But I do not know whether to say that the figure described by our
sentence consists of four or of nine elements! Well, does the sentence
consist of four letters or of nine?—And which are its elements, the
types of letter, or the letters? Does it matter which we say, so long as
we avoid misunderstandings in any particular case?
Actually I believe that numbers ARE things — Fuzzball Baggins
I was arguing that just because we can't empirically observe an infinite thing doesn't mean that it's always unreasonable to assume the existence of an infinite thing. — Fuzzball Baggins
Here's another example: something caused the big bang. In the absence of any evidence indicating that this event could only happen once, the hypothesis that are physical laws which cause big bangs to spontaneously happen at random point in time and space is more simple and relies on fewer assumptions than the hypothesis that something caused only one big bang to happen and then something else stopped that process from reoccurring. Because of this I can infer that a multitude of big bangs have always been and will always be happening, and therefore there is an infinite multiverse. — Fuzzball Baggins
How do we get to the point of saying that matter is an idea? — Terrapin Station
You know, so phenomenally, there's a tree say (not as a tree--that is, the concept, etc.--but "that thing"--I have to call it something to type this), and then how do we go from that to saying that the phenomenal tree is an idea? — Terrapin Station
Because it's not much different to saying something like, say, "The feeling of anger is an emotion". You do see the problem, right? — S
We already know that a feeling is an emotion. — S
And, what's worse, it misses the point, namely that the aim of the game is to score a goal without cheating, so to speak. If you start by speaking about a notion, then that's cheating, because it's setting yourself up so that you can't possibly lose. But as a result of your cheating, your attempt can be rightly dismissed. — S
My reply to this will be much the same as my reply to Wayfarer. Masterful prose? Perhaps. A very clever piece of writing? May well be. But are the key arguments plausible? No. What's more important? Are you a truth seeker or something akin to an admirer of exotic artifacts? — S
After all, if something was obviously true and accepted by everyone, we wouldn't have an axiom for it, would we? — Pussycat
For Wittgenstein, there are similarly illusions generated by the illegitimate employment of language itself, the confusion of kinds when 'language goes on holiday' and attention is not paid to the language-games or grammar to which uses of words belong. — StreetlightX
40 ...—It is important to note that the word "meaning" is being used illicitly if it is used to signify the thing that 'corresponds' to the word. That is to confound the meaning; of a name with the bearer of the name.
You may not be able to observe through empirical evidence that an infinite thing exists, but that doesn't mean it's unreasonable to infer that it exists. Take numbers, for example. I cannot count all the way to infinity, but I can infer that there are infinite numbers from the fact that if there were a finite biggest number then asking 'what is that number plus one' would break that limit. — Fuzzball Baggins
I think that is a reasonable way to define an infinite set of numbers, it is used all the time in mathematics. Just because he didn't list all those numbers separately doesn't mean they don't all exist. — Fuzzball Baggins
I am a college student studying philosophy, and currently I have a lot of misunderstandings about Aristotle's Unmoved Mover.
1. How is the unmoved mover not a conraditction of everything else Aristolte proposes in the Metaphysics?
2. In this theory, how does the unmoved mover cause motion? — Mattt
all positive numbers of the form 2n, n being any integer. — tim wood
The razor, then. "What is averred without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." Btw, a request for a respectable source is perfectly reasonable. — tim wood
And we can also say the word "this" to the object, as it were address the object as "this"—a queer use of this word, which doubtless only occurs in doing philosophy.
For a large class of cases—though not for all—in which we employ the word "meaning" it can be defined thus: the meaning of a word is its use in the language.
Which ones would you like me to list? — tim wood
I know the difference - I'm by no means sure you do. And your "if you listen" in response to my question to you as to who besides you says so - your answer in response to that question - is simply an example of what I've experienced as your toxic style of discussion. You made a claim, — tim wood
I ask you who besides you says so. And you do not answer. Answer or Hitchen's razor awaits you. — tim wood
So it appears, at first glance, that there may be an issue with self-contradiction, because it is suggested that a multitude of objects is a single object. However, we do commonly speak of a multitude of objects as a single object, that's what happens in arithmetic; 2, 3, 4, etc., are each representative of a single object, a number, but each number defines a multitude as well. What happens with "infinite" is that the multitude is undefined, and even specified as undefinable. But the object, the particular number, 10, 15, 25, or whatever, only has existence because it defines a multitude. Its very existence, as a number, is completely dependent on its capacity to define a multitude. If any such number which is signified by a numeral, "6", "7", "8" etc.,, did not define a multitude, it would not exist as an object. "Infinite" signifies an undefined multitude. So by the very fact of what it signifies, the possibility of it being an object is denied. What "infinite" signifies is "it is impossible that I am an object like a number", because a number necessarily defines a multitude while "infinite" necessarily does not.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your claims seem a little arbitrary. Especially your claim that the multiverse being seen on the one hand as a multitude and on the other as a single object makes it self-contradictory. A bunch of bananas is both a single object and a multitude of bananas. — Fuzzball Baggins
Do you have any logical reasoning (not involving human intuition, but based on the laws of physics or mathematics) for why an infinite thing could not exist in reality? — Fuzzball Baggins
I don't think the concept of a set having to be 'collected' quite applies to what can and cannot exist in reality. — Fuzzball Baggins
I may not be able to create an infinite collection, or even imagine all the members of an infinite set, but reality doesn't have to 'collect' anything - infinite things can exist simultaneously without having to be created one by one. — Fuzzball Baggins
I have them collected in my mind. — tim wood
A large number of grains of sand of sand is certainly collectible. — tim wood
I guess you can't have a large pile of sand, yes? — tim wood
Your opportunity to educate. — tim wood
Sorry. Just realized I rambled without answering your question. — vulcanlogician
Plato's answer is that the philosopher discovers the form of justice by turning away from the body and investigating truth itself via mathematics, dialectic, and good ol' book learnin'. — vulcanlogician
I didn't expect the Republic to be so interesting, I am up to the point where Socrates is getting weird and talking about how the rulers of state should censor books and fairy tales (???) but hopefully he has a deeper meaning. — Dagny
Words cannot tell what lies in unexplored territory, until we go and explore it. — unenlightened
...the philosophical point, contra Baden, being that it is a showing, not a saying, but with words. — Banno
Justice and beauty partake in the form of the good. The just city will be just to the extent that it partakes in the form of justice. So too with the just man.
The shadows on the wall of the cave are common opinion. One must turn away from the common opinion in order to see the world as it truly is (ie. behold the forms).
So people and cities do partake in the form of the good and the form of justice. It just takes a philosopher to recognize it. — vulcanlogician
Then why do you continue to use the terms if they aren't "good"? What do YOU mean by the term, "physical"? I think it would be more useful to me, because it would be easier for me to understand, if you made the distinction between things in your mind as opposed to things outside of your mind when you write your posts. Remember though, that both types of things have causal influences on each other. They interact. — Harry Hindu
Then how do you know you're thinking about your mother in the past or future, or even seeing her in the near-present? — Harry Hindu
But there obviously is a constant there, or else you'd never be able to recognize her. That is what I'm talking about. Those constant forms that allow you to recognize things (compare forms for similarities). — Harry Hindu
I think we already came to an agreement here anyway. Information is needed to reason, or think, or else what would you be thinking or reasoning about? — Harry Hindu
Terrapin appears to want to have it both ways, appearing to say that meaning can be private even if it's also public. I'm not convinced. — Luke
Yes. Also, I believe that Wittgenstein alludes to judging in section 35 that follows, when he says that it depends "on the circumstances — that is, on what happened before and after the pointing — whether we should say "He pointed to the shape and not to the colour"." [my bolding] — Luke
Wittgenstein notes that characteristic experiences are characteristic "because they recur often (but not always) when shape or number are 'meant'." Wittgenstein notes that there is no characteristic experience which accompanies pointing to a piece in a game as a game piece. Nonetheless, one can still mean that this game piece is called the king, rather than (e.g.) this piece of wood is called the king. — Luke
You're confusing your forms (your sensory symbols) with what they represent. Your forms are neither physical nor non-physical. My point in this thread is that the non-physical vs. physical dichotomy is false. I've been explaining myself without using those terms. You should try it. Just talk about forms, not whether or not they are physical or not. You're making things more complicated than they need to be. — Harry Hindu
Your mother takes the same form in your memories of the past and in your predictions of the future, or else how could you say that you are remembering your mother, or predicting what your mother will do? You recognize your mother by the consistent forms you have for her (her appearance, her voice, her warm touch, her smell, etc.). — Harry Hindu
So then when people are unreasonable, they aren't thinking - there aren't any thoughts in their head? — Harry Hindu
A robot has senses. — Harry Hindu
And not just interpretations, but comments, too--do you think the author is right or wrong? — Terrapin Station
The main point I was wanting to make is that when one points to something and makes a sound, one cannot point to the sound. One does not need to understand the composition and function of the moon to learn the name, but one needs to understand that human sounds have meaning, and that cannot be told in meaningful sounds or by pointing. Small children have that moment of revelation, and cows never do. — unenlightened
Before moving on to and past §37 - which begins a new line of argument dealing with names - do people have questions or interpretive issues they want to raise with the discussion of ostensive explanation in the sections covered so far? — StreetlightX
This example is not even a language-game, it doesn't have the requisite social settings. — Sam26
We've jumped a bit ahead, because in this early part of the book he's trying to show us something about the ostensive model, and how it sometimes lacks what is needed for someone to learn what is meant by a word or concept. — Sam26
Wittgenstein concludes that: "neither the expression "to intend the definition in such and-such a way" nor the expression "to interpret the definition in such-and-such a way" stands for a process which accompanies the giving and hearing of the definition." Again, understanding a definition is usually judged by how the hearer goes on to use the word and react to the word's use. It usually has little to do with a speaker's intention or a hearer's interpretation. — Luke
To repeat: in certain cases, especially when one points 'to the shape' or 'to the number' there are characteristic experiences and ways of pointing—'characteristic' because they recur often (not always) when shape or number are 'meant'.
Of course all present memories have been laid down in the past and future memories may be laid down in the present or in the future. The present very quickly becomes the past. All this is obvious.
The distinction between a memory which is of the past and one which is not is a perfectly valid one, and you have provided no argument to convince me otherwise. (Crying "Shame on you" is not an argument). — Janus
This is empty word play being used to deny a perfectly valid distinction between memories which are of or about past events, and memories which are of things such as, for example, formulae, artworks or poems which have nothing to do with the past other than that they were encountered, and the memory of them acquired, in the past (which is no distinction at all since it is trivially true that every presently held memeory was acquired in the past). — Janus
No, no, no. Let's not go there with that physical vs. non-physical stuff. There is just a form your memories, beliefs, knowledge, language, and the way you see the world, takes. Let's just go with that. — Harry Hindu
But the future can be indifferent, or neutral - neither bad or good. — Harry Hindu
You have it backwards. Reasoning, just as logic, is the tool for thinking (processing information). We don't always reason. Sometimes, we are unreasonable. — Harry Hindu
How does AI "create" information? From nothing? Of course not. It doesn't create information. It processes it. "Process" is another word for "change". AI processes sensory information in order to complete some goal. — Harry Hindu
I suppose this is really more a discussion of the definition of the word set rather than whether the universe could be infinite, so I'll agree with you that with the definition that humans have given the word set, the term 'infinite set' is illogical :P — Fuzzball Baggins
