Sounds like Rod Serling opening an Outer Limits episode. — Mww
Would you like me to construct a half-decent argument for your position whilst I'm at it? — S
Isn't there pretty widespread agreement about, say, characteristics of Santa Claus or vampires? Or pretty widespread agreement about the Beatles being a good band?
Neither is any closer to being correct, especially not objectively so. — Terrapin Station
This is a confusing example, because isn't it your position that ALL utterances are subjective? If definitions are subjective can anything be said that is NOT subjective?
So since religious people take certain claims to be objective, that is the "exact same" as someone claiming that words have consistent meaning?
I think I am missing your point? — ZhouBoTong
Why should a student NOT be allowed to argue (and actually win / get credit) any wrong answer on a test, because that is what the question "meant" to them?
2 + 2 = 5? Well I interpreted = to mean equal plus 1. Why am I not allowed to do that? — ZhouBoTong
No time “telling”, no temporal reference frame, time itself becomes nothing.
— Mww
It doesn't follow that time becomes "nothing", that conclusion is merely a dim reflection in the dark mirror of your prejudicial thinking. Time becomes untold is all. If time were "nothing" then what would there be to be told in the first place? — Janus
If we say something about a river, we're not talking about something that is itself language...
That's only if we focus on the utterance as an utterance. — Terrapin Station
I think I am fine with all of that. I would say that any single experience I have is subjective, but it can be made more objective by comparing it to other people who have had similar experiences. Isn't that a major part of the scientific method? I can agree that experience is how we learn. Heck, I would even say that experience has taught me that the rock will still be there when humans are gone because when I leave a room and return, everything is still there (I get there could be some crazy supernatural or just plain weird stuff going on, but extraordinary claims blah, blah... it seems simplest to assume it all just stayed there vs thinking it disappears and re-appears every time I blink). — ZhouBoTong
You all get in a lot of responses each day. I try to read everything, but apologize for any overlaps. — ZhouBoTong
Regarding my conversation with S., in this thread, just for the record, that conversation ended by S. being asked what he meant, and being unable to tell what he meant. — Michael Ossipoff
But a strength of my argument is that I'm not saying anything controversial on the face of it. — S
If the idealist can't even handle a hypothetical scenario of a rock (as defined by the dictionary) after we've died, then that's a big failing for idealism. I'm not suggesting that they can't bite the bullet, I'm suggesting that it's wrong to. It's a failing if you have to go to such lengths in order to explain away something as simple and easily understandable as post-human rocks. — S
Again, what would the guy on the street think? He'd get it straight away, wonder why you were making such a fuss, and think you peculiar. — S
So idealism has to invent a whole new way of interpreting language just to account for it's wacky premise? Why should we speak their peculiar language? These problems stem back to the wacky idealist premise, do they not? Isn't that the real problem? — S
I seem to recall (oh oh....memory trust again) you agree with S, there is a rock, in the future without observers. If so, what is the ground of your reason? — Mww
Maybe it suggests evidence of "something that occurs independently of us"? That was my point. Clearly, we all know that facts are not determined by democracy. — ZhouBoTong
But is that tacit entitlement for an affirmative truth claim with respect to the physical reality of future objects? Is the logic that it wouldn’t disappear serve as truth that it would still exist? — Mww
That is the predication of my whole argument: if there can be no truth statements if humans are gone, then the truth statement “there are rocks when humans are gone” cannot be made. No truth value can be assigned to a truth statement impossible to make. There very well may be rocks, but no true statement can be made about that existential condition, which includes “there will be rocks”.
Maybe there will be rocks is not a consideration a truth statement admits. — Mww
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