Yeah, those explanations of what you mean by 'explanation' are clear as mud! — Janus
. . . seek to have meaning in the sense that the delivery of your creativity and its reception forms a closed, conserved system? — kudos
So you do work, labour, for a client. — kudos
Besides profit, what are the characteristics of the the social exchange? — kudos
Do you receive different levels of individual satisfaction from having the identity of a composer, or receive greater insight into the lives of others? The world? — kudos
But RL songs are not like mine. They use words that have been used before, and notes that have been used before, but it is still reasonable to describe them as new and different — Pattern-chaser
Something has been created, not just rearranged. — Pattern-chaser
My point is that Terrapin's division into mental and non-mental - which I appreciate him providing - is very problematic, and for his purposes untenable because inconsistent. — tim wood
The crux of the difference here (as I’m seeing it) is that Tim is asserting that mental activity is ultimately based in the physical world, whereas Terrapin is asserting that there is something fundamentally different about mental activity. — EricH
How do you know anything about the "objective" world? Not do, but how. — tim wood
I'd love to know, but you haven't told me. I know only that you work with 'creative' people, and that it has something to do with music. — Pattern-chaser
No it isn't. Everything you say is true, but it doesn't describe what creative people do. I.e. it doesn't describe the part of what they do that is creative. — Pattern-chaser
Should people like me be registered predators even if we abide by the law regardless of our nature? — THX1138
Fair enough. So you acknowledge the experience of redness? A what-it-is-like to be a human being? — g0d
So you mean something like mental and physical, right? Even then, I don't think it's a clean distinction, however usual as a first approximation. — g0d
In your view then, would art purely for other's sake be a bastardization from it's true aims unless it served oneself in some way? — kudos
What "rules for explanations"? Are you going to propose that they must be in physicalist terms to count as explanations? That would be very convenient for you. — Janus
You are going to use some notion of language as communication between your homunculus and our homunculi, — Banno
The world may not be, but everything we do with, in, or about it is brain based. — tim wood
Designing a car involves identifying some existing components/assemblies and creating others. They aren't really arranged, because they don't fit together like Lego. They aren't re-arranged because they haven't been arranged before, and because there's only one place they fit. The steering wheel can't be rearranged onto an axle.... :wink: — Pattern-chaser
On your definition of subjective/objective, everything is subjective - how not? — tim wood
Are all things either objective or subjective? — Matias
IME, design involves much more than rearrangement of existing building blocks. Often (usually), the building blocks themselves must be designed and implemented before they can be used in the main project. — Pattern-chaser
This account seems to assume that the necessary 'parts' are already available, and only their arrangement, relative to one another, remains to be done. This is much less than the creativity of taking a problem - a problem which has not previously been solved, or we'd use the existing solution - and creating a solution. — Pattern-chaser
Well, what I meant to ask was is if could exist (or if somebody invented) any "automatic" and "objective" way to recognize meaningful mathematical theorems (or theories) when they are expressed in a formal language.
Probably the answer is NO. But if there is no such thing as an objective "value" of a mathematical sentence, how can mathematicians be able to recognize an "interesting" new theory when they see one? — Mephist
So, a physicalist account (which is itself always a logical and semantic, as well as a physical, entity) would be an account in the language of physics. — Janus
There was a typo there: it should have read "physicalist account". My point was just that the physical form in which all accounts are given is irrelevant, in terms of their mere physical configurations, to their meaning. Of course this is not to say that the conveyance of meaning is not effected by recognizable physical configurations, but to make the fairly obvious point that there is no necessary, or necessarily physically recognizable, connection between physical conformation and meaning. — Janus
but they are semantically and logically identical which shows that no coherent physicalist account of logic or semantics is possible. — Janus
Physicalist accounts are not themselves physical, — Janus
you would need to make sense of that claim by explaining the two-ness of the brain state in physical terms. Can you do that? — Janus
Then, since you are talking about a completely different thing to the rest of us, why should we pay you any attention? — Banno
Why not treat your argument as a reductio, — Banno
since it makes language impossible — Banno
Numbers are something we do; they consist in our counting and calculating. — Banno
Knowing what 2 is, is not having a particular brain-state, — Banno
