If a poorly constructed building fails to meet certain criteria, we call it bad. We decide for ourselves what those criteria are depending upon the utility we seek from the building. There are no objectively good or bad buildings. It's just a matter of preference. On the other hand, the building itself exists regardless of my preference or opinion. — Hanover
As to morality, are you claiming that bad buildings are akin to bad acts, and saying that rape (for example) is bad if it meets our criteria for badness based upon whatever social objectives we might have,? Or, do you subscribe to the position that rape is bad regardless of what I think, much like the building exists regardless of my opinion? — Hanover
As Davidson suggested, the world is always, already interpreted. I would add that the interpretation is put in place by our use of language. — Banno
I'd also like to hear something about what you think our use of language does exactly. Psychologists test how infralinguistic children model the world, and how crows do for that matter. Why language? — Srap Tasmaner
One day you might have to say what you think Davidson means by that. — Srap Tasmaner
That whether a statement is factual depends on the framework within which the statement is made. — Srap Tasmaner
I believe there is something important to say about reality prior to language; and how children and animals model reality. — Sam26
In fact, it's hard to imagine how language would gain any kind of grounding without such a model — Sam26
Animals participate in reality - they use it, in Wittgenstein's terms. Calling this a belief is surely a retrojection. — Banno
It can "gain a grounding" by building on that use - the same process as we see in showing rather than stating. After all, there is a way of understanding a rule that is not an interpretation - not a belief - but which is found in enacting the rule: §201 — Banno
You seem to be confusing modality and temporality; not everything that is possible occurs in the future, but that is what is implied by your post. So I don't see what you propose hee as clarifying, so much as misleading. — Banno
My inclination here too is to say that my brain's model of the world, and I'm guessing everyone's, pretty clearly treats apples as objects, paradigmatic objects, if apples aren't objects then nothing is. — Srap Tasmaner
It's a matter of accepting that the models in our heads are how we understand the world and knowing that they're models doesn't change that. — Srap Tasmaner
The theories we work through consciously, we get a bit more say in, including how we theorize the models in our heads. — Srap Tasmaner
A language community in part imposes its language on the world. We talk in terms of balls and stuff that is not balls. Like Anscombe's shopping list, we use the words to pick out things in the world, or we use it to to list the things we have. Both are equally legitimate, and each relies on the other. — Banno
This is an interesting take and well deserving of a mention.I've previously characterised my own view as realist. I've argued against typical examples of anti-realism such as pragmatic theory, logical positivism, transcendental idealism and Berkeley's form of idealism. I have however also defended a constructivist view of mathematics, an anti-realist position; and off-handedly rejected realism in ethics and aesthetics. — Banno
But apples are not the raw perceptual data they cause us to have. — Srap Tasmaner
But there's no coherent way to talk as if we're not modeling — Srap Tasmaner
And yet the stuff "out there" does enter into the conversation. — Banno
The direction of fit here is reversed, in that we intend these words to be about whatever it is that is "out there". — Banno
It's not luck, it's a process of eradicating versions that are dysfunctional. — Banno
We can learn to work through models consciously that were previously managed sub-consciously. The way we do this is by changing our concepts about how these models work, about the veracity of the results they produce. — Isaac
I'm not sure that what we clumsily call the "belief" that there are "external objects" is up to us, no matter how much physicists futz with the definition of "object". Ditto for space, time, who knows what else. — Srap Tasmaner
What interests me about this is not that we might be able to generate a contradiction or a paradox by constructing some peculiar class, something you'd only think of when doing this kind of analysis; what interests me is that even if we agree that the whole idea of a class turns out to be kind of useless, since there aren't any objects for them to be classes of, we can keep talking in terms of classes, and apparently keep making sense. Whether we could give up classes -- I doubt that can be made sense of, but maybe there's a sort of Funes-the-Memorius way of individualizing absolutely everything. At any rate, it looks like no matter how we undermine them, classes will still hang around cheerfully offering their services. ("Won't be needing you today, or ever -- you're not real, you're just a manner of speaking." "I'll just wait over here, then, shall I? In case you change your mind.") — Srap Tasmaner
You're still classifying, but refusing to name the classes you're using. Making them anonymous is pointless, and a maybe little disingenuous. (You can kind of kid yourself that you're keeping the model you're using at arm's length.) On the one hand, it's as if it's only the name, not the classifying, that we're worried about; on the other, the name plays a role, and we ought to look at that. — Srap Tasmaner
We can accept that we will have classes without reifying what any of them currently happen to be. — Isaac
A person's socio-economic efforts would be thwarted if a person would consistently believe that one can never see outside of the mind-created world within which all the objects of perception exist.I think a lot of the talk about realism and anti-realism gets stuck on this, but unhelpfully so. There's little point in getting hung up on that problem because it cannot be surmounted. The solution is to accept that state of affairs and move on. We're talking about the way things seem to us to be.
/.../
So the issue really is in what things seem to have an external cause and why they seem that way. — Isaac
In order to succeed in the world, or at the very least, in order to get by in the world, one has to believe "there is a real world out there" and "there is only one true, accurate, correct way to perceive this world". — baker
I'd say simply that we are ontological realists by default because it is intuitively obvious the stair we just tripped on is actually there independent of us. Only through (too) much thought will we question that.
As to why morality isn't the same, I'd say because we don't trip over good and evil and we realize we create all sorts of social norms. If the morally real is out there, where is it? — Hanover
Here, and wherever some one/thing suffers. — 180 Proof
Morality is objective because all suffering persons depend on one another to keep the implicit (eusocial) promise both to not harm one another and to help reduce each other's suffering whenever possible (Spinoza). — 180 Proof
I'm obviously on-board with this to some degree, but I'm not sure that what we clumsily call the "belief" that there are "external objects" is up to us, no matter how much physicists futz with the definition of "object". Ditto for space, time, who knows what else. — Srap Tasmaner
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