OK, the challenge is to come up with something that is both a) inexpressible, and b) whose inexpressibility can be explained. It also ought to be something worth worrying about, — J
Numbers exist. 2 is a number, therefore there are numbers. — Banno
For example, the Pythagorean theorem exists in the sense that it belongs in Euclidean geometry. Surely it did not come into existence before someone in the Pythagorean school invented it. But it has been in conceptual existence, i.e. in geometry, ever since. Not that geometry has an autonomous existence, i.e. that it subsists independently of being thought about. It is just that we make the indispensable pretence that constructs exist provided they belong in some body of ideas—which is a roundabout fashion of saying that constructs exist as long as there are rational beings capable of thinking them up. Surely this mode of existence is neither ideal existence (or existence in the Realm of Ideas) nor real or physical existence. To invert Plato’s cave metaphor we may say that ideas are but the shadows of things—and shadows, as is well known, have no autonomous existence. — Mario Bunge
In that spirit, we haven't explained its inexpressibility as much as exhibited it.If something is inexpressible, then by that very fact one cannot say why... Doing so would be to give expression to the inexpressible. — Banno
What? I'm not buying it. — Arcane Sandwich
Me either. It should be
2 is a number
Therefore there are numbers.
Hence numbers exist.
Which is an instance of f(a) ⊢ ∃x(f(x))
I thought we'd agreed on this. — Banno
If folk want to say that, in addition, Pegasus is in the stables down the road, it's up to them to present their case. — Banno
Yes, Pegasus exists, in that Pegasus is the subject of a quantification. — Banno
Are they "out there", like apples and trees are? That's the actual "existence debate", — Arcane Sandwich
"Apples and trees"—a number of apples and trees—how many? So of course, number is out there if apples and trees are. So, number is out there—are numbers out there? That's a different question, no? — Janus
Yes, Pegasus exists, in that Pegasus is the subject of a quantification. — Banno
No, my beef is with the term "existence", which I think we should retire from the field with all due honors. Same for "real". I believe we will learn a lot more about the concepts that those terms try to refer to, if we stop the endless, unresolvable bickering about them. — J
What would happen if we tried to reframe the "existence" question in terms of structure, grounding, and quantification, retaining full rights to claim metaphysical truth, but did so without once using the term "exist"? — J
The words "exist" and "existence" cause nothing but trouble, because they call like Sirens to philosophers — J
People who think only physical stuff exists -- materialists, in other words -- are the same people who often want to say that "rights" and "truth" and "justice" also don't exist. — J
So wouldn't what you say provide reason for going in the other direction - for showing that rights and truth and justice do exist? — Banno
People who think only physical stuff exists -- materialists, in other words -- are the same people who often want to say that "rights" and "truth" and "justice" also don't exist. — J
So wouldn't what you say provide reason for going in the other direction - for showing that rights and truth and justice do exist? — Banno
As a materialist, I can confidently say the existence of rights, truth and justice is not incompatible with the materialist premises and conclusions of my philosophy. — Arcane Sandwich
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