Exercised rationality is how we come to recognize it. But the definition describes the kind of animal a human is, and is not negated by the developmental stage any particular human is at or whether their capabilities are currently being exercised. — Andrew M
As a similar case, consider the uncontroversial claim that humans are bipeds. Yet initial human embryos don't have two legs and neither does an adult that has had their legs amputated.
For the same reasons, being a featherless biped is insufficient for being a human. — creativesoul
Remember inertia? The first derivative of motion? The big deal is that "rest" isn't actually not going anywhere. It is simply a relative lack of motion. — apokrisis
So in the actual physics of action, your presumptions about "rest" being anything else than an asymptotic limit on action is archaic metaphysics. — apokrisis
Would you also say the claim that "humans are bipeds" is false? — Andrew M
Now the concept of "inertia" for you is derived from motion, but as I explained already, "inertia" for me is derived from an observed temporal continuity of existence, a lack of change. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, you mistakenly assume that the concept of inertia is derived from actual motion, when it is really derived from an assumption of rest, the foundational assumption that things will continue to exist in an unchanged way, as time passes. Now you have no approach toward understanding this foundational assumption, because you have excluded it from your conceptual structure by associating inertia with motion. And you support this conceptual structure with your foundational assumption that anything outside of this conceptual structure is "archaic metaphysics", which ought to be ignored. — Metaphysician Undercover
Inertia is a positive quality - a resistance to change. So rest is the potential for a reaction to an action. Push a rock to get it to roll and it pushes right back. — apokrisis
But even archaic physics was based on metaphysical dichotomies. — apokrisis
Ok, so "passivity" does not refer to something which matter is prior to being acted on, it refers to how matter will react when being acted on. See, you are defining everything in relation to action, saying what passivity would be like if it were active. It would be reactive. You give yourself no means for describing what passivity is during that time when it is what it is, passive, i.e. not being acted upon, and not reacting. So passivity is the potential for action. What do you think it means to be capable of reacting? — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is, that you have the wrong idea of what a dichotomy is. A dichotomy is a division, a separation. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is because your monist faith will not allow you to conceive of real ontological separation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you also say the claim that "humans are bipeds" is false?
— Andrew M
Yup. Some are. Some are not. That's the issue I see. Not enough precision in the claims... — creativesoul
You are distressed because your ontology likes to presume a world of passive and stable existence. — apokrisis
So you get your desired passivity. But only at the end of time. — apokrisis
Look it up. A dichotomy is a relation that is mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive. — apokrisis
Yes, so it appears like you do not know what "mutually exclusive" means. How are rest and motion mutually exclusive when you define rest as a minimal degree of motion? . — Metaphysician Undercover
It is evident that some things remain the same, and we do not have to wait until the end of time to observe this. — Metaphysician Undercover
I accept dualism as the only coherent understanding of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Will you ever master this tricky notion of reciprocal limits I wonder? — apokrisis
Rest would be minimal motion, and motion would be minimal rest. — apokrisis
We were discussing dichotomies, not reciprocal limits. And your attempt to turn dichotomies into reciprocal limits is misguided. . — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, so rest and motion are clearly not mutually exclusive when defined in this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Dichotomies are reciprocal limits on possibility regardless of whatever you might pretend to be discussing. — apokrisis
Then you described "reciprocal limits" in a way in which they clearly were not mutually exclusive. — Metaphysician Undercover
What could be more minimal than zero? — apokrisis
Precision isn't the issue. The issue is about what interpretive rule to apply to statements like the above which are termed generics (SEP). Some interesting points from these slides:
Much of our commonsense knowledge of the world is expressed by generic sentences
One of the notable features of generic sentences is that they are "exception tolerating"
It is this feature that piques the interest of many logically-oriented linguists and philosophers
I think the interpretive rule here is that the truth or falsity of "humans are bipeds" isn't dependent on whether there are defective or incomplete instances of the type, but instead on whether there is a non-accidental (or essential) connection between humankind and the property of being bipedal. — Andrew M
...the truth or falsity of "humans are bipeds" isn't dependent on whether there are defective or incomplete instances of the type, but instead on whether there is a non-accidental (or essential) connection between humankind and the property of being bipedal. — Andrew M
The truth or falsity of "humans are bipeds" is wholly and completely determined by whether or not humans are bipeds. Not all humans are. — creativesoul
...the deeper point, of the sense in which reason is dependent on logic, is also incorrect, I belileve. — Wayfarer
Knowledge cannot be false. Belief can be false. — creativesoul
The truth or falsity of "humans are bipeds" is wholly and completely determined by whether or not humans are bipeds. Not all humans are. — creativesoul
Knowledge cannot be false. Belief can be false.
— creativesoul
True, but not relevant here. — Andrew M
The truth or falsity of "humans are bipeds" is wholly and completely determined by whether or not humans are bipeds. Not all humans are.
— creativesoul
On an ordinary interpretation, the sentence "humans are bipeds" evaluates as true. [*]
The problem is that you're misinterpreting that sentence as the universal "for every human, that human is a biped". Since that evaluates as false, your interpretation fails to match the logical form of the ordinary interpretation. In other words, you mean something different to what ordinary language users mean.
I suggest trying to understand Aristotle's definition in this generic sense...
Not exactly following this. Let me be clear here. Not all reason is existentially contingent upon logic. I do not privilege logic over and above thought and belief. All reason consists of thought and belief. Some is existentially contingent upon logic. — creativesoul
If one who believes that "men are rational beings" is true later admits that not all men are, then s/he is forced to deal with learning that their own belief is self-contradictory, incoherent, and just plain false. — creativesoul
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