It very much seems you cannot since there's nothing that says to continue while it's a pumpkin, but not beyond, where it ceases to be pumpkin. And certainly nothing to say that 'pumpkin' is what matters in the first place. — noAxioms
That contradicts this:You don't get any discrete boundaries if you exclude any reference to minds.
We seem to be in agreement then. — noAxioms
All distinctions are ideal, and not physical, aren't they?
— Metaphysician Undercover
Only to an idealist. — noAxioms
You are trying to define an object separately from the other components of the same object, like trying to define a pizza without any dough, or without any sauce or cheese.
— Fire Ologist
Per your weird assignment of terms, it would be an attempt at a pizza with dough but without the cheese and sauce, except that the dough seems undefined without sauce on it. — noAxioms
What is pragmatic depends on how a particular animal lives its life.
To re-quote your Pinter snippet:But you seem to be leaning towards an idealist view yourself. Can you say why you're not? — Wayfarer
That sounds somewhat like idealism as well and I totally agree with it. Something (humans, whatever) finds pragmatic utility in the grouping of a subset of matter into a named subset, which is what makes an object out of that subset. That's the similarity with idealism. But if I am correct, idealism stops there. Mind does not supervene on anything. There's no external reality, especially a reality lacking in names and other concepts to group it all intelligibly. There is only 'cup', and no cup.The atoms of a teacup do not collude together to form a teacup: The object is a teacup because it is constituted that way from a perspective outside of itself. — Mind and the Cosmic Order, Charles Pinter
I personally never think of the moon as a 'still', unchanging ideal. Seeing its shadow come right at me really drove home that point. Yes, like all things designated as 'objects', they change and will eventually no longer be that object, if only by the lack of something to so name it.because of change, the still object referenced in the “moon” is really an ideal moon, because the actual moon isn’t a still object. — Fire Ologist
It very much seems you cannot since there's nothing that says to continue while it's a pumpkin, but not beyond, where it ceases to be pumpkin. And certainly nothing to say that 'pumpkin' is what matters in the first place.
— noAxioms
You couldn’t give the example of how a pumpkin is not a distinct object if there were no distinct objects. You certainly couldn’t covey such a thought to me from your mind if you didn’t place an object, like a pumpkin, translated as “pumpkin” into language, but otherwise able to be thrown in the direction of my head, in between us. You could have said “gourd” or “cheese sandwich” but you made reference to a distinct thing instead.
— Fire Ologist
Some distinctions are indeed physical. Object boundaries don't seem to be one of them.Unless you, like me think, some distinctions are ideal, and others are physical.
I was envisioning something more like 'this'. Making up a word with no reference is running away from the issue of a reference without a word.hgtiigumsolee
and the nature of the animal. — Count Timothy von Icarus
why different peoples make largely the same sorts of distinctions despite having developed their languages and cultures largely in isolation. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But can you think of one culture that doesn't distinguish types of animal or doesn't use terms for colors but rather blends color and shape, color and size, etc.? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Everything is "could, "can," "is possible," or "if." But can you think of one culture that doesn't distinguish types of animal or doesn't use terms for colors but rather blends color and shape, color and size, etc.? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Making up a word with no reference is running away from the issue of a reference without a word. — noAxioms
Ah, OK. In that case I don't know where you're pointing. Perhaps it is only the msc part that is the pile of black and white in question, situated between different shaped physical piles of black and white. How would I know?It’s not word. Don’t idealize it.
It’s a physical pile of black and white. Can you see the border? I could go cut and paste it for you. — Fire Ologist
How would I know? — noAxioms
I did, but lacking knowledge of the bounds of the physical thing, I was reduced to guessing, which I did. That's the mscYou would have to use physical eyes and senses because it’s a physical thing — Fire Ologist
I did all that, and found an object, but probably not the object you meant, since all I had to go on was the physical.that’s the only way to investigate and find if you see border or edge or particular “object
That wording makes it sound like there's one preferred border, when in fact there is an arbitrarily large number of ways the border can be assigned, none better than any other. There is no 'this border'. There is only 'a border', among many other possibilities.And this border is distinct
"what constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it." — noAxioms
Is this the premise you're examining? — ucarr
Yes. — noAxioms
Can a sentient being cognize a thing-in-itself without the mediation of language? — ucarr
Any cognition is at some level a language, but I suppose it depends on how 'language' is defined. — noAxioms
I was reduced to guessing, which I did. That's the msc
That guess is likely wrong — noAxioms
That wording makes it sound like there's one preferred border, when in fact there is an arbitrarily large number of ways the border can be assigned, none better than any other. There is no 'this border'. There is only 'a border', among many other possibilities
That sounds somewhat like idealism as well and I totally agree with it. Something (humans, whatever) finds pragmatic utility in the grouping of a subset of matter into a named subset, which is what makes an object out of that subset. That's the similarity with idealism. But if I am correct, idealism stops there. Mind does not supervene on anything. There's no external reality, especially a reality lacking in names and other concepts to group it all intelligibly. There is only 'cup', and no cup.
Idealism leads to solipsism. Intellects sharing categorization via language does not.
Idealism leads to solipsism. — noAxioms
It's worth considering that before the rise of "the view from nowhere" as the gold standard of knowledge the gold standard was "the view from the mind of God." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I indicated my guess and it was different than yours. Now what? Is yours also a guess? Which of us is wrong? Both seems likely.We should compare guesses. — Fire Ologist
It would be nice, yes. We're 150 posts in here, and no such middle ground that holds water has been suggested yet, but I'm open to it.Isn't there a middle ground between there being "one canonical border," and any assignments being arbitrary? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nonsense. People can create conventions to put the distinctions at pragmatically useful places. Nothing random about that.If assignments were truly completely arbitrary then people should make such distinctions at random.
That seems to be along the lines of giving AI and thus conventions to devices, difficult to do with an energy beam. The OP mentioned a teleporter that moves that to which it is 'attached'. So (kindly ignore the fact that I'm using language here) it gets strapped to a railing at the edge of the roof of a building that is integrated into a city block of building connected by shared walls and interconnecting passageways. Question is, what are the bounds of what the device teleports?But they clearly don't do so. So wouldn't it make sense to look for the object in exactly what causes people to delineate them in such and such a way in the first place?
Not so. We boiled water until it froze, as an illustration of how to reach the triple point. The boiling was done via pumping air (and steam) out of the jar with the water. After not long, ice forms on the boiling surface.Water can become ice or steam, but it doesn't do both simultaneously.
I suspect you're right. I'm no authority, but other people/minds are nothing but ideals themselves to me, and one has to get around that. I don't know how its done.I think [idealism leading to solipsism] is a misrepresentation of idealism. — Wayfarer
So they must have solved the problem then. Again, I know very little of the positions pushed by various famous philosophers. I'd not pass a philosophy course in school since that's mostly what they teach, sort of like how history was taught to us.None of the canonical idealist philosophers believe that only my mind is real.
Ah, human speech and representations thereof. If 'language' only refers to that, then a sentient being can definitely cognize a things without the mediation of languagelanguage - a system of human communication rooted in variations in the form of a verb (inflection) by which users identify voice, mood, tense, number and person. — ucarr
I suspect that word processing software has no more awareness that it is dealing with language than does my tongue.word-processing software delineates language into sentences, paragraphs and chapters.
I don't see a denial of the indicated connection, so it's a question you must answer.we see that the interface connecting cognitive language with physical parts of the natural world is denied.
This denial raises the question: How does language internally bridge the gap separating it from the referents of the natural world that give it meaning?
However, in the same way, you can't delineate the boundaries of anything without the idea/universal. The idea is what tells you "include this, not that," or "stop here." — Count Timothy von Icarus
You don't get any discrete boundaries if you exclude any reference to minds. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It would be nice, yes. We're 150 posts in here, and no such middle ground that holds water has been suggested yet, but I'm open to it.
Any suggested bound is going to be put to the test of one of my OP examples, or the Midas thing.
If the idea can't do that, then it doesn't seem to help.
When we look at the premise: What constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it., we see that the interface connecting language with physical parts of the natural world is denied. — ucarr
King Midas cannot avoid touching — noAxioms
Pretty much like Pinter seems to say. But your paper doesn't seem to be the position held by most self-identified idealists who consider mind to be fundamental, supervening on nothing else.Take a look at The Mind-Created World. — Wayfarer
Since it seemingly cannot actually be done, all such devices are necessarily fictional/magical, yes. If there were a solution to the problem, we could find a non-fictional example to illustrate the point.Dontcha think this might have to do with the standards all being magical devices? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Godel certainly shoots that down, but perhaps it was already shot down by that point.This was, in fact, the problem with Maxwell's Demon. It took a very long time to figure out why it couldn't exist, but finally people thought to challenge the assumption of the thing essentially having a non-physical/magical memory.
You seem to still be approaching the problem from the wrong end. You're taking a cow and looking for a very precise (down to the atomic level) demarcation of that already defined convention.Think about it this way, if "being a pipe" or "being a cow' is "strongly emergent" or something like that, then it's quite impossible to determine if some particle belongs to a cow, etc. or not.
The story does not describe the universe being converted, so the supplied physical definition is not the correct convention obviously.Was there a before King Midas touched, when the world wasn’t gold, and then what happened to Midas afterwards? — Fire Ologist
Well for one, the suggestion is that convention is very much the interface between the physical world and 'object'. Convention comes from language and/or utility. So the interface is not denied, but instead enabled by these things.When we look at the premise: What constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it., we see that the interface connecting language with physical parts of the natural world is denied.
— ucarr
How is my understanding of your quote a mis-reading of it? — ucarr
The energy beam itself (and not the gun) needs to figure this out. — noAxioms
But your paper doesn't seem to be the position held by most self-identified idealists who consider mind to be fundamental, supervening on nothing else. — noAxioms
A perspective can collapse a wave function. Can God (with the supposed 'view from nowhere') do that? — noAxioms
So this got me thinking, and I could only conclude that what constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. — noAxioms
Schopenhauer’s philosophy is built on the premise that our understanding of the world is mediated through perception and cognition. — Wayfarer
However, Schopenhauer extends this idea, positing that the will is the fundamental reality behind all appearances. — Wayfarer
He (Schop) argues that objects, as we know them, do not exist independently of our perception. — Wayfarer
According to Schopenhauer, what we perceive are representations (Vorstellungen), which are dependent on the subject (I would add, as well as the object, as I don’t deny that objects exist). — Wayfarer
If we can’t know the objects in themselves and unmediated, then all “objects” should have quotes around them. They are ideal only. — Fire Ologist
My only solution to poke a small hole in the phenomenal veil is to triangulate towards the thing-in-itself by comparing the ideals from other minds who together investigate the same or at least similar phenomena. — Fire Ologist
It's a view which attempts to exclude the subject and subjectivity altogether, so as to grasp what is 'really there'. — Wayfarer
The world which is there (for ages).
Us in it, the human subject, also there, but now there with.
And our perspectival experience the unique picture made of the other two, existing only in our head, filled with “objects” that are unlike the other two things. — Fire Ologist
'Everyone knows that the earth, and a fortiori the universe, existed for a long time before there were any living beings, and therefore any perceiving subjects. But according to Kant ... that is impossible.'*
Schopenhauer's defence of Kant on this score was [that] the objector has not understood to the very bottom the Kantian demonstration that time is one of the forms of our sensibility. The earth, say, as it was before there was life, is a field of empirical enquiry in which we have come to know a great deal; its reality is no more being denied than is the reality of perceived objects in the same room.
The point is, the whole of the empirical world in space and time is the creation of our understanding, which apprehends all the objects of empirical knowledge within it as being in some part of that space and at some part of that time: and this is as true of the earth before there was life as it is of the pen I am now holding a few inches in front of my face and seeing slightly out of focus as it moves across the paper. — Bryan Magee Schopenhauer's Philosophy, Pp 106-107
You seem to still be approaching the problem from the wrong end. You're taking a cow and looking for a very precise (down to the atomic level) demarcation of that already defined convention.
I am starting with only 'this', an indication of some classically local substance, say the non-air surface (say a leg exoskeletal surface of a 0.1 mm bug sitting on a shirt) upon which the phaser energy beam is focused. Now this beam needs to perform its function to the entirety of the 'object' of which that surface is a part.
Godel certainly shoots that down, but perhaps it was already shot down by that point.
The point is, the whole of the empirical world in space and time is the creation of our understanding, which apprehends all the objects of empirical knowledge within it as being in some part of that space and at some part of that time: and this is as true of the earth before there was life as it is of the pen I am now holding a few inches in front of my face and seeing slightly out of focus as it moves across the paper.
Perhaps I used the wrong words. It has become more clear in the subsequent posts. What most everyone seems to have concluded is that 'object' is an ideal. Ideals are manipulated (expressed to others say) through language, and my initial post focused on the language and convention part instead of naming it for what it was: an ideal.When we say that objects are a product of language, we are simply shifting the problem from the external world to the interiority of language. We then say that there are objects in language. — JuanZu
Apparently not. No example of this has been found, at least if you alter the statement to say 'external to ideals'. There are certainly things that arguably don't use language as we know it that nevertheless treat preferred groups of material as 'objects'.Doesn't this mean that if there are objects in language, then there are also objects-ish in "the world external to language" that authorize and enable our language to function?
I don't think there ever was a 'problem', only an observation, an investigation into such things.It’s a fictional thing.
Problem solved. — Fire Ologist
Ah, 'sufficient void between groups', except that me and the ground one since there's no void between us. Human convention usually considers air and liquid to be classified as 'void' for such purposes. King Midas still breathes air, not gold.But if you are grappling with atoms and void and finding not enough void anywhere between groupings of atoms…
A river is an object by convention, and you step into the same river each time. If it's a different river each time, then it's also a different me each time doing it, so a man cannot even 'be' twice since, like the river, the material changes from moment to moment. Anyway, no, I'm not saying that. I talk about identity quite often, but this topic is not about that.Or are you saying a man can’t step into the same river twice
Pretty much everybody is concluding the same thing, so it doesn't seem to be an example of being contrarian.Or are you just being contrarian
Problem is, several people, (you especially) throw these names around, which is great for the readers that know them and their views, but I'm not one of those. I don't know the names, and I'm apparently discovering things for myself that have already been discussed somewhere by these famous guys. I'm behind the curve. I didn't bother with learning a lot of the history because so many of them were pre-20th century and the main reason I came to this site (well, the old PF actually) was because nobody seemed to discuss the philosophical implications of 20th century science, such as the nature of time, of identity, of the finite age of the universe, of wave function collapse and such. All these modern findings really put a hole in a lot of the older views, forcing their adherents to look the other way instead of face the new issues.Thanks for looking at it, I appreciate your feedback. But I’d like to think that the essay is compatible with the canonical idealists, such as Berkeley (with some caveats), Kant, Schopenhauer, and our contemporary, Bernardo Kastrup. — Wayfarer
I've come to agree with that, but I would put 'object' in scare quotes since the thing in itself (or better worded, the stuff in itself) is not so tied to perception. A subject yes, but not necessarily a perceiving one.the idea that the existence of objects is intrinsically tied to the presence of a subject that perceives them. — Wayfarer
Agree with this, at least until perception becomes fundamental, and fundamental properties are given to 'the will' like it's something more special.our understanding of the world is mediated through perception and cognition. He argues that objects, as we know them, do not exist independently of our perception. This aligns with the broader philosophical stance of idealism.
No, it just challenges 'object', one of a list of words that can similarly be demonstrated to be ideals. That we put words to sets of material that we find useful does not imply that the material behind it is challenged.Schopenhauer asserts that the existence of the objective world is contingent upon a perceiving subject. Without a subject to perceive, there can be no object. This challenges the notion of an independently existing material world.
Maybe because there's only 'stuff in itself'. It's us that makes 'things' of it all.The phenomenal veil, of our own construction, that cloaks and hides the thing-in-itself. — Fire Ologist
Pretty much a realist stance, with some of the findings of this topic highlighted.I see three things:
The world which is there (for ages).
Us in it, the human subject, also there, but now there with.
And our perspectival experience the unique picture made of the other two, existing only in our head, filled with “objects” that are unlike the other two things. — Fire Ologist
An objective world, by definition, would not require a subject or its ideals at all.We need all three.
The “objective world” that is “really there” requires not just the ideals to the subject, but also the idealized thing without the subject (however that thing appears to me, or better, to us.)
It likely does. Consider if MWI were true, then 'world' right there is an ideal. The theory itself does not posit them. It's only a side effect of entanglement of states, and even 'states' becomes an ideal. There's not much left to objective reality except that one wave function and its evolution.consider, if the nature of objects is imputed by the observer, then why doesn't the same apply to the ‘external world?’ — Wayfarer
That was in reaction to your Magee quote, and it seems to presume a more fundamental (proper) idealism than the one described by your paper or Pinter.Bold but true, I believe.
From the lack of examples outside of fiction, it seems pretty obvious that you can't.How can you possibly demarcate where some object ends without any idea at all of what it is you want to demarcate? — Count Timothy von Icarus
In a search for an objective object, yes, I want that. Seems completely impossible, so the conclusion is that all these things are but ideals.If I understand you right, you want some beam to paint a particular bug, pumpkin, etc. and lable them "thing" against some background not labeled "thing."
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