This thread is just a collective stream of consciousness. How can consciousness be objective? — emancipate
Because truth and belief are connected. Sure, you can have a notion of "objective truth" that is completely divorced from whatever anyone thinks about the world. But by that same token, it'd be completely empty. If there is no way to establish truth, then judging things as true or false is pointless. — Echarmion
That's the thing, isn't it - what counts as an object depends on the conversation.
If I am playing word games, it's because that's what much of philosophy is. So let's do it self-consciously - Sort through the word games and see which ones make sense.
Words like objective and subjective have a useful place in some conversations. But when they get attached to truth and reality and such, they take us up the garden path. — Banno
But all along you were the one insisting objects are "out there". — Echarmion
Language games take place in the world, and involve stuff. So drop the "just". The keys are both part of a language game and the things you start your car with. "Making sense" involves both; better, the distinction is a metaphysical error. Stuff in the world is always, already, interpreted; but it is also still stuff.Now you're saying that they are just an element in a language game, — Echarmion
I was talking about your quote in the same post, here:I posted one quote concerning the “pretensions of the schools”; treat it as you wish, hopefully in context. — Mww
Is this quote about all minds and speculative epistemological philosophy, or about your [mind's] ego's need to put scribbles on a screen?Mind is a human construct given from pure reason, subjectivity being nothing but the consequence of such construction. It is hardly a confusion, insofar as the rest of the world cannot be blamed for human intellectual error, so theoretical subjectivity was invented to take the fall, and speculative epistemological philosophy was invented to, if not correct the fall, at least to make the fall less painful. — Mww
I'm not clear on your distinction between empirical predicates and rational predicates. This might be a product of the false dichotomy of empiricism vs. rationalism. In my mind, they are inseparable. Your rationality takes the same form as your "empirical" thoughts. Thoughts are about things, and can't be grounded in anything except what they are about.Depends. If the topic has empirical predicates the words will be about the world, conditioned by the pure intuitions and having natural law as its irreducible ground. If the topic has rational predicates, the words will be about speculative manifestations of the intellect, conditioned by pure reason and having the ego as its irreducible ground. And n’er the twain shall meet. The value of expressions in words to one mind, cannot be determined by the origination of them in another.
In this Platonic pseudo-elenchus we got goin’ on here....if you are Socrates, which interlocutor might I be? — Mww
Language games take place in the world, and involve stuff — Banno
The keys are both part of a language game and the things you start your car with. "Making sense" involves both; better, the distinction is a metaphysical error. — Banno
Stuff in the world is always, already, interpreted; but it is also still stuff. — Banno
I thought we had reached some sort of an agreement that it might be processes/relationships all the way down, not objects which would imply the "physical vs. non-physical" dichotomy I was trying to stay away from. You might need to re-read our previous exchanges.The view still has to be explained though. If the universe is just a bunch of objects strung together by cause and effect, how is it possible for some object to have an internal perspective? — Echarmion
You don't try to get people to agree with you, and see things how you see them outside of a philosophy forum, like in everyday life? Being on a philosophy forum or not has no bearing on how you use words to communicate ideas about the world.This is a philosophy forum. I am not saying there isn't anything objective or true. — Echarmion
Then your mind has no purpose?My physical brain is moving my physical arm. Whatever the mind does beyond the physical I don't know. The physical phenomena are representations of the non-physical reality. So the mind is not strictly speaking in a causal relationship with anything physical. — Echarmion
Imagining stems from the brain's ability to form concepts and goals. The goal in the mind is just as imaginary as Santa Claus. It doesn't exist in the world outside of the mind. But it drives the behavior of the body to change current conditions to reach that goal - so that world and mind are in sync - homeostasis.That's a good point. The imagination does seem so be necessary to cause the following developments. But if you were to look at the chain of events that led from, say, the evolution of humans to spaceflight, where would you find the imagination? Could it be described? — Echarmion
He's making a reference to logic. He's trying to show that logic can generate objectively true statements. — Cidat
Not really that relevant here; except that they are exactly right. — Banno
Yes, correspondence theory of truth. Aristotle.The formula is the new-fangled, analytic, thinks-it’s-better way of stating the continental version which claims, “...the definition of the word truth, to wit, the accordance of the cognition with its object... — Mww
Absolutely. I’d even go one step further, to wit: is impossible. Still, pointless works, because if it’s pointless, being impossible doesn’t make all that much difference. — Mww
Mind is a human construct given from pure reason (...)....
— Mww
Is this quote about all minds and speculative epistemological philosophy, or about your [mind's] ego's need to put scribbles on a screen? — Harry Hindu
I'm not clear on your distinction between empirical predicates and rational predicates. This might be a product of the false dichotomy of empiricism vs. rationalism. In my mind, they are inseparable. — Harry Hindu
In a nutshell, chess or war or poker maybe "constructions" or "inventions" but the strategies utilized within these frameworks can either be better or worse and this is not a matter of subjective opinion. — BitconnectCarlos
You just asserted an objective truth, implying that we can indeed be objective. Your assertion of the lack of objectivity is thus limited in scope. — Cidat
And like I said, I believe in an objective reality we know next to nothing about. To say that it's an objective truth that we know little about reality isn't self-defeating. — neonspectraltoast
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