I will. I don't see a misreading.I think you're misreading it, but I won't press the point. — Wayfarer
Yet consciousness is a response to the world in which it arrises.Bitbol considers consciousness to be “self-evidentially absolute”: the one domain of existence that is given fully and indubitably whenever it is present. — Wayfarer
Here:...not really sure how that cuts against the quoted passage. — Wayfarer
It rests consciousness on the distinction between "inner" and "outer "- the homunculus arrises!Conscious experience is not a phenomenon among others. It is that in and to which the very distinction between “phenomenon” and “object,” “inner” and “outer,” first take shape. — Wayfarer
Phenomenology begins from a simple but far-reaching insight: the reality of first-person consciousness is ineliminable, and any account of the world must ultimately be grounded in the structures of experience as they appear to the subject. — Wayfarer
The reason why "a state of affairs" cannot list "the positions" some object occupies over time, is because this is explicitly a compilation of a multitude of states. Therefore it is not "a state". — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose in the world are the States of Affairs i) the apple is on the table ii) the apple is not on the table. These States of Affairs are not perspectival.
If the State of Affairs, the apple is on the table, obtains, then it is a fact. This is also not perspectival.
A State of Affairs exists even if it does not obtain.
A State of Affairs expresses a possible world.
When I say “the apple is not on the table”, this is perspectival from my point of view.
Then my proposition “the apple is not on the table” is false because the apple is on the table. — RussellA
Exactly.A state of affairs that obtains is a fact. — frank
In this and what follows, it would pay to make clear in which world the apple exists. That was the bit we discussed way back where truth and existence are both relative to a world; sentences are true at a world, and things exist at a world. The addition of "obtaining" is unnecessary. It is a somewhat confused proxy of "actual", and a part of Plantinga's erroneous metaphysics, which treats actuality as a property rather than an index... in order, I might add, to procure a dubious ontological argument for there being a god.However in modal logic, the apple exists even though it does not obtain. — RussellA
If that were so, then we could ask which apple is not on the table. But “there is no apple on the table” is not about an individual apple.In Ordinary language, when we say “there is no apple on the table”, we mean that the apple does not exist. — RussellA
But the sentence "there is no apple on the table” is not referring to an individual apple. And nor is it referring to the haecceity of some absent individual apple. It's not saying "There is an x such that x is an apple and x is not on the table", but that "for all x, if x is an apple then x is not on the table".This makes logical sense, because the apple must exist in some sense if we are able to refer to it. — RussellA
Yes, it could, but if that were the only possibility then it would indeed be subject to Zeno's paradoxes.A State of Affairs could list the position of an object through time, — RussellA
Like most such arguments.His argument feels like a construction for a pre-determined outcome — Ludwig V
maybe take care here, too. Why shouldn't a state of affairs list the positions some object occupies over time? As, 'The ball rolled east at 2m/s'?I agree that a State of Affairs can only capture one moment in time, — RussellA
:rofl:Obviously the problem cannot be expressed in formal logic, because the nature of the problem is that it renders the formal logic as fundamentally unsound. — Metaphysician Undercover
:lol: Have you thought of going in to writing the jokes for Christmas crackers?The demonstration is like this. If the world is describable as state A, and then it becomes state B, we can conclude that change occurred between A and B, We could then assume a state C as the intermediary between A and B and describe the change as state C, but this would imply that change occurred between A and C, and also between C and B. We could posit state D between A and C, and state E between C and B, but we would still have the same problem again. As you can see, this indicates an infinite regress, and we never get to the point of understanding what change, activity, or motion, really is. Activity, change, motion, is what occurs between states of affairs, when one becomes the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Actual" reality is simply stipulated, even Banno accepts this, as indicated below. — Metaphysician Undercover
About a particular apple or not? Is it that there might be an apple - any apple - on the table, or that some particular apple is on the table? And then how, if it is possible that the apple is on the table, do we understand the haecceity of the apple being on the table but not the apple?...the proposition “the apple might be on the table” is true because there might be an apple on the table, — RussellA
Suppose the properties that comprise an individual essence is comprised of this maximal set: 100% of the individual's intrinsic and relational properties at every point it time that it exists. There is a relation to everything that exists in this world, and therefore the set of possible worlds in which the individual exists is just the one: the actual world. I suggest this is the base case - because it does clearly identify an individual. — Relativist
A haeecity is an essence, or at least an essential property (a component of an essence). — Relativist
How to make sense of this? A possible world in which I didn't eat a different apple to the one I didn't eat for breakfast? :chin:Nevertheless, it seems to me a possible world in which you eat a different apple depends on kind-essentialism - the essence of what an apple is. — Relativist
No. The apple can't be a mere mental state because we are now each talking about the very same apple, and your mental states are not my mental states.Is it a mental state? — frank
Isn't it more that ◇∃xEx is true if there is an accessible world in which ∃xEx can be represented? Roughly, if we can posit, or perhaps talk abuot some world in which ∃xEx?For Trace Actualists, things in possible worlds can exist. This allows the modal semantics of (23) ◇∃xEx is true if there is a world in which ∃xEx — RussellA
On the assumption that there is a (nonempty) set of all possible worlds and a set of all possible individuals, we can define “objective” notions of truth at a world and of truth simpliciter, that is, notions that are not simply relative to formal, mathematical interpretations but, rather, correspond to objective reality in all its modal glory. Let ℒ be a modal language whose names and predicates represent those in some fragment of ordinary language (as in our examples (5) and (6) above). Say that M is the “intended” interpretation of ℒ if (i) its set W of “possible worlds” is in fact the set of all possible worlds, (ii) its designated “actual world” is in fact the actual world, (iii) its set D of “possible individuals” is in fact the set of all possible individuals, and (iv) the referents assigned to the names of ℒ and the intensions assigned to the predicates of ℒ are the ones they in fact have. Then, where M is the intended interpretation of ℒ, we can say that a sentence φ of ℒ is true at a possible world w just in case φ is trueM at w, and that φ is true just in case it is trueM at the actual world. (Falsity at w and falsity, simpliciter, are defined accordingly.) Under the assumption in question, then, the modal clause above takes on pretty much the exact form of our informal principle Nec. — SEP
No, Meta. I haven't moved past it because i keep answering your silly quibbles. My bad, yes, i should go back to ignoring you.You seem to want to focus on one, the abstractionist interpretation, as if it is the only acceptable interpretation — Metaphysician Undercover
Note the correction. I was trying to be too general. Truthmaker theory is my theory of choice. It is correspondence, but in general it is not deflationary. — Relativist
I don't require those numbers to be correct for this point to stand — AmadeusD
I gave evidence earlier that this is not quite so; it's a relatively recent development, consequent on the development of the modern medical system.Seems to me that the history of 'civilization' has always treated those with disabilities as if they did not belong in the same places as 'normal' people. — creativesoul
This thread is for a read through of two SEP articles on possibility and actuality. — frank
Sometimes. Ethics is not algorithmic.Are you a proponent of virtue ethics? — Jeremy Murray
Well, yes - you'd have to change your mind... :wink:Hard to figure out what you're talking about. — AmadeusD
It is a classic, straight-forward example of the Medical Model.This definition is neutral in terms of the social and medical model. — bert1
Yep.If a fish jumps out of the water and land on the path and starts exhibiting challenging behaviour, the medical model would have us fit it with artificial lungs and a trolley at great taxpayer expense. Proponents of the social model will pop it back in the water where it is not disabled. — bert1
As usual. you reject my arguments because they are inconsistent with what you believe, without even addressing the the truth or falsity of the premises, or the validity of the argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
It contains at least a half-dozen compounding errors. There are infinite sets, and indeed uncountably infinite sets; and we can give truth conditions for those sets. Consider ℕ and ℝ. These sets are not "incomplete" - you trade on an ambiguity here. M is not the actual world, as you think, but an interpretation of a modal system. A model M is an ordered structure ⟨W, R, V⟩, and the actual world is a distinguished element w∈W. Kripke prooved that K, T, S4, and S5 are both complete and consistent, so truth can be "obtained" (your term) for those systems.Possibilities are infinite, so we cannot have "the set of all possible worlds", as required for the truth conditions. That is impossible because any proposed set will be incomplete. We will never have the true actual world (M), therefore the stated truth conditions for possible worlds semantics are necessarily violated, truth cannot be obtained. — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed, but very clearly what is being used in modal logic is a semantic theory of truth.I was referring to a correspondence theory of truth. — Relativist
Well, we can use Kaplan's account, if you like. It's an extension of the semantic theory of truth that does deal with indexicals....you've been referring to indexicality, which is beyond Tarski. — Relativist
Nuh. It's not deflationary. It's very much one of the substantive theories of truth.This actually does apply to correspondence theory, which is deflationary. Deflationary theories are based on the equivalence principle: — Relativist
