Anything that exists materially, changes continuously, however minutely, it always becoming. — Janus
Birds would be a genus - a real distinction in nature - because there was some essential natural purpose that "a bird" expresses. And then a duck would be a bird as a particular form that in turn expresses that purpose in terms of some more specific design. — apokrisis
He does not give a coherent account of the difference between existence and being. I have never heard a coherent account of this difference, which is probably because to say that anything is is logically equivalent to saying that it exists (in whatever sense of 'existence' we might be using). — Janus
A cause has to be driven you are saying that there is an ineffable force in the universe which is evolution. That's utterly absurd. — charleton
Shit happens, things change, and the result is evolution. For some species this is the end, for others it means little, for others still it means more fitness to a changing environment, but the result of all this change is evolution. — charleton
You can ask what was the change that led to evolution, but its just dumb to suggest we change BECAUSE of evolution.
Darwin gave us one of the three major Copernican turns in intellectual history, don't be a dinosaur medievalist! — charleton
What do you think of stuff like longitudes and latitudes? Do you think that time falls in the same category? — TheMadFool
Planck time is a unit of measure, and a theoretical one at that. I have yet to see anything measured in units of planck time, which sort of makes it useless. I'm suggesting the notion of an atomic quantum of time is maybe not an observable phenomenon in our universe. — AngleWyrm
Quantum mechanics tells us that "nothing" is inherently unstable, so the initial leap from nothing to something may have been inevitable.
SO much for the school boy understanding of evolution.
Evolution is an EFFECT, not a cause. — charleton
If the genus is the capacity for communication, what is the differentia? — Banno
Put another way, you might try to translate "language" as "a capacity for communication", but if you do not understand what communication is, you have not made any progress. — Banno
What could be more minimal than zero? — apokrisis
For example? — Banno
Yet being able to interpret any given English sentence in FOPL does not imply that we can interpret every sentence.
What we can do - and this was Davidson's program - is to see how far the proposal can go. What sentences can we satisfactorily interpret? — Banno
Further, not all language use need be translated into FOPL, so long as part of it is. — Banno
Dichotomies are reciprocal limits on possibility regardless of whatever you might pretend to be discussing. — apokrisis
Why not? — Banno
Will you ever master this tricky notion of reciprocal limits I wonder? — apokrisis
Rest would be minimal motion, and motion would be minimal rest. — apokrisis
Language a the least contains identifiable negation and conjunction, nouns and predicates. — Banno
You are distressed because your ontology likes to presume a world of passive and stable existence. — apokrisis
So you get your desired passivity. But only at the end of time. — apokrisis
Look it up. A dichotomy is a relation that is mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive. — apokrisis
In the sentence 'What did the girl kiss the boy who delivered?' We have a coherent subject (the girl) but unlike the Chomsky example we cant say that there was an activity or behavior at all, even a ta higerh level. Just fragments of subjects and an activity that we dont know how to connect to either subject.
So the difference between the two sentences is that the first has a more extented coherence, we can go on within it longer.The higher order grammatical consistency allows us to forgive to at least a small degree the lower order grammatical inconsistency. — Joshs
Inertia is a positive quality - a resistance to change. So rest is the potential for a reaction to an action. Push a rock to get it to roll and it pushes right back. — apokrisis
But even archaic physics was based on metaphysical dichotomies. — apokrisis
This is an abuse of language. — charleton
Remember inertia? The first derivative of motion? The big deal is that "rest" isn't actually not going anywhere. It is simply a relative lack of motion. — apokrisis
So in the actual physics of action, your presumptions about "rest" being anything else than an asymptotic limit on action is archaic metaphysics. — apokrisis
So if discrete parts can overlap each other, then you have an interesting definition of "discrete" - one that seems to mean "continuous" as well. — apokrisis
I see. You want to be so literal about "glue" that you mean actual glue - the material/efficient cause for how to discrete things became one continuous thing?
Have fun with your careful misunderstandings! — apokrisis
So yes, a more fundamental and well formed dichotomy is that of stasis~flux. Or absolute rest vs absolute motion.
Thus if we are talking about kinetics, temperature has this asymmetric direction. There is the spectrum of possible states that are anchored at the two ends of maximum physical action (the Planck heat) and minimum physical action (absolute zero). — apokrisis
A strong definition of temperature is one that is concretely bounded. So a kinetic theory of temperature defines heat in terms of motion. — apokrisis
So physics understands temperature as a bounded spectrum. Opposing the hot and the cold is at least a start on getting to the root of the story. And now physics can define reality in terms of being bounded by the asymptotic limits of the absolutely hot and the absolutely cold. — apokrisis
Check back and you will see that a proper notion of "an object" is that it is continuous with itself and discrete from the world. So the absolute separation from the world is the logical source of being able to claim the matching fact that the object is absolutely continuous with itself. — apokrisis
In the four causes Aristotelian view, formal cause is about constraint - the regulating presence of some enduring tendency, function or purpose. So organisms are defined as wholes rather than mere sets of parts because they are glued together by a common purpose. They have a generality or continuity that is real in being actually causal. That is why Aristotle could claim his hylomorphic substantialism. Form wasn't all accident. The glue of a purpose is what is essential to the continuity that makes anything an actual substance. — apokrisis
It boggles that you claim to be any kind of Aristotelian. — apokrisis
So one of us has defined it by grounding it as the opposite of the discrete or the divided - the standard dictionary definition, as it happens. — apokrisis
The other of us says it is "categorically different", but can offer no good reason for that claim. — apokrisis
I can see where you are coming from insofar as 'multiplicity' is (or at least can be) less specific than 'collection'. This is shown by the fact that we can say "There is multiplicity in nature"; we can speak of 'multiplicity' or 'a multiplicity', whereas we cannot speak of 'collection' unless it is treated as a verb. So, if I say "There is a mutliplicity of objects in my room" it doesn't seem any different in meaning or in what it implies than saying "there is a collection of objects in my room", because both are referring to a precisely specific group of objects. — Janus
On the other hand, it seems more appropriate and suggestive of unity to say of the human body, as an example of organic unity, that it is a multplicity, than it does to say of it that it is a collection. — Janus
So this divine mind, is it the bit that is continuous? — apokrisis
But inertial motion is a degree of freedom. — apokrisis
If there's a reason I use "2" and not "3" for 2, then "2" is not arbitrary. The definition of arbitrary is that it is not based upon a system or reason, but it's just random or whim. Not every symbol is arbitrary, but some are based upon prior similar usage (as when we adhere to roots) and some languages attempt to make the word look like the thing it represents (like hieroglyphics). Regardless, though, I would agree that whatever the basis for why we have chosen a particular symbol, the typical user has no idea what it is. All of this is terribly irrelevant though because none of this requires any degree of faith. The reason I believe "2" represents 2 is through empirical evidence. Every time someone uses "2," I know they mean 2. If someone starts using "2" to mean 3, I'd correct the person because it would be contrary to what I empirically knew to be true, and the argument would consist of empirical examples of usage. — Hanover
This reliance upon empirical evidence is not limited to language usage, and I wonder why you've chosen to use it as example, but it is used to know most things about the world. And, as I've said, I fully acknowledge having faith in the truth of empirical evidence (and in my ability to reason) as those things are foundational to any understanding of the world. — Hanover
I think you've defined "belief" and not "faith." I would define faith as belief inspired by something other than proof. It is a belief often the result of spiritual apprehension but sometimes the result of necessity. — Hanover
This categorization of two dogs as two objects and then on the other hand categorizing them as a group isn't mysterious and has nothing to do with transubstantiation. — Hanover
What I want to ask is: is time a mental or physical thing? To me, it looks like the former because it is possible to imagine a universe at absolute rest - no change at all - and in such a universe time is meaningless. So, if time seems real to us then time must be a peculiar characteristic of our universe and others like it. — TheMadFool
So are you saying that the form in God’s mind is always completely particular? — apokrisis
Seems that this leads to more than a few problems regarding change - Janus’s point about the fact you are materially different every day. — apokrisis
Again as Janus reminds, continuity of function or purpose seems a trivially obvious reply. — apokrisis
Well. I guess there's nothing more to say then, since I don't interpret those terms the way you apparently do. — Janus
So does God imagine trees in general, or the particular kinds of trees like oak and larch, or even each particular tree, such as all the individuals in an oak forest? Is there any limit to the particularity of his generality? Or alternatively, any limit to the generality of his particularity? — apokrisis
.And the reason for that unity is....some kind of continuity? — apokrisis
I cannot see any reason why you would think "collection" implies "one whole", whereas "multiplicity" does not. — Janus
For example take the collection ( in the sense of 'set') of things in this room; they do not form a whole in any but the associative sense that they happen to all be in this room. — Janus
I could equally refer to them as ' the multiplicity of things in this room'. — Janus
An arbitrary collection of disparate, unrelated things is a multiplicity, but then so is a collective of functionally interrelated things, such as for example, the human body. — Janus
It makes mereology emergent rather than fundamental. So yes, ontically it gets the story the right way around. It explains how hierarchical organisation can arise in nature. — apokrisis
How does this story work when we are talking about nature? Humans can invent notions about beds (and what use God would have for a bed is a mystery). But where is this double representation deal when it comes to an oak tree or a river? — apokrisis
Does the ur-oak tree and ur-river exists as a particular ideal in God’s mind? And how particular would it be, given variety seems an essential part of natural things? (Natural law always seems to have maximum generality according to scientific discovery at least.)
Then in what sense is material nature trying to make an ideal oak tree or ideal river? How is universality the medium connecting two individual representations. Does nature employ a mind when it produces its paler imitations of the divine ideal? — apokrisis
Your account needs to say something exact about why fiveness can be regarded as a unity. The continuity has to be explained on logical grounds, not simply treated as a matter of mathematical fiat. A meaningless convention. — apokrisis
Crucial to the notion of fiveness is that it is a permutation symmetry. The five parts that compose the whole can be swapped around without making any difference to their total number. The set has cardinality but not ordinality. And fiveness, in representing pure cardinality/complete lack of ordinality, thus can become itself an ordinal part. It can be placed after fourness and before sixness. — apokrisis
So here we now have the principle of indiscernibles - the idea that there are differences that don’t make a difference. A can now equal A to the measurable degree that someone agrees nothing essential is changed by the finer detail. — apokrisis
All through this thread, MU and creative show how badly metaphysics can go astray in presuming identity as brute fact rather than being relative to some principled degree of indifference. — apokrisis
I'm not following your argument that "arbitrary" = "faith." I don't see the correlation and I don't understand why I can't accept that we use all sorts of arbitrary symbols to describe reality without having faith. — Hanover
There are foundational beliefs that anchor us into reality, sure. We might accept that our senses report to us what is occurring in the real world, and we might accept that reason and logic provide us insights into reality. Those foundational beliefs might at some level have to be accepted on faith, simply because a foundational belief can't have a further foundation; it's the origin of our belief.
If you're saying that your foundational belief is whatever the Catholic Church happens to tell you is true, I'd say that foundation is a much less rudimentary foundation than mine that no doubt relies upon many other more rudimentary beliefs, thus making it not truly foundational. — Hanover
You find it mysterious why people notice similarities among things and group them into categories? — Hanover
don't think that's right. Again, I think you attribute far too much significance to the notion of the individual. It was barely present in classical philosophy. Individuals only exist because they are expressions of the universal. — Wayfarer
Why would you consider something that is made op of parts to be a unity rather than a multiplicity? — Janus
Boundaries are notoriously imprecise, so it seems we cannot rely on them to define what counts as a discrete thing. Say a discrete thing is an individual; the etymology of 'individual' is 'not divisible', and yet something made up of parts can be divided into those parts, or may even be able to be arbitrarily divided. Would you say you ceased to be an individual if I cut off your arm, for example? — Janus
I haven't read up much on mereology, but as far as I know it is a contentious field; so I'm not convinced there would be an unambiguous "mereological principle" that could be relied upon. Now I can say, for example, that my body is a unity of discrete parts, so what kind of "unity" is that, if not a functional unity? And to think of unity in functional terms would seem to be thinking in terms of systems rather than entities. — Janus
Of course we do commonly speak and think mereologically, if that is just taken to mean something like "in terms of parts and wholes". But we are here questioning whether or not that thinking, on analysis, remains unambiguous. I don't think we can fairly claim that it does. — Janus
