Realism is not the view that X exists regardless of what we say about it. It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about it. — khaled
Evan if all we see is the way things seem to be to us, there may still be the way things are.
Changing this to a linguistic argument, realism entails that there are still true statements; while an anti-realist would say not make that commitment.
So a realist says the ball has a mass of 1kg; the anti-realist might say that saying that it has a mass of 1kg is useful, or fits their perceptions, but will not commit to it being true. — Banno
If symmetry or balance, or the lack of, then measurement. — tim wood
Only that abstract terms and concepts often - always? - decompose into something real. Beauty to balance and symmetry, for example. But sometimes the lack of it. Jeanne Moreau and Bette Davis two examples of that (imo), or the other way, Jean Paul Belmondo. The French seem to have an eye beauty in the unpretty.I am not sure of your meaning, — Athena
Realism is not the view that X exists regardless of what we say about it. It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about it. — khaled
With the material I hold the mental, ideas and feelings, to be altogether real. But real as they are, and not as they are not. — tim wood
As Idea, yes, as unicorn, no. And so with seven, justice, God. I do not mean anything at all complicated here. It's been argued that forces are real but themselves neither material nor idea. I hold they're material, but would not care to argue it.On some level the unicorn is real — Athena
"It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about ___." What on earth do we fill in the blank with? — Srap Tasmaner
The whole point of modelling is that within the model, tables quite specifically count as real. Real is theory-relative. — Srap Tasmaner
What about the second? "It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about ___." What on earth do we fill in the blank with? — Srap Tasmaner
I think that's a misunderstanding of what "X" -- as a name or a label -- is doing in the first place. Isaac and I went around and around about this before: it's no use saying "tables are only part of my model" as a way of saying "tables aren't real"; that's a category mistake. The whole point of modelling is that within the model, tables quite specifically count as real. Real is theory-relative. — Srap Tasmaner
As Idea, yes, as unicorn, no. And so with seven, justice, God. I do not mean anything at all complicated here. It's been argued that forces are real but themselves neither material nor idea. I hold they're material, but would not care to argue it. — tim wood
Well, there's subjective, and then there's subjectivity. Perhaps we might look for something more than your intuitions. I had assumed you would adopt an anti-realist approach, given you think
"the false can be true"
— Hanover — Banno
But where is the moral judgment? I get that the suffering is occurring in the world as an objectively identifiable event, but where is the badness of it except in your opinion? — Hanover
It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about ___." What on earth do we fill in the blank with?
— Srap Tasmaner
The “raw perceptual data” Isaac was talking about. It’s the view the raw perceptual data exists regardless of what we say about it. — khaled
"...the cause of our representation of that something". Processes and objects are two different things, we can conceive of objects as being representations caused by hidden factors. We don't need to assign object status to those causes any more than gravity is an object, or my preferring vanilla is. — Isaac
'Real' does seem to have a perfectly ordinary use which can be quite easily seconded to describe exactly the kind of active inference relationship to our external world that I'm looking to use it for. — Isaac
No, there are two things (1) badness and (2) suffering. #2 is an emotional state. #1 is a judgment about that emotional state. If I say "you are suffering," that will be true if the event of your suffering is occurring. If I say "your suffering is bad," that will be true if your suffering is bad. What is "bad" here other than an opinion? Your suffering is occurring (or not) regardless of my opinion. Why doesn't this apply to "bad"?The "badness" IS the suffering. — Sam26
No, there are two things (1) badness and (2) suffering. #2 is an emotional state. #1 is a judgment about that emotional state. If I say "you are suffering," that will be true if the event of your suffering is occurring. If I say "your suffering is bad," that will be true if your suffering is bad. What is "bad" here other than an opinion? Your suffering is occurring (or not) regardless of my opinion. Why doesn't this apply to "bad"?
I can't dictate whether your pain is real, but can I dictate whether your pain is morally bad? If I can't, how do I know? — Hanover
Sure. But it can't enter the conversation, and it can't be found out. Maybe the way things seem to us IS the way they are, but that just means we got lucky. We don't know when this is the case. So what difference does it make? — khaled
A realist will say that either there is water at the poles, or there isn't - that either the statement or its negation is true.
An anti-realist may say that the statement "There is water at Mercury's poles" is neither true not not true, until the observation is made.
Which is the better approach? — Banno
...whether a statement is factual depends on the framework within which the statement is made... — Srap Tasmaner
And a realist about tables would say that tables are “really real”. No models. The existence of tables is a direct reflection of reality. — khaled
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