The entire argument equivocates, — Michael
1. wV is a fictional world.
2. everything in wV is fictional.
3. fictional things are ideas
4. fictional vibranium is an idea
5. wV contains fictional vibranium
Conclusion: wV contains an idea. — frank
When you're here, you admit that vibranium is an idea. When you're in wV, you say it's real. But you're never in wV. — frank
I think we've had this discussion before. — fdrake
things eat in the same sense as they walk, run, dance, skip, speak, interpret — fdrake
It treats the universe as sort of flat and so it tells a story that is sort of flat. — Srap Tasmaner
Possible worlds in modal logic are not the same as possible worlds in physics.So what's the ontology of World X? — frank
I do think "where the types come from in nature and norm" is a very different question than "under what conditions are sentences true", and a slightly different question from "where does the correlation between nature types and norm types come in". — fdrake
We should also keep in mind expressions such as 'I'll eat my hat" and "eating humble pie". — Banno
"Counts as..." underpins language. — Banno
It's what we do, a habit, and needs no further explanation. — Banno
I take that as a psychological or neurological question. Arguably neural nets are built in order to continue in some pattern - to "predict" is how it is usually phrase.Even to learn that the practice of "counting as"? — fdrake
I take that as a psychological or neurological question. Arguably neural nets are built in order to continue in some pattern - to "predict" is how it is usually phrase. — Banno
My calculator is a phone. Puzzling. — Banno
So aren't pretending and imagining different to "counting as..."? When we count as, we "carry on" in the same way. We say this paper counts as money, and use it for transactions in an ongoing fashion. But pretend money or imaginary money - say a toy dollar note or a dream of a lottery win - can't do this. — Banno
It treats the universe as sort of flat and so it tells a story that is sort of flat.
...
But I don't always want a framework that doesn't distinguish eating from dancing from speaking, or leaves those distinctions optional, or builds up to them in a similarly generic way (apo). — Srap Tasmaner
If I utter a proposition that says that some X is a prime number the truth or falsity of that proposition is pre-determined. That seems to throw a spanner in the works for the idea that truth is exclsueively a property of uttered propositions. — Janus
It makes you wonder if accuracy is just something people say about the painting. — frank
Yes, and "true" and "false" are adjectives that we use to describe a sentence. I think Wittgenstein's account of language is more reasonable than any account that suggests that our utterances are somehow associated with mind-independent abstract objects and properties (related somewhat to this, this, and this).
I think that language is behavioral and psychological, not something more as platonism would seem to require. — Michael
you just aren't interested in even looking into why propositions still hold a prominent spot in AP and phil of math. — frank
Why?
If I paint a red ball accurately then is the accuracy of that painting "pre-determined", and so evidence that painting-accuracy is not exclusively a property of painted paintings? — Michael
For a start paintings do not enjoy pre-existence prioir to their being painted, and thought as pre-existents they are not determinate objects like prime numbers are. — Janus
Also, it is an observable object—the painting—which will be assessed for accuracy once it exists. What exactly is it that will be assessed for primeness? — Janus
I don't have to propose anything I can simply present some number: say 579,836,642,549,743,762,649 and there is a truth about whether or not that number is prime. No proposition required. — Janus
Also, accuracy is not a precisely d;eterminable quality. — Janus
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