First, I’d have to have a reason for so doing, — Mww
Correct. The support is in the theory. Or, the support is the theory. And, as we all know, good theory must be falsifiable. — Mww
Are you aware of all the options within the given amount of time? If you were, then how could you ever make the wrong choice? — Harry Hindu
I don't see how that is possible — Harry Hindu
The naturally occurring information impressed on sense as appearance is a different form than the procedural information in the brain that gives representation of the appearance. — Mww
I'm saying that it is because you can only choose options you are aware of. — Harry Hindu
But if you could somehow see space-time...but couldn't see matter, could you put it the other way, ie
'matter isn't a thing in itself, it just supervenes on space-time and its relationships' ? — wax
2. We assume N and only N. (= ex nihilo)
3. We assume (hypothetically) some (existing) object. (creatio ex nihilo) — Pippen
In dreams, that which appears is the contents of consciousness.
In conscious awareness, that which appears are intuitions representing sensory impressions — Mww
I guess it's more the idea that the faster we develop various avenues, the faster we get weary of it.. — schopenhauer1
Direct experience or first person subjective. Which is the only thing there is. — Nobody
There is only one reference frame. The frame of the observer. — Nobody
We assume that there is appearances in one hand and in the other hand there is objective medium sourcing these appearances..but what are this so called objective medium but another appearance!. — Nobody
A way to think of it is that we don't perceive form or matter, we perceive substances (like apples, people, etc.) Those substance have properties (form) that can be identified. But a substance is more than a formalism, it is also material - the substance pushes back when you push on it. This is Aristotle's hylomorphism. — Andrew M
I do not think that what you have said actually is in accordance with common usage of "rule". A rule is a principle, so to learn a rule is to learn a principle. When one person imitates another, that person is copying. To copy another is not to learn the rule, we learn this in grade school. That's why copying is not allowed. We must each learn the rules, the principles involved in what we are being taught, and copying from another does not qualify as learning the rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
According to normal usage conventionally established patterns of behavior are rules. Think of the road rule: drive on the left hand side of the road (in Australia). If one consistently drives on the left hand side of the road merely on account of following what everyone else does; that is following a rule. Standing in queues is another example. — Janus
But seriously, csalisbury has a point. Why build a philosophical theory of language without consulting history to see whether there is evidence humans actually acquired language that way? — Marchesk
And I do not expect you to agree with me. This is, after all, philosophy. However I think we can both see that we're at the point where we basically believe or do not believe a proposition, and we're kind of at the part where we're just asserting our belief -- we have tried to show the other what we mean, but failed. — Moliere
