t is particulars which I was talking about. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that the general sense of this would be that the Form of the individual thing exists in God's mind prior to it's material existence, such that the ideal — Metaphysician Undercover
I wouldn't equate unity with continuity at all, they seem quite incompatible. — Metaphysician Undercover
...It is true that he often suggests that reason (or speech, thought, or some
other capacity he regards as characteristic of rational creatures) is unique to human beings; but that is not necessarily to claim that “rational animal” gives a sufficient account of what it is to be a human being, which is what an Aristotelian definition is supposed to do...
...Similarly, the concept rational animal seems to be such that other species at least
could fall under it...
Being existentially contingent upon language and being a language construct are not equivalent.
— creativesoul
The basic point is that the capability came first (i.e., animals evolved with the capability for language/rational thought). At some later point that capability was recognized and represented in language. — Andrew M
For the realist about universals, that capability is real independent of whether it is represented in language. Whereas for the nominalist, that capability is real only to the extent that it is represented in language. Essentially it comes down to whether universals are considered to be discovered or created.
So are you saying that the form in God’s mind is always completely particular? — apokrisis
Seems that this leads to more than a few problems regarding change - Janus’s point about the fact you are materially different every day. — apokrisis
Again as Janus reminds, continuity of function or purpose seems a trivially obvious reply. — apokrisis
Well. I guess there's nothing more to say then, since I don't interpret those terms the way you apparently do. — Janus
What does this indicate about the supposed existence of these concepts? — Metaphysician Undercover
I would say that this is a conclusion which must be made, the divine Forms are particular, as property of one divine mind, and they are present to us as particular things. — Metaphysician Undercover
In physics, inertia is taken for granted, but this is inconsistent with your assumption of degrees of freedom. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can see where you are coming from insofar as 'multiplicity' is (or at least can be) less specific than 'collection'. This is shown by the fact that we can say "There is multiplicity in nature"; we can speak of 'multiplicity' or 'a multiplicity', whereas we cannot speak of 'collection' unless it is treated as a verb. So, if I say "There is a mutliplicity of objects in my room" it doesn't seem any different in meaning or in what it implies than saying "there is a collection of objects in my room", because both are referring to a precisely specific group of objects. — Janus
On the other hand, it seems more appropriate and suggestive of unity to say of the human body, as an example of organic unity, that it is a multplicity, than it does to say of it that it is a collection. — Janus
So this divine mind, is it the bit that is continuous? — apokrisis
But inertial motion is a degree of freedom. — apokrisis
Being rational is existentially contingent upon being able to think about one's own thought and belief. — creativesoul
So far the idea of continuity has not been grounded. We really haven't agreed at all on a definition. You think it's at the opposite end of the spectrum from discrete, I think it is categorically different from discrete. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since inertial motion is completely defined by past constraints, and "degrees of freedom" is how you refer to the future, I do not see how inertial motion is at all consistent with any degree of freedom. — Metaphysician Undercover
So one of us has defined it by grounding it as the opposite of the discrete or the divided - the standard dictionary definition, as it happens. — apokrisis
The other of us says it is "categorically different", but can offer no good reason for that claim. — apokrisis
Reason is not contingent on language, so much as language is contingent on the ability to abstract. Apokrisis said that language might become established as ‘a habit of reference’ which might well be so - but hierarchical syntax is a step beyond pointing and making a sound about something. — Wayfarer
I was under the false impression that you were reading my posts. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, defining a thing with its opposite doesn't ground it. We need to refer to something outside the category to give it meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
Defining cold as the opposite of hot, and hot as the opposite of cold, does not tell us what it means to be either hot or cold. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, are you arguing that to be continuous is to be nothing, or that there is nothing which is continuous? — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't be coy. What's point would you like to make about those ? — Janus
Rationality is the ability to ‘see reason’ - to make inferences, to say ‘because of this, then that must be the case’, to say that ‘this means that’, or ‘this equals that’. Being able to think about one’s own thought might require that, but I don’t believe it’s the definition of rationality. That is self-awareness, which is related, but not the same.
Reason is not contingent on language, so much as language is contingent on the ability to abstract. Apokrisis said that language might become established as ‘a habit of reference’ which might well be so - but hierarchical syntax is a step beyond pointing and making a sound about something. But then you’re into the whole discipline of evolutionary linguistics, which is a vast subject area. Here I think we’re actually talking about a very general point. — Wayfarer
Reason is not contingent on language... — Wayfarer
...Janus pointed out how the category of the discrete~continuous connects to the category of the material~formal...
A dichotomy is not a category. — creativesoul
A strong definition of temperature is one that is concretely bounded. So a kinetic theory of temperature defines heat in terms of motion. — apokrisis
So physics understands temperature as a bounded spectrum. Opposing the hot and the cold is at least a start on getting to the root of the story. And now physics can define reality in terms of being bounded by the asymptotic limits of the absolutely hot and the absolutely cold. — apokrisis
Check back and you will see that a proper notion of "an object" is that it is continuous with itself and discrete from the world. So the absolute separation from the world is the logical source of being able to claim the matching fact that the object is absolutely continuous with itself. — apokrisis
In the four causes Aristotelian view, formal cause is about constraint - the regulating presence of some enduring tendency, function or purpose. So organisms are defined as wholes rather than mere sets of parts because they are glued together by a common purpose. They have a generality or continuity that is real in being actually causal. That is why Aristotle could claim his hylomorphic substantialism. Form wasn't all accident. The glue of a purpose is what is essential to the continuity that makes anything an actual substance. — apokrisis
It boggles that you claim to be any kind of Aristotelian. — apokrisis
So I have to oppose heat, which is motion, to what is other from it, and this is rest. Now I have a real dichotomy, motion and rest. All the degrees of heat, which are described by hot and cold are placed in the category of motion. Do you see the need for the category of rest, in order that we can account for the reality of things that stay the same through time? Isn't this what continuous means, staying the same through time, not changing? — Metaphysician Undercover
Physics only deals with the physical, and this is why we need to go beyond physics, to metaphysics, in order to relate this category of things which physics deals with (motion), to reality as a whole. You seem to want to pigeonhole all of reality into this one category "what physics understands", with total disregard for the obvious fact that physics is a very limited field of study in relation to the vast whole of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since Aristotle set forth his own criterion for what counts as the 'kind' of definition in question, a charitable reading would grant that he would meet his own criterion of what it is to be a "man", and would also realize that being rational is insufficient. — creativesoul
This dubiously presupposes a completeness that is later represented — creativesoul
So yes, a more fundamental and well formed dichotomy is that of stasis~flux. Or absolute rest vs absolute motion.
Thus if we are talking about kinetics, temperature has this asymmetric direction. There is the spectrum of possible states that are anchored at the two ends of maximum physical action (the Planck heat) and minimum physical action (absolute zero). — apokrisis
but it is obvious that an object is made of discrete parts, and the parts even overlap each other, — Metaphysician Undercover
I've read most of Aristotle's material, and I never saw anything about an object being glued together by a common purpose. I think maybe that's something you are just making up. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that all the components of my computer are glued to together by the common purpose of being a computer? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, my computer was built with intent, or purpose, but it is not the intent, which holds the parts together. Intent, or purpose, may be influential in inspiring a person to put parts together into a unity, but it is clearly not the glue which holds the parts together. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if we want to define Homo sapiens in terms of a distinctive evolutionary break, it would be animal+language rather than animal+reason.
Once humans started painting pictures on walls, wearing bear claw necklaces and daubing themselves in ochre, then they had become symbolically organised social creatures. They were reasonable at a collective socio-cultural level of semiosis. They were using signs to take a shareable view of a "world of objects". — apokrisis
So if discrete parts can overlap each other, then you have an interesting definition of "discrete" - one that seems to mean "continuous" as well. — apokrisis
I see. You want to be so literal about "glue" that you mean actual glue - the material/efficient cause for how to discrete things became one continuous thing?
Have fun with your careful misunderstandings! — apokrisis
But all "physical action", including what you call the two maximums, are by definition, within the category of motion. No type of action qualifies as rest. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well stretch your grey matter a bit and you will understand the triadic story I've been providing. — apokrisis
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