You wrote:
The thought itself, in memory is rather vague and fleeting. It doesn't stand still. Then there is the expression of that thought, by the mind which is somewhat more concrete but actually can be vague also. The expression attempts to describe the thought within the limited modes available-all are symbolic and therefore inadequate in some way.
Modernists authors (influenced by Bergson such as Virginia Wolfe) imbued these characteristics of thought and expression directly in their written works. Artists tend to delve into these matters more than philosophers though Bergson did not shy away.
I asked:Is the above true?
You replied:
It is an expression of what I believe.
I replied:
Granting that you believe what you write, then all we would need to do is copy some of those statements, put quotes around them and we would have statements of belief.
What's to be believed about those statements if not that they're true?
I asked:
With certainty(conviction) comes "I know", and with less comes "I believe". Is that what you're getting at?
You answered:
Yes. It is a feeling that leads us to express a thought with different word characterizations.
If this is what your argument really comes down to, then surely you've given no reasons to think there's no "fixed reality" (whatever that means).What makes you think that there is a fixed and determinate reality? A fixed meaning of the sentence cannot provide truth if there is no corresponding fixed reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are different senses of "subjective" here that we shouldn't mix together. Initially you have used "subjective" to mean something that is incompatible with objective truth, but now you are using it in a weaker and more broader sense as anything that is related to subjects. But subjective in this other sense can be perfectly compatible with objective truth, since many things that have to do with subjects are themselves perfectly objective (e.g., if I have a toothache, it's an objective fact about me). Obviously all cognition is 'subjective' in the sense the it involves subjects, but this is a trivial claim, and doesn't prove that cognition cannot itself objectively grasp reality.Are you saying that there is nothing in the concept of interpretation, to suggest that an interpretation is necessarily subjective? Remember how I defined subjective as "of the subject". Do you know of anything else, other than the mind of a subject, which could give us an interpretation? If so, name it. Is it God or something like that? Otherwise I think you're just spouting bullshit. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but I already acknowledged that the truth of a sentence is in some sense dependent on how its meaning is interpreted, and this doesn't help you because it doesn't prove that truth is subjective. This is because a) I reject your claim that all interpretations are necessarily subjective (in the sense of being incompatible with objective truth - see above) and b) even if I grant you the premise that all interpretations are subjective (and I don't), as my original example about the cows and grass show, you cannot logically infer from the fact that A is dependent on B, anything about the properties of A from the properties of B (so if B is subjective, and A is dependent on B, it doesn't follow that A itself is subjective).You haven't provided a proper analogy. My argument would be like this. Grass is dependent on sunlight. Cows are dependent on grass. Therefore cows are dependent on sunlight. The truth conditions of the statement are dependent on interpretation. Truth is dependent on the truth conditions. Therefore truth is dependent on interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would make precisely the same objection to this argument as the objection that I made to your "interpretation of language is subjective" argument. It is possible to achieve perfectly objective interpretations of reality in most normal cases (e.g. if you are watching an action film, and believe that someone is shooting at you from the screen, then you are obviously incorrectly interpreting reality, as opposed to the people who understand that they are only watching a movie, and there are no people behind the screen with guns, and so on). And secondly even if I grant you that all interpretations of reality are subjective (and I don't), then it still doesn't follow that we cannot establish objective standards of truth on the basis of these interpretations, because this sort of inference is logically fallacious.We need to go way back in this thread, to see why I argue that truth is necessarily subjective. This is because not only is the interpretation of the sentence subjective, but also the interpretation of reality, which the sentence is supposed to correspond to, is subjective. — Metaphysician Undercover
This claim is ambiguous. You have to distinguish between a case of an X changing into a completely different thing Y (a cube of ice melting into a puddle of water), and the case of an X that is changing one or more of its properties while remaining the same X (like a car that moves from position a to position b while remaining the same car). In the second case we can perfectly well fix the reference for X even if X changes some of its properties in the process.If X changes, it is no longer X, but now Y. How could you fix your reference, if the thing you call X, is Y by the time you finish calling it X. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how this is relevant. — Fafner
I don't think that fact about cats (or whatever) are in any way any less real or objective just because the subatomic particles from which cats are composed behave in funny ways. We care about cats only in so far as their observable properties and behavior is concerned, and on the macroscopic levels cats (as animals) exhibit perfectly stable and persistent behavior, even if on the subatomic level of description things behave differently (their quantum properties after all don't show up on the macroscopic level, so we are perfectly entitled to ignore them when we deal with cats, or anything else).Nothing is persistent or consistent long enough to be a fact, though one can label it as such until this belief is undermined by new events. — Rich
and on the macroscopic levels cats (as animals) exhibit perfectly stable and persistent behavior, even if on the subatomic level of description things behave differently (their quantum properties after all don't show up on the macroscopic level). — Fafner
You have never observed what? I'm not sure what your are referring to.I have never observed this. — Rich
It doesn't prove that there are no such boundaries though.No one has ever found a boundary between the micro and the macro and the flux in the universe percolates to all levels of observations. — Rich
The question doesn't make sense unless you can tell me in advance what should count as "immobility" and "persistence".In any case, the crux of the issue lies in whether one can find immobility in the universe, that is persistent and consistent throughout duration, such that it can be call a truth or a fact. — Rich
If it is the case that the constant state of flux causes one to believe that they cannot step into the same river twice, then that person cannot talk about the river. Different rivers have different names. Which river cannot one step into twice?
It's nonsense on stilts. — creativesoul
MU has been indefatigably insisting on this through a couple of hundred posts in this thread alone. I think he is in the position of the man who says there is no such thing as a chair because it's all made of atoms, or whatever. I won't say he is that man, but I'll leave it to him to say he isn't. The point is that the chair man is entirely correct, but completely wrong. — tim wood
But how is it completely wrong? It destroys the possibility of meaning beyond that agreed to by interested parties or imposed by force. If you say, "Sure, agreement is good; that's all we have anyway!" What you mean is that's all we have as a matter of force. You have thrown reason out the window - after all it's all interpretation. — tim wood
Interpretation is the attribution of meaning. One can mistakenly attribute meaning. — creativesoul
There are different senses of "subjective" here that we shouldn't mix together. Initially you have used "subjective" to mean something that is incompatible with objective truth, but now you are using it in a weaker and more broader sense as anything that is related to subjects. But subjective in this other sense can be perfectly compatible with objective truth, since many things that have to do with subjects are themselves perfectly objective (e.g., if I have a toothache, it's an objective fact about me). Obviously all cognition is 'subjective' in the sense the it involves subjects, but this is a trivial claim, and doesn't prove that cognition cannot itself objectively grasp reality. — Fafner
And now, about interpretation, if you think about actual cases where it makes sense to talk about interpretation, then it actually shows that 'interpretation' is something that is usually aimed at achieving an objective grasp of something which itself is not subjective. Here are some examples (and they could be multiplied): — Fafner
I reject your claim that all interpretations are necessarily subjective (in the sense of being incompatible with objective truth - see above) — Fafner
It's nonsense on stilts. — creativesoul
What I am saying is that it is a chair, and it is fundamental particles, etc.. What it is, is however it is interpreted....
I believe that it is a common assumption, to assume that there is something which exists independent of being interpreted. We describe that existence and our descriptions have meaning. We observe a compatibility between our descriptions, and the assumed independent existence. Does this compatibility justify the claim that meaning is independent of our descriptions? How do you bridge that gap, to say that our descriptions have meaning, and there is compatibility between the descriptions and the thing described, so the thing described must have meaning? — MU
Meta wrote:
This is where you demonstrate your confusion. An interpretation is an interpretation. There is no right or wrong, or mistaken interpretation, unless it is judged in comparison with another interpretation.
That statement is false. We can and we do it all the time. I swam in the same river for years — creativesoul
I was just trying to help you... This only makes your argument even weaker than I though it was, because the conclusion is trivial and proves nothing of any interest as I already showed.Are you not paying attention? I've stated numerous times that I am adhering to a definition of subjective which is "of the subject". If you are interpreting anything other than this, then that is your mistake, and the ambiguity is produced by your own mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
No I'm not.So in your example, when you say things like having a toothache are objective, you refer to the weaker sense of "objective". — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, you are begging the question. Obviously on my understanding of truth, truth is not the same as justification.But the fact that it is justified, and agreed upon, and "objective" in that way, does not make it an objective truth. You may have fooled everyone into thinking that you have a tooth ache, when you really do not. — Metaphysician Undercover
And I say there is such a thing, so?There is no such thing as correct or incorrect translation of a language into another. — Metaphysician Undercover
I did give a definition of 'objective truth' way back, in terms of truth conditions. And nothing that you've said shows that it is not 'acceptable'.You haven't yet given me an acceptable definition of "objective truth" — Metaphysician Undercover
Objective reality def= anything that could be described truly or falsely.just like you've failed in your attempt to provide an acceptable definition of "objective reality" — Metaphysician Undercover
They are not useless, but depending on who or what it's doing the translation, the results are always quite different. There are over 300 translations of the Dao De Jing, must of which are entirely different. For example, some use concepts that the translator believes were being used at the time the Dao De Jing was written, whenever that might have been instead of modern context.Yes, why not? Otherwise bilingual dictionaries would be useless. — Fafner
Of course things become way more complicated when it comes to translating literature, but this doesn't show that for most intents and purposes you can find very close correlations in meaning between words of different languages. It also partly depends on what one means by "translation", because we can adopt different criteria for "correctness" of translation - say 'literal' as opposed to 'free' etc. — Fafner
Quantum physics is micro-phenomena, irrelevant in the macro world of chairs and cows. I understand that quantum uncertainty attaches a probability that the bow of the battleship USS Massachusetts will appear in my living room (with the rest outside), but I also understand that I really don't have to worry about it. And the same with any other quantum phenomena at "street" level. Truth, then, if it means anything at all, that meaning is neither conditioned nor constrained by any quantum considerations. (The level of precision of this claim, being just the odds against the battleship appearing, is far greater than the level of precision of any other measurement of anything that is measured.) — tim wood
I describe, you describe (they describe). We tally the descriptions, and they agree! For present purpose let's suppose we all agree it's a blue chair. — tim wood
Is their anything objective, here? I think there is. If we can agree on blueness and chairness, and that these are combined in one object, then it seems reasonable to conclude that there is an object that just is blue and a chair: a blue chair. — tim wood
The proposition, "That is a blue chair," then, is true. But it draws from the truth of the matter of there being a blue chair. That truth, I argue, is objective and "lives' in the collective judgment that affirms it. And its objectivity is not that of the blue chair, which is a real existing thing (as established and constituted by collective judgment), it is instead of the same objectivity as numbers, like four, or seven. — tim wood
Rich asserted:
You swam in a different river with a persistent name.
That you give it the same name does not make the river the same...
An interpretation is wrong by virtue of (mis)attributing meaning. — creativesoul
I was just trying to help you... This only makes your argument even weaker than I though it was, because the conclusion is trivial and proves nothing of any interest as I already showed. — Fafner
I did give a definition of 'objective truth' way back, in terms of truth conditions. And nothing that you've said shows that it is not 'acceptable'. — Fafner
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