You are equivocating between the sense of an objective perspective and an objective thing. — Pantagruel
All you are doing is declaring that realism (or maybe Platonism) is true, nominalism false. — Pantagruel
I don't know what you mean by "objective perspective", perspective is something subjective. — Lionino
Nice. I hear you but i don't think this is all that useful a formulation. We can find any number of minds to agree and visualise a unicorn but it still doesn't make it true. In this way we can also have objective accounts of ghosts and UFO too. Not sure what the word objective adds to this understanding. — Tom Storm
All can however only provide the exact same example of what a perfect circle is epitomized by. And from this universality of agreement in understanding among all sapience then gets derived things such as the number pi. — javra
By entailment: If a perfect circle is no more objective/true/real than is a unicorn, then the number pi is no more objective/true/real than is a unicorn. — javra
A perfect circle is realized in this world by all minds which can comprehend it's, granted non-physical, being and, furthermore, all minds with sufficient comprehension will be able to thus realize an understanding of the exact same geometric form. — javra
it can then likewise also lead to unicorn based technologies we all live by and universally agree upon. — javra
But you are quite right to say that a perfect circle and a unicorn have little in common. A perfect circle is a mathematical abstraction, while a unicorn is a mythical creature. The unicorn relies upon open an open ended imaginative discourse, while the circle's properties are defined mathematically. — Tom Storm
But, if so, then – via pi and so forth – so too is all our modern scientific knowledge of quanta nothing more than concoctions of human imagination. — javra
This would satisfy my idea of perfection as that which can't be improve upon. — Tom Storm
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