Why does it have to be the exact same time to be the same photons? Do the photons turn into other photons over time? — Marchesk
There might be a way to emit and capture the same photons in a very controlled setting, while bouncing them off two surfaces made to have the reflect the same wavelength. — Marchesk
You're asking me whether the same photons bounce off different surfaces? — Marchesk
Not if they reflect exactly the same wavelength of light. — Marchesk
Things can have identical properties, such as color, under nominalism, — DingoJones
But that's begging the question. — Marchesk
How do we know two numerically distinct things can't be identical in some manner that would contradict nominalism? — Marchesk
We have tomatoe 1 and tomato 2. If they both have exactly the same color, then isn't that an identical property that nominalism says can't exist? — Marchesk
So all it would take to disprove nominalism is to find a numerically distinct thing that was identical for some property or function? — Marchesk
So Data wouldn't present a problem to you, because he could tell you he was conscious, and back that up with convincing behavior? — Marchesk
I don't know that I can agree with that. How would they functionally be different for such a simple case? You're saying that there can never be an exact duplicate function across different physical subtrates. — Marchesk
That might work, but would you extend that to different computers performing addition? — Marchesk
I don't think we're doing exactly the same thing as a calculator/computer when we add two, — Marchesk
However, I think the argument is that functionalism is a kind of dualism, because it's something additional to the physical substrate. — Marchesk
What we see, i.e. the input signals we receive, create some kind of model in our heads, i.e. an abstraction of the physical world. — alcontali
This is because logical possibility is based on the nature of being, not on contingent restrictions as physical possibility is. For example, the reason for the logical principle of noncontradiction is that it is impossible to instantiate a contradiction in reality. On the other hand, the laws of nature are contingent and need to be discovered empirically. — Dfpolis
You presumably mean that in your current human mind's eye with your current language and current psychological construct of 'time', your sentence 'makes sense' to 'like minded' humans ? — fresco
Mad magazine, a US institution famous for the grinning face of jug-eared, tiny-eyed mascot Alfred E Neuman, is to stop being a regular fixture of newsstands — Amity
A pragmatist might ask why 'the physical world' is not also 'a language object'. Why is 'physicality' not merely 'a set of experiential expectancies' associated with those aspects of human physiology we call 'the senses'? — fresco
One major problem is, of course, that R is actually unknown. As Immanuel Kant famously quipped: Das Ding an sich ist ein Unbekänntes. (The thing in itself is an unknown). — alcontali
The issue is "meaning". I think there is far more meaning in two extremely complex things like DNA which happen to match, than there is in the correlation between a proposition and a state of affairs. In comparison, the correlation between a proposition and a state of affairs is extremely simplistic, while the correlation between replicated DNA is extremely complex. Don't you think that the complex correlation is far more meaningful than the simplistic correlation? — Metaphysician Undercover
I've been trying to avoid responding here beyond offering brief comments because time is precious for me at the moment. So I'll keep it as short as possible. — Janus
There are two senses of 'fact': facts as verbal statements and facts as ostensive ontological propositions or conceptions of states of affairs. States of affairs are propositional in the sense that they are always given, even prior to their expressions, in the form that 'such and such is the case'. The verbal propositional equivalent is just the expression of what is already recognized to be the case. The fact need not be expressed, but it is always already in propositional form by virtue of its recognition as fact nonetheless. — Janus
A phenomenalist says that all there is, is properties. — frank
Agreed. Judgements are not described as truth. — Mww
But when we say two shirts are the same, isn't this a kind of shorthand for saying that the pattern, color, size, etc. are the same? The sameness you're talking about is under the umbrella of universals. I think your nominalism is sort of shabby chic. — frank
Imagine a dream in which the scenery comes into existence spontaneously with the flow of the dream. It wasn't there before the action takes place, but having come into being, the dreamer flows on with the rock solid assumption that the landscape it takes place in was always there. The dream gives itself its own history. When the dream characters interact, they all draw from this solid ground they find themselves in. And every word they speak is reinforcing and recreating that landscape moment by moment.
I think to some extent this is what we mean by form of life. Now that is doing something with words. — frank
When DNA replicates, it's quite clear that something is making a correlation between distinct things. If there was no correlation, it would not be a replication. So if agency is necessary to draw correlations between distinct things, then agency must be involved in DNA replication. — Metaphysician Undercover
