I doubt if there are primitive 'thingers' in philosophy today, even in phenomenology, having a specific method of analysis. Therefore the concept of a thing needs a more precise definition. The thing as I see it is a phenomenon; the thing as I believe, theorize is some quantity of energy, God's creation or what comes to a theoretical/religious/mystical mind. 'Unthinging' of our reality doesn't do anything good to it.Things require thingers...
The problem with 'common sense' is that it assumes language to be representational of 'extant permanent objects'... — fresco
The thesis here is that 'existence' is a word used by humans regarding what is 'a useful concept'....nothing more ! — fresco
To me reality is more than just a word. As a word 'reality' is a channel to 'aletheia'. Words have two functions: a) to connect two different, communicating aletheias, b) to connect mind and things in a personal aletheia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aletheia'Reality'...? That is just another word used in social contexts to denote agreement about 'what is the case'.
Anyone who seriously thinks/believes that nothing exists prior to human awareness of it has lost their fucking mind. — creativesoul
I think of the relationship between reality and the personal momentary impression of utility like the direction of water molecules in the path of a water stream. Each molecule has a direction and is a quantity of water. However, it may or may not be consistent with the overall direction of the surrounding volume of water. And if it is inconsistent, it is likely that it will be altered, numerous times, with the overall tendency to follow the same path as the rest. Or not, but more likely, it will. The surrounding volume of water also may deviate from the total turn of the stream, due to an obstacle, for example. But ultimately, it will probably join with the rest. Or not, but usually it does. And if it does, by the time it does, the stream may have changed direction.I don't define it. It is a concept which denotes 'utility' of another concept and the utility of all concepts is relative to human needs. — fresco
One could similarly argue that conceptualization is extrapolation of form derived from sensory experiences. You might then claim that you don't have concepts, but delusional elaboration of your senses. But if the concepts, sensory experiences, and the phenomena which cause them are joined in through methodical interactions, existence can be claimed in the usual way - through observational verification.Some concepts imply expectance of lasting physicality and others do not. Concepts are denoted by 'words' whose abstract permanence suggests permanence of "objects' relative to human experience. — fresco
Concepts are like self-fulfilling prophecies. In the event of contention, each side assumes it is consistent with the human condition on a larger scale. Each side fights for recognition and self-affirmation, until the "correct" belief is justified if it becomes testable, and compels a wider consensus. Then, the relativistic conceptualization transcends its boundaries. Realism is a statement, that such convergence is inevitable.But concepts are all we've got ! — fresco
mathematical model — fresco
Words mediate concepts in our thought process, but they are not in themselves concepts. The interpretations of words require an interpreter and a universe, where the interpretation is "acted". The interpreter and context are not compelled into existence by language. If the interpreter acts irrationally by virtue of its conceptual understanding, it will face increased adversity. This decreases its odds for successful function (biological, social, etc). Even if very slowly, this will gradually eliminate or rectify the interpretation (by changing or destroying the interpretation bearer, its culture, its species, etc).I think you are avoiding the notion that all 'concepts' are denoted by 'words' which are socially acquired. — fresco
They have a lot more in common, like culture, economy, ecological factors. Delusions are frequently part of the majority point of view. But they must still be acted out in ways that remain practical. Without practicality, a delusion will be self-destructive. As the technological and anthropological needs of a society increase, prior delusions lose practicality and are removed from majority consensus. New delusions appear in their stead, but reality does gradually settle in.Convergent consensus may be inevitable, but only to the extent that human language users have large parts of their physiology in common. — fresco
Einstein did not invent special/general relativity, just to break the mold. There were good and eminent physical reasons to do it (such as the relative consistency between the speed of electromagnetic waves and the rate of other physical phenomena in all reference frames), and there was already a vigorous debate concerning the meaning of time and space, before Einstein. Similarly, there were discussions about the wave and corpuscular nature of light prior to QM. There was of course conservatism, resistance to change, etc, but in both cases, empirical data prompted the developments in the conceptual model, not aesthetics.Now, it may be, that an 'uncommon physiology' like the brain of Einstein, can deconstruct previously 'useful' concepts like 'time', thereby triggering a paradigm shift with its associated 'concept/language revision'. — fresco
every assertion evokes its negation. — fresco
'absolute existence' — fresco
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