we feel them, what kinds of experiences they are associated with, an so on, without having to explain what they are in themselves, or worrying about the question as to whether they are in themselves; without, that is without objectifying them. — John
In the next paragraph you go on about a "difficulty" with the very idea of "the way we use words", which I presume would be extended to 'how we experience things', and refer to this idea as an "unjustified generalizations". All this seems to completely contradict what you were saying in the first paragraph. — John
Now I do agree that we are each unique and that there are differences in how we use words and experience things. But there are also commonalities, and when we refer to conventional usage we are certainly referring to "something outside our individual minds"; I haven't anywhere denied this. The point is that the phrase "the way we use words" as I intended to use it refers to just theses conventional usages, so it seems you have completely misunderstood what i have been saying. You say the conventional ways we use words, being external to our minds, do not reflect the "way we think about them" because the latter is "something within our minds". I think this is greatly mistaken. We learn languages consisting of conventional usages; we introject these languages, and so, of course, they come to mediate, if not completely determine, what and how we think. There is no clear and coherent delineation between what is 'outside' and what is 'inside' our minds. — John
If there's an object with an essence, than the object is something (an object with an essence). — Terrapin Station
I still suggest that using the term "existence" in these two different senses is counterproductive. I would say, instead, that the essence of the object has being separate from the object prior to the object's existence--i.e., esse in futuro. This also avoids the objection that the essence of the object must itself be an (existing) object; the mode of its (real) being is not actual, it is potential. — aletheist
First, that's just a claim--it's not really an argument. — Terrapin Station
If essence is "what an object is," then it's contradictory to say that "what an object is" obtains prior to the object existing. — Terrapin Station
An object can't be something prior to that object coming to be. That would be the case just as well under strong determininsm. — Terrapin Station
"What object x is prior to object x existing" is simply incoherent nonsense. — Terrapin Station
What would be the motivation for positing additional subsistents (or whatever you want to call them), one per particular, that existents then fulfill by existing? In other words, why in the world would anyone believe that? — Terrapin Station
I disagree with that however. First off I disagree with saying that what the object is has anything to do with "essence." You could, however, be saying that you're just defining "essence" as "what an object is," without any of the other typical associations that "essence" has, and that would be fine, but in that case, saying that what an object is must precede the object's existence makes no sense. The object can't be whatever it is prior to it being something (existing) in the first place. — Terrapin Station
This seems to me like it's probably buying that substances separate from properties can make sense (which is something I disagree with). — Terrapin Station
How do we analyze beauty, goodness and truth other than by analyzing the way we think about them. which includes the way we use the words, as you already said? The way we use the words reflects what we think about them, that is how we judge them to be in our lives. Can you think of any other way to analyze them? — John
But the point of naturalism is to try to explain things without the use of other-worldy, "supernatural" forces. There is no supernaturalism required to explain the existence of planes - humans created them. All x must come from not-x. So far so good. So "LIFE" cannot come from life. It had to start somewhere. And so Life came from non-Life. And yet what is this non-Life? — darthbarracuda
The naturalist will say it came from inorganic matter. The supernaturalist will say it came from something else, like a god or something. But this is a clear case of simple ignorance. Naturalism doesn't have to know everything, it merely has to say "I don't know" and try its best to figure it out. Whereas alternatives are simply god-of-the-gaps arguments. — darthbarracuda
Lamarck's not done for yet - he passed some of his characteristics on to later generations ;). — Wayfarer
