I would think that clearly penises are not existentially contingent upon language. Thus, "penis" sets out something that is properly called "independent" of language, for it is not existentially contingent upon our taking account of it via naming it. — creativesoul
So how do you divide up a foot into inches unless there is some underlying continuity to be divided? — apokrisis
One second we are talking about units of measurement, the next about actual substantial objects out there in the real world? — apokrisis
Divide the inch into halves, quarters, however you wish, they are still all discrete units. — Metaphysician Undercover
You have been switching back and forth at will, — Metaphysician Undercover
creativesoul
A penis does not a man make. Geckos have those.
Do geckos exist apart from language? Is "gecko" a universal? — Mitchell
My participation in this thread was motivated by my own unconventional use of 'universal' which is more about being a common denominator... being universally extant within all X after removing the individual particulars. — creativesoul
...One fundamental question of Metaphysics, then boils down to how we think language is related to the world. — Mitchell
Language is related to the world by virtue of the attribution of meaning — creativesoul
No need to remove them. A constraints-based logic simply ignores them as differences that don't make a difference.
So a compositional approach - one predicated on construction or addition - wants to understand its "other" of universality or generality as that which can survive all particular acts of subtraction. That is how it seeks dichotomously to complete itself. What can you take away and so arrive at "the particular essence".
But this ontology doesn't really work, as we know. — apokrisis
Ignoring/removing... no difference. Setting them aside either way. — creativesoul
It calls things that are existentially contingent upon language 'independent' of language. — creativesoul
And yet all still capable of further sub-division apparently. And how can there be further division if there is nothing further that counts as the undivided? — apokrisis
That a unit is potential divided into other discrete units does not imply any continuity. — Metaphysician Undercover
It calls things that are existentially contingent upon language 'independent' of language.
— creativesoul
Where exactly? — apokrisis
You are enthusiastic about philosophical approaches that appear to endorse full-on dualism. Science misses something as it rejects a hard division of reality into the material and the immaterial. Science is wrong in thinking that materiality vs immateriality is only a relative affair so far as its physicalism is concerned. You take it as just an obvious fact that there is an empirical world that is available to the senses, but then an actually separate rational world that is available to ... the nous, the mind, the secret sauce spirit. — apokrisis
The modern mind-body problem arose out of the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, as a direct result of the concept of objective physical reality that drove that revolution. Galileo and Descartes made the crucial conceptual division by proposing that physical science should provide a mathematically precise quantitative description of an external reality extended in space and time, a description limited to spatiotemporal primary qualities such as shape, size, and motion, and to laws governing the relations among them. Subjective appearances, on the other hand -- how this physical world appears to human perception -- were assigned to the mind, and the secondary qualities like color, sound, and smell were to be analyzed relationally, in terms of the power of physical things, acting on the senses, to produce those appearances in the minds of observers. It was essential to leave out or subtract subjective appearances and the human mind -- as well as human intentions and purposes -- from the physical world in order to permit this powerful but austere spatiotemporal conception of objective physical reality to develop. — Thomas Nagel, Mind and Cosmos
Yet natural philosophy rejects actual dualism. And science supports its immanent understanding of nature. — apokrisis
But perhaps it actually is just this organic thing, this middle path between hard realism and hard idealism, that one would dub pan-semiosis. — apokrisis
A silly reply if my immanent metaphysics is what I've said it is - a full four causes naturalism. — apokrisis
Any other model of "the mind" - like a spiritual or freewill one - is fundamentally flawed. — apokrisis
Aristotle held that being a man is not dependent upon language because what is common to men is not dependent upon language.
I disagree with Aristotle strongly on that matter. If being a man is not dependent upon language, then nothing that is existentially contingent upon language counts as part of being a man. — creativesoul
Q1) When something is undivided, is it:
A) Divided?
B) Continuous? — apokrisis
Q2) When quantifying an amount of water, do we ask:
A) How many water is there?
B) How much water is there?
Q3) When quantifying an amount of apples, do we ask:
A) How many apples are there?
B) How much apples are there?
Q4: When you have fallen into a pit of logical incoherence, do we:
A) Keep digging?
B) Cease to dig? — apokrisis
We are all familiar with the idea of continuity. To be continuous[1] is to constitute an unbroken or uninterrupted whole, like the ocean or the sky. A continuous entity—a continuum—has no “gaps”. Opposed to continuity is discreteness: to be discrete[2] is to be separated, like the scattered pebbles on a beach or the leaves on a tree. Continuity connotes unity; discreteness, plurality.
1. The word “continuous” derives from a Latin root meaning “to hang together” or “to cohere”; this same root gives us the nouns “continent”—an expanse of land unbroken by sea—and “continence”—self-restraint in the sense of “holding oneself together”. Synonyms for “continuous” include: connected, entire, unbroken, uninterrupted.
2. The word “discrete” derives from a Latin root meaning “to separate”. This same root yields the verb “discern”—to recognize as distinct or separate—and the cognate “discreet”—to show discernment, hence “well-behaved”. It is a curious fact that, while “continuity” and “discreteness” are antonyms, “continence” and “discreetness” are synonyms. Synonyms for “discrete” include separate, distinct, detached, disjunct.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/continuity/
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