• Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    You're asking something about your own understanding, right?Terrapin Station
    No, I'm asking about "matter" and "ideas" and how you understand the difference. You've only supplied a difference in scribbles.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    Coherence is always to someone, isn't it?
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    Coherence is always to someone, isn't it?Terrapin Station
    Okay, so then your idea of "matter" and "mind" is only coherent to you, then.

    It is when something is coherent to many, not just one, that we make strides in objective knowledge.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    Are you asking if something is coherent to someone else? Or to yourself?
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    I'm done with the game of yours. When you can actually answer the question, we can continue.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I'm done with the game of yours. When you can actually answer the question, we can continue.Harry Hindu

    The only way we're going to get anywhere is by doing this "game."

    I'm not going to keep addressing the same things over and over. It's only going to work if we go step by step.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    Are you asking if something is coherent to someone else? Or to your self?Terrapin Station

    I wasn't asking anything. I was simply reiterating what you said - that your concept of "matter" and "mind" are only coherent to you, and that isn't enough. Coherence isn't subjective. It follows rules of logic that are the same for everyone.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    The only way we're going to get anywhere is by doing this "game."Terrapin Station
    No. It would be by answering the question that you keep avoiding.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Coherence isn't subjective.Harry Hindu

    So, we don't at all agree on this, and we don't at all agree about logic, either, including that I think that logic is subjective, and obviously, even for those who do not, there are many different species of logics, some incompatible with others.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    So, we don't at all agree on this, and we don't at all agree about logic, either, including that I think that logic is subjective, and obviously, even for those who do not, there are many different species of logics, some incompatible with others.Terrapin Station
    So then why are you trying to be coherent to others when you speak? How is it that you expect them to understand anything that you say? Do words mean things? Are they coherent?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    No. It would be by answering the question that you keep avoiding.Harry Hindu

    Whether you will participate in getting somewhere is up to you, but I wasn't asking your opinion about what was required. I don't consider you qualified to know.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    So then why are you trying to be coherent others when you speak? How is it that you expect them to understand anything that you say?Harry Hindu

    That would be a whole big tangent about how communication works that wouldn't help you figure out what the difference is between what idealists and materialists are saying, which is all I'd want to accomplish.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    That would be a whole big tangent about how communication works that wouldn't help you figure out what the difference is between what idealists and materialists are saying, which is all I'd want to accomplish.Terrapin Station
    It is very difficult for you to stay focused. I wasn't asking about how the difference in that post. I was asking how you can expect others to understand you if coherence is subjective.

    You obviously have issues that won't allow you to engage in any real, meaningful discussions. I'm done.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    It is very difficult for you to stay focused. I wasn't asking about how the difference in that post. I was asking how you can expect others to understand you if coherence is subjective.Harry Hindu

    What I'm focused on is you understanding the difference of what idealists and materialists are saying.

    A tangent about communication, which is what that would be, won't help us get to you understanding the difference betwen what idealists and materialists are saying.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    Making it all physical is interesting but will that lead to a theory where the difference between first and third person is illuminated? — Valentinus


    I don't know, but in my view, the goal isn't to lead to a theory. The goal is to have accurate views about what is. If an accurate view about what is doesn't lead to a theory, but an inaccurate view does, that doesn't make the inaccurate view better.

    That's not to deny the utility of instrumentalism. But it doesn't make the instrumental approach better for anything other than making successful predictions or for applications for practical matters, just in case the instrumental approach in question can do this. It's important in those cases not to reify the instrumental theory, and it's important to not theory worship. Both of those things are big dangers, because there are personality types that are both attracted to instrumental theories and that tend to reify and worship them. (The personality type best suited to being an engineer is one of the prime examples.)
    Terrapin Station

    The correspondence between mental states and physical conditions ties them together in such a way that their causes are not to be separated into different kinds of existence. For the purposes of studying the physical as the cause of those states, it is an eminent example of operational assignment of meaning as per Bridgeman.

    However far it can proceed on that basis, the theory goes forward on being able to explain itself against objections to its claims. The success or failure of the correspondence does not inform other ways of talking about substances because those meanings are not germane to the project as given.

    While the theory revokes the use of other kinds of explanation, it does not refute them as something proven by deduction. Aren't you in danger of "reifying the instrumental" by using it in this fashion?

    The limits you argue for remind me of Kant's rhetoric in the Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysics.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    What I'm focused on is you understanding the difference of what idealists and materialists are saying.Terrapin Station

    And I already told you I'm not interested in the difference of scribbles or sounds. I'm interested in the difference of what those scribbles and sounds mean. In order for a word to be coherent it must mean something. What do materialists mean when they say, "matter" or "mind". What do idealists mean when they use those words?

    Synonyms are different words that mean the same thing. It seems to me that "matter" and "ideas" are synonyms because while they are different words, saying one would be different than saying the other, but they mean the same thing.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Aren't you in danger of "reifying the instrumental" by using it in this fashion?Valentinus

    I don't think that physicalism is an instrumental theory but rather what's really the case ontologically. Instrumentally, it's not very practical for some things. Psychological, sociological, etc. approaches are often better suited for making predictions, where those approaches don't focus on more or less "mechanistic" explanations re what's going on in brains.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    And I already told you I'm not interested in the difference of scribbles or sounds. I'm interested in the difference of what those scribbles and sounds mean. In order for a word to be coherent it must mean something.Harry Hindu

    Yes. We went through that. So, given that you can't grasp the differences in what each side is saying in that regard, we need to look at what your beliefs/expectations are re meaning and coherency, so we can diagnose just what's going on for you not understanding the difference.

    I was in the process of doing that when you bowed out.

    One slightly alternate way to approach this is to figure out why, in your view, people aren't saying something different than each other just in case you don't believe that they're saying something coherent.

    But from that alteranate approach, we still have to deal with what you understand meaning, coherence, etc. to be, because part of the issue we need to deal with is whether you can understand that to the people in question, they may be saying someting different than each other per their own understandings, even if it's incoherent to you.

    For example, one person saying "Color my love brittle" and another saying "Polecats dance planets" are both saying something that's incoherent to me, at least at first blush, but that doesn't lead me to thinking that they're saying the same thing.
  • Janus
    15.6k
    In Berkeley, there's no non-idea tree is there? If you're claiming there is, what would be the textual evidence of that?Terrapin Station

    According to Berkeley the tree is not your idea or my idea but God's idea. So the tree is a real mind-independent (in the sense of being independent of human minds) thing. Unlike with a human idea which is to be a reflection of a concrete thing to be God's idea is to be a real concrete thing; a thing that can exist only as long as God holds it in mind.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    According to Berkeley the tree is not your idea or my idea but God's idea.Janus

    That still makes it an idea though. So there's no non-idea tree (per Berkeley).
  • Janus
    15.6k


    Yes but it's a very different kind of idea; it is an idea which is a concrete existent. It doesn't accord at all to our limited idea of what an idea is.

    Also when we perceive the tree it is not the same as thinking about the tree. So perceiving the tree is using real concrete faculties to grasp a real concrete existent. In that sense it is similar to ordinary realism as Harry said. It's just that what is thought about the ultimate nature of things is different in idealism and realism.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Yes but it's a very different kind of idea; it is an idea which is a concrete existent. It doesn't accord at all to our limited idea of what an idea is.Janus

    What in Berkeley supports that he considers it a concrete existent? (Well, and where "concrete" doesn't amount to "clear and distinct" or something like that)
  • Janus
    15.6k


    I already explained that; it is a concrete existent because it is thought by God. That's just what it means to be a concrete existent for Berkeley. The concrete existence of everything is on account of its being thought by God.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I already explained that; it is a concrete existent because it is thought by God.Janus

    You're misunderstanding me. I'm not asking for you to explain anything. I'm asking for some quotations from Berkeley--some textual evidence (I had specified that earlier)-- that support the notion that he believes there are concrete things.
  • Janus
    15.6k


    The substance of Berkeley's philosophy is well known. What do you think it means to be a concrete thing? To my understanding it means to be a stably persistent entity that does not depend on the human mind for its existence. How would Berkeley's things, which are stable entities in the mind of God, not qualify as concrete objects?
  • Jamesk
    317
    The substance of Berkeley's philosophy is well known. What do you think it means to be a concrete thing? To my understanding it means to be a stably persistent entity that does not depend on the human mind for its existence. How would Berkeley's things, which are stable entities in the mind of God, not qualify as concrete objects?Janus

    The more I think about it I still don't understand how it all works. How do we actually receive sense data if sense data is basically Gods ideas? If it is a Brain in a vat situation I can understand, however if it isn't then where exactly do our minds exists? How do our own bodies interact with other bodies?

    I also understand the frustration people are having with this discussion of ideas and matter. I still haven't understood how the immaterial universe actually functions other than God makes it so.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    The substance of Berkeley's philosophy is well known. What do you think it means to be a concrete thing?Janus

    Depends on the context, of course. Above, you seemed to be suggesting a context that was close to claiming a material thing.

    We should simply quote Berkeley on this, though. The only thing I recall was him using "concrete" in the sense of something being a clear and distinct idea.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    The more I think about it I still don't understand how it all works. How do we actually receive sense data if sense data is basically Gods ideas? If it is a Brain in a vat situation I can understand, however if it isn't then where exactly do our minds exists? How do our own bodies interact with other bodies?

    I also understand the frustration people are having with this discussion of ideas and matter. I still haven't understood how the immaterial universe actually functions other than God makes it so.
    Jamesk

    Good questions/comments.
  • Janus
    15.6k


    Yes to be a material thing in Berkeley's view just is to be an idea in the mind of God.

    Consider the well known limericks which have Berkeley's philosophy and the common sense naive realist questioning of it as their subject:

    There once was a man who said: "God
    Must think it exceedingly odd
    If he finds that this tree
    Continues to be
    When there's no one about in the Quad."

    Dear Sir,

    Your astonishment's odd:
    I am always about in the Quad.
    And that's why the tree
    Will continue to be,
    Since observed by

    Yours faithfully,
    God.


    Of course, God both thinks into being His creation and observes it. This is not in the least unorthodox thinking in a Christian context. All things have their being in God.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    Yes. We went through that. So, given that you can't grasp the differences in what each side is saying in that regard, we need to look at what your beliefs/expectations are re meaning and coherency, so we can diagnose just what's going on for you not understanding the difference.Terrapin Station
    There was nothing to grasp. You keep referring to what scribble or sounds an idealist and materialist makes when I'm talking about what those scribbles and sounds mean. You have only shown that they make different scribbles and sounds. You have yet to explain the difference that those scribbles and sounds mean.

    I already told you that for a word to be coherent, it must mean something. If you don't mean something when you make scribbles and sounds, then you aren't saying anything, you're just making noise and scribbles (what you have been doing). When someone says, "Color my love brittle" then it is only coherent if it actually means something other than just being noise. What do they mean? That is what I ask them, and they would tell me. You can't seem to do that with words you seem so sure that you know what they mean, "matter" and "mind".
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