Who is the one being unreasonable? — Metaphysician Undercover
Correct, but "length" is a measurement, and a thing only has a measurement if it's been measured. To say that it has a measurement without having been measured is contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that this specific rock would exist at some times after all the people are dead, and at other times after all the people are dead, it would not exist? So, after all the people are dead, if it is to be either true or false that the specific rock exists "an hour" after all the people are dead, then some one must interpret, "an hour", and measure "an hour" after all the people are dead. Therefore it is a nonsensical question, because the rock exists at sometimes and other times it does not exist, and there is no one to interpret "an hour", and to measure "an hour", to see how this relates to the existence of the rock. The rock may or may not exist "an hour" after all the people are dead, and it is meaningless nonsense to ask such a question. To presuppose that the question may be answered is to presuppose something impossible, something contradictory, that "an hour" can be interpreted and measured when there is no one to interpret and measure. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ooh, that's a toughie. You. Your fake conversation between us misrepresents what I'd say. Straight away, I wouldn't even say, "That rock has a measurement". I would say something along the lines of what I have been saying throughout the discussion, not what you've been so desperately trying to get me to say, or what you've simply been imagining me to say. I would say that the rock is of a certain length, and that that length could be 10cm, but that without measuring it, we won't know whether it's 10cm, even if it is. — S
This is not correct. A thing has length if it is measurable, it is measurable if it has length. It need not be measured to have length, In fact it must have length (i.e. be measurable) in order to be measured. — Janus
This is insane. It serves only as an example of very bad logic: a test for someone to analyse, identify the errors, and write up an explanation. Besides that, it is of no value.
Thanks for all of these tests, I suppose. I remain as sharp as ever. — S
No, the length is the measurement. The object is measured, and the measurement is the length, 10cm, or whatever. Whether or not an object is measurable is irrelevant to its actual length. What is relevant to its length is actual measurement. You are simply making stuff up. Welcome to the S group, fabricators of fictitious fantasies. — Metaphysician Undercover
The rock is not "of a certain length" until the length has been ascertained. To say that it is, is contradiction plain and simple. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you really believe that it is "of a certain length", then tell me who is certain of the length? — Metaphysician Undercover
What are you supposing here, that the rock is certain of its own length? — Metaphysician Undercover
Ok. So if some properties are measured, some meaning follows necessarily from those measurements, but the meaning itself is not a measurement. If that is true, then how can we tell whether the meaning belongs to the measurement or to the EMR? Just like if we measure the sides of a four-sided geometric figure and the measurements provide the same units means the figure is a square, does “square” reside in the figure or the equal measures? — Mww
If what you claim were true, then we could not be wrong in any of our measurements. The fact that multiple measurements can be taken completely independently and without any knowledge of prior measurements, and yet will unfailingly be found to agree with one another with a very small margin of error (given that all the measurements are correct, of course!) proves the point. — Janus
It is not S or me who is "fabricating fantasies"; in fact that's one of the most egregious examples of projection I have come across. Leaves me wondering if this is wilful intellectual dishonesty or rank stupidity. Be ashamed, be very ashamed! — Janus
A thing has length if it is measurable, it is measurable if it has length. — Janus
Nope, not by my logic, plain and simple. By your logic, plain and simple. Your logic is bad logic which I reject. — S
This is one of your fundamental errors: confusing your logic for mine. — S
That's right: a premise! And whose premise is it? Is it yours? Is it mine? Is it a premise that we both agree on? Bearing this in mind, whose logic leads to contradiction? Does my logic internally lead to contradiction? Yes or no? — S
Let me know if you've figured it out. — S
Very funny. I'm guessing that you don't see why that's a funny question to ask me, and you'll expect me to explain it to you, like you expect me to explain everything, no matter how simple or obvious it is to anyone with half a brain. Nah. I don't think so. Try to figure it out for yourself. It is not good that you need to be spoon fed everything, like a little baby. — S
Before science there were humans that perceived blue things. Before geometry there were humans that perceived equi-sided formations. — Mww
Even if we can say truthfully the scientific or geometric properties resided in the objects before we knew of them, we can truthfully only say so after the discovery of it. — Mww
Blue things were blue long before wavelengths and frequencies were determinable, or even practically necessary. Square things were square long before geometers determined what it means to be square. — Mww
Because these things were perceived beforehand, the specific properties for these things are not required for them to be understood. — Mww
That is the same as saying the real parts of these things are not required for the understanding of them, for the knowing of them for what they are merely by means of their appearance. — Mww
A gal who wants a shade of blue for the nursery doesn’t give a crap about the frequency of it, and the guy setting tile in the hallway doesn’t give a crap about the fact of four equal angles, but both of them know what they want from each of those things, have an expectation from these things because of their appearance and NOT from their respective properties. — Mww
There is no suspicion in claiming to be a realist, the negation of which is absurd, but the denial of idealism which necessarily accompanies it, is highly suspicious. As long as an otherwise normally functioning human thinks, he is an idealist of some kind. Simply knowing something about blue and squares and all the rest, that cannot be derived, nor does not need to be derived, from its physical properties presupposes a source of knowledge having nothing to do with the empirical realism, that being merely the occassion. — Mww
.”Translation:
“I can’t define it.” “— Michael Ossipoff
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I went over this. Your reply is nonresponsive and doesn't progress the discussion. Whether I can or can't, defining it isn't necessary if we understand the meaning…
., which we do.
.”1. You point to a cabinet whose contents are unknown, and say “Is a rock there?” “ — Michael Ossipoff
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And you're going to pretend that you don't understand what is being asked there?
.”2. Or you say “Is there the rock that I referred to, after everyone dies?”. (“Exists that rock?”)” — Michael Ossipoff
.”Those are two entirely different kinds of question, and “There is…” is being used entirely differently, with a different meaning. (..an unknown or absent meaning, in #2)” — Michael Ossipoff
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The part about existence is no different in either. They're just two different scenarios, two different contexts,
.…and you understand what's being asked in both cases
.”As you meant it when you asked if there still is that rock after everyone has died, “There is” means “Exists”.
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“Exists that rock, after everyone has died?” accurately translates your question.
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It’s a matter of whether or not you can define “Exist”. “ — Michael Ossipoff
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It doesn't make a difference if you use "is" or "exists", as they have the same meaning per my usage here.
.And nope, it's just a matter of whether what I'm saying is understandable…
I don't see how that proves your point. It just indicates that the numerous people measuring the same object use the same standards, and therefore come up with the same measurement of that object. Are you familiar with length contraction in relativity theory. Length is dependent on the frame of reference. If relativity theory is true, it proves my point, length is a product of the measurement. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, defining our terms is necessary. Without that, philosophy becomes meaningless, muddled gibberish.
If you can’t define it, then you don’t know its meaning, and that supports my claim that it doesn’t have one. — Michael Ossipoff
What you’re saying (what you’re asking in your OP question) is meaningless.
…and, not having a meaning, it also doesn’t have an understandable meaning. — Michael Ossipoff
.....has no greater power than mere conjecture, a contingent possibility, because no conditions are given to sustain any prediction. Because of the technical difficulty intrinsic to color, simply observing one of them enables no predictions whatsoever about their physical properties. You couldn’t even ascertain the fact color is EMR, much less predict anything about the behavior of it from the observation of rainbows. Even saying if you knew enough is catastrophically inept, because it raises the question....how much is enough. If you knew x and y and from those predicted z, z remains no more than reasonable expectation until some other condition is satisfied, as in, experiment or accident. A caveman sees green grass and predicts it is fresh, but only because he has seen brown grass that deer never eat. Just because he knows the grass is green at night, does not allow him to predict the sun is partly responsible for fresh grass. Faraday might have the unconfirmed hypothetical for electric lines, but without the rational appeal to a very specific experiment, he would have had no reason to suppose them. And even then, he got it wrong by requiring a medium.....knew enough to make a prediction or a guess about the properties of blue objects or geometric shapes, then I could speak unconfirmed truths about them. — S
if I knew that the colour blue consists in visible light from within a certain range of wavelength, and I knew that we could measure wavelengths in nanometres, then I could make a complete guess and say that the colour blue has a range of between 450 and 495 nanometres, and if I said that, then I would be speaking a truth prior to the discovery of that fact. — S
At least you seem to have moved on from much of your illogic to focus on trivial semantics. That's progress of a sort, I suppose. Let's just agree to disagree, as I don't really care about your opinion on the semantics here, and it doesn't seem worth arguing over. If your semantics is anything like your illogic, then it will leave much to be desired. — S
You continue to conflate length with measurement. — Janus
Is an anaconda longer than a maggot? Of course it is, and you don't need to measure them to see that. — Janus
Does the "length contraction" that accords with Relativity theory occur regardless of whether it is measured? If it didn't then how would it ever be discovered? — Janus
Unconfirmed truth is a contradiction in terms. No truth is unconfirmed and that which is either rationally or empirically unconfirmed cannot be a truth. That which is true now and will be under congruent circumstance is a necessary truth empirically, or a logical truth rationally. Substantiated hypotheticals can lead to reasonable predictions, but truths absolutely must meet the criteria of knowledge. — Mww
To that I simply would say: "how do you know; you haven't been there"?"without an observer, nothing exists" — ZhouBoTong
What? You just now realized that my objection to your thought experiment is based in semantics? — Metaphysician Undercover
Oh look, a non sequitur. — S
To that I simply would say: "how do you know; you haven't been there"? — Janus
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