What's the difference between the material chairs and the mathematical chairs? — Agustino
What does it mean chairs exist because we perceive them? Nobody ever said that. Berkeley said chairs exist because they CAN be perceived. — Agustino
For example, by verification.Then how does the realist distinguish between a veridical and a non-veridical experience? — Michael
That's not a principle of realism.The very principle of realism is that the way the world is is independent of our experiences such that we can see things that aren't there and not see things that are there. — Michael
Ok so if I see a chair, how do I go about deciding whether it's made up of atoms or mathematical properties? What are the real differences between chairs made of mathematical properties and those made of atoms? Do they look different, smell different, behave differently? What's the difference between them?Material chairs are made up of physical stuff such as atoms and their bonds. Mathematical chairs only have mathematical properties. There is no physical stuff. Surely you've heard of Max Tegmark and his claim that the universe is mathematical. Instead of particles or fields or space being the ontological structure, it's numbers and their relations. — Marchesk
Yes — The Great Whatever
What I call an atom is also something observable in experience. — Agustino
Did you picture someone going out and cutting some christmas trees, or did you think about what it means to cut a tree, and then multiply that by seventy? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, which makes me think these notions of imagination have to be wrong. — The Great Whatever
Then I tell myself seventy times — Metaphysician Undercover
I think naive realism is not a coherent metaphysical position if one supplements it with the claim that one has some reason to believe it. If one wants to assert it dogmatically, then it's I suppose possible in principle, but by its own logic I think it rules out the possibility of having any evidence for it. — The Great Whatever
What is the world independent of us? — Marchesk
No they aren't purely theoretical constructs. They are constructs that suggest such and such behaviour in such and such situations. That's what we meant by atoms - things which behave so and so in such and such. Then we do the experiment, and we notice such and such behaviour. Therefore we conclude that our conception must be correct - because our conception simply is that behaviour in that circumstance. And we don't need electron tunneling microscopes to experience atoms. Experience of atoms is experience of anything that behaves like atoms.Not until electron tunneling microscopes were invented. Atoms were purely theoretical constructs created to explain the various forms matter takes (or to be more accurate, ontological posits), and then later, various experimental results. Now that we have tools to see and manipulate atoms, they're more than just theoretical abstractions. Also, chemistry doesn't work at all without atoms. — Marchesk
And if they had a length, would they behave any differently than if they were point particles? The reason why we treat them as point particles is that in order to determine the size of the particles which form a certain other particle, we need to bombard it with something smaller than itself. So we bombard a gold atom with an alpha particle, and we find the size of the nucleus, as Rutherford did. Then we bombard the nucleus by electrons, and other smaller particles, and we find quarks. I don't see any of this being mysterious or pointing to something beyond experience (and by the way, we treat quarks as point particles, because we haven't found smaller particles to bombard them with and see what length they actually have). All that we're talking about is such and such behaving so and so, in this or that circumstance - and we call that an atom. That's what the atom is, everything else is empty abstraction.All that being said, atoms aren't fundamental, they're made up of subatomic particles and you have all the QM probability wave weirdness going on. Also, the particles themselves are said to be point particles, meaning they have no length or width. But more importantly, atoms, photons, electors, are abstracted away from colors, tastes, etc of everyday objects. What we know of them is physics, which is heavily based on math. Which leads to the possibility that the only real properties are mathematical properties. — Marchesk
Consider the table. It feels solid, looks brown and polished, sounds a certain way when you thump on it. But all of that can be explained in terms of light and sound waves, empty space with tiny atoms bound together by some magnetic force. The table of physics is very different from the table we see or hear or feel. — Marchesk
Really? That seems exhausting and pointless, and not the way people imagine things. — The Great Whatever
This guy does it better than you. So what? All that we mean is that the "ordinary" table behaves so and so, because we play with it in "ordinary" circumstances. The "scientific" table behaves so and so because we play with it in different circumstances. In truth they are one and the same table, and all we mean by ordinary and scientific is the different circumstances we play with it. — Agustino
Ok, I agree, but why is my statement contradictory with the statement that human's participate in experience and thus alter it by experiencing it?But this is exactly where the falsity lies. They are not one and the same table. Playing with it in this way makes it different from the other table which we play with in that way. The moment a table is "touched" by someone it becomes different from the table it was, as untouched. The idea that human beings can play with things without changing them is clearly false. And this points to the falsity of the premise of human beings as passive observers. — Metaphysician Undercover
No you don't create your experience. You don't have that much power. Part of your experience comes upon you whether you want it to or not. But you participate in the creation of your experience.That doesn't make sense, because they create their experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
From the outside world? The fact you go out to work for example, and you meet a lion on the road to work. Is that your creation too? Meeting the lion? Of course not. That's something that you didn't cause, and yet it is part of your experience.I don't see how my experience could be something other than something I create. I'm an active, living being, my experience is a property of myself. Where else could it come from but myself? — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, by verification. — jkop
Realists assume that the world exists independently of our beliefs and statements.
You can't imagine a guy chopping down seventy trees unless you literally picture a tree chopping event seventy times over in your head? — The Great Whatever
7. What is going through your mind all day, if not sights and sounds?
All narration, all the time. An infinite script of milk voice dialogue.
...
9. How do you imagine things?
First I think of a noun in my milk voice: cupcake. Then I think of a verb: cough. Finally an adjective: hairy. What if there was a hairy monster that coughs out cupcakes? Now I wonder how he feels about that. Does he wish he was scarier? Is he regulated by the FDA? Does he get to subtract Weight Watchers points whenever he coughs? Are his sneezes savory or sweet? Is the flu delicious?
If I don’t like the combination of words I’ve picked, I keep Mad Libbing until the concept piques my interest.
If they are created from within you, then it follows precisely that your experience bears no relationship at all with reality, which is nonsense. Your experience necessarily is intertwined with the rest of reality. You cannot be eaten by a lion while experiencing something completely different, that is just ignoring everything we know about how the human organism works.These things affect my experience, they don't create it, or cause it. That I interpret my surroundings as a lion approaching me, is something created from within me. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's like asking why we experience the world in time. I'd answer because it's a necessary precondition of any experience at all.Why does the "outside world" have a history? Why are there fossils? — tom
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