Essential attributes and accidental attibutes are both properties, and properties are universals. — Mitchell
This means that in the case of sense knowledge, the form is still encompassed with the concrete characters which make it particular; and that, in the case of intellectual knowledge, the form is disengaged from all such characters. To understand is to free form completely from matter.
This is an example of the bad thought habit I just highlighted - turning a "soft" contrary into a "hard" contradiction. It is the reductionism you always complain about.
So it is not a problem that knowledge is structured by it having two poles of being - ideas and impressions, concepts and percepts, rationality and empiricism. — apokrisis
It is an important fact that the best mathematical models of psychology support the view that ideas and impressions are not hard contradictions - a dualism - but only a soft or relative state of dichotomisation. — apokrisis
Yet natural philosophy rejects actual dualism. And science supports its immanent understanding of nature. — apokrisis
This is an example of the bad thought habit I just highlighted - turning a "soft" contrary into a "hard" contradiction. It is the reductionism you always complain about. — apokrisis
Science misses something as it rejects a hard division of reality into the material and the immaterial. — apokrisis
TO invoke against a philosopher a mere factual impossibility, a particular historical condition of the intelligence, to say, 'what you offer us is possibly the truth, but our mental structure has become such that we can no longer think in the terms of your truth, for our minds "have changed like our bodies" is no argument at all. It is nevertheless the best that can be opposed to the present rebirth of metaphysics [referring to the renaissance in Thomism in the 20th century]. It is only too true that eternal metaphysic does not fit in with the modern mind, or more exactly that the latter does not fit in with the former. Three centuries of mathematical empiricism have bent the modern mind to a single interest in the invention of engines for the control of phenomena - a conceptual network, which procures for the mind a certain practical domination over, and a deceptive understanding of, nature, where thought is not resolved in being but in the sensible itself.
If Peirce were an "objective idealist" in the sense that you keep wanting to claim, then he would simply be wrong by his own lights. There would have to be something very queer about his thinking. He would have to be contradicting himself. — apokrisis
Aren't there more than one accepted use of the term universal? — creativesoul
If what you say is accurate, then Aristotle does not use it in the same way as a nominalist would. — creativesoul
What's being talked about when the word 'man' is being used is determined wholly by the shared meaning of a community of language users. — creativesoul
That's only a matter of perspective. The other perspective claims that making categorically distinct things, like the sensible and the intelligible (the particular and the universal, material and immaterial), into two poles of one category, with degrees of separation, is the real mistake. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is this form of idealism, the desire to make all things mathematical, which drives this mistake. So of course the mathematics will support it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Three centuries of mathematical empiricism have bent the modern mind to a single interest in the invention of engines for the control of phenomena - a conceptual network, which procures for the mind a certain practical domination over, and a deceptive understanding of, nature, where thought is not resolved in being but in the sensible itself.
Maritain, The Degrees of Knowledge
There's your 'immanent metaphysics' in a nutshell. — Wayfarer
He was hardly a systematic or monolithic thinker. — Wayfarer
The fact that he was an idealist philosophy is something you continually try to deprecate, but it is a fact nonetheless. — Wayfarer
So there are clear rules for forming proper dichotomies. It's not a matter of "perspective". It is an exact mathematical relation. — apokrisis
Mathematics reveals nature's fundamental patterns. — apokrisis
But there are fundamental differences which cannot be expressed as mathematical relations, such as the dichotomy between future and past, the difference between what has been and what has not yet come to be. — Metaphysician Undercover
The patterns of nature are revealed to us before we apply mathematics to them. — Metaphysician Undercover
The past is the constraints on future degrees of freedom. The future is the remaining free possibility that the past hasn't managed to constrain. Of course the definition is reciprocal. — apokrisis
Was that much of nature really revealed by an Aristotelian level of physics? — apokrisis
As I said, you have no description of the qualitative difference between what has already been, and what will have being in the future. What you express is the description of an agent at the present, who has constraints relative to the past, and freedoms relative to the future. You have no description of what it means to be constrained or to be free. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's an example. Say we have hot and cold, as dichotomous terms which define each other, with degrees of difference assumed to be "between" them. By defining hot with not-cold, and cold with not-hot, and degrees of difference, we have no description of those qualiies, what it means to be hot, or what it means to be cold. So if you proceed in this direction now, to define what it means to be hot, and what it means to be cold, you'll see a fundamental difference between them, such that hot and cold are completely distinct ideals which cannot be related through the degrees of difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hot and cold are discrete, while the degrees of difference are continuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
In all such instances there is an incommensurability between the discrete (hot and cold, constraint and freedom) and the continuous (degrees of difference). Incommensurability is beyond the capacity of mathematics. So we have an incommensurability between the continuous existence of the agent at the present, and the two discrete things, constraints of the past, and freedoms of the future. That incommensurability cannot be grasped with mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're missing the point. — Metaphysician Undercover
My account was rather more general than that. — apokrisis
The maths of limits works. My approach explains metaphysically how it could in fact work. It explains in what sense there are limits to approach even if these limits could never be reached. — apokrisis
If one extreme of a dichotomy is defined by its "distance" from the other, then it is both possible always to be measurably moving towards one limit - by measurably moving away from the other limit - while also never arriving at this other limit, as then that would result in the nonsensical claim of having left the other limit "completely behind". The other limit would have to have vanished. And what then could measure a distance from it? — apokrisis
What makes the measurement meaningful is its relationship to something outside the category of the things being measured. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aren't there more than one accepted use of the term universal?
— creativesoul
There's more than one use of the term, though I'm not sure what 'accepted' adds here. — Andrew M
If what you say is accurate, then Aristotle does not use it in the same way as a nominalist would.
— creativesoul
Right. — Andrew M
What's being talked about when the word 'man' is being used is determined wholly by the shared meaning of a community of language users.
— creativesoul
Yes. So would you say that the ordinary use of the word 'man' is more accurately described by Aristotle's definition of universals (where what is common to being a man is language independent) or by the nominalist definition (where 'man' is just a name)? — Andrew M
What counts as being a "man" is what one is taught counts as being a man. That varies tremendously from group to group, or it can at least. — creativesoul
He initially learned what counts as being a man the same way everyone else does. — creativesoul
What counts as being a "man" is what one is taught counts as being a man. That varies tremendously from group to group, or it can at least.
— creativesoul
So is a penis a social construct? Is an X chromosome a social construct?
Sure, social construction is a thing. But so is biological construction. And semiosis recognises other kinds of "language use" beyond just words, like the language of the genes.
Aristotle was right about humans as substances as their being is organised by a structure that is more than accidental. Genes and neurons encode a purpose and a design. There is a reason why bodies and behaviour hang together, or endure. — apokrisis
His method seems inadequate, or 'hazy' as you say. — creativesoul
Proponents of structuralism would argue that a specific domain of culture may be understood by means of a structure—modelled on language—that is distinct both from the organizations of reality and those of ideas or the imagination—the "third order".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuralism
when you measure a degree of continuity, what else do you measure that against except a corresponding degree of absence of discreteness? — apokrisis
A is continuous to the degree it isn’t .....
Go on. Try to fill in the blank with a word that doesn’t mean discrete. — apokrisis
The difficulty, it seems, is developing a method for taking account of which constructs set out that which is existentially contingent upon language, and which ones set out that which is not. — creativesoul
The difficulty, it seems, is developing a method for taking account of which constructs set out that which is existentially contingent upon language, and which ones set out that which is not.
— creativesoul
Pragmatically, where is the difficulty? — apokrisis
A degree is a discrete unit. By measuring a continuity in degrees, you are applying discrete units to the continuity. — Metaphysician Undercover
If a thing is hot, then it is not cold. To say that a thing is hot to the degree that its not cold, is to replace a clear logical principle with an ambiguous one, allowing contradiction that the thing be both hot and cold, qualifying this with the ambiguity of "by degree". — Metaphysician Undercover
The temperature is meant to be objective and any temperature in itself, is neither hot nor cold. — Metaphysician Undercover
Depending on the application, what is hot by one standard might be cold by another, but the independent standard allows us to avoid the nonsense of "it is hot to the degree that it isn't cold". — Metaphysician Undercover
First, the concept would need to be one that sets out the elemental constituents of the candidate in question — creativesoul
So now you are saying that a unit is a continuity chopped into discrete pieces? — apokrisis
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