Nominalism doesn't have to explain anything while avoiding concepts/universals/types--and after all, language isn't possible without those things. It's just we're denying type realism. — Terrapin Station
t is dissatisfying, but sometimes some old bugger says 'I refute it thus!' and then you're stuck for an answer, and have to wander off to find questions which seem to have replies :). — mcdoodle
How exactly it obtains is a different issue than saying that they each have their own charge versus saying that they literally share just one charge, which is the nominalism vs. realism (on types/universals) debate. — Terrapin Station
Aren't you being circular though? Brute facts don't have explanations. But you want there to be an explanation for what makes a brute fact. — mcdoodle
Or whether each electron has its own charge, and the charges are both −1.602×10^−19 coulomb. — Terrapin Station
So that is what nominalists are denying. — Terrapin Station
That's the basic idea. Nominalism isn't at all denying this. It's just saying that no two things are numerically identical in any respect. (So |..| isn't identical to |..|--they're just similar in some respects, and more similar than |....| is in some respects to either) — Terrapin Station
ou're not thinking that either either it's true that there are types that are (numerically) identically instantiated in multiple things or otherwise it's true that there are no degrees of similarity and everything is effectively a completely uniform soup, are you? — Terrapin Station
Before we go further with this, we should probably cement just how you're using "arbitrary." Are you using it with a connotation of "random"? — Terrapin Station
Concept-formation is something that individuals do. It's a way that individuals think about things--they formulate abstractions, ignoring some details and generalizing others, so that the "same term" (again, it's not literally, numerically the same from instance to instance) can apply to many different particulars. Indviduals do this non-arbitrarily. It's in response to things experienced. And it can't be avoided as long as one is conscious and has anything like a normally functioning brain. — Terrapin Station
In my view nominalism and conceptualism aren't distinct. Nominalism isn't arbitrary. Under nominalism, universals are non-arbitrary abstractions that individuals make, where those abstractions are unique to each individual (in terms of whether they're particulars or somehow numerically identical among more than one individual). Under conceptualism, we can't have anything other than that. — Terrapin Station
Obviously the ways we talk about the world are going to have some relation to the world. The error is in assuming that they're identical to the world. That's a rudimentary conflation. More specifically a reification. — Terrapin Station
Your argument was that if the world itself is not x, then x could not describe the world. — Terrapin Station
I believe that mathematics is an invented language we employ to talk about the world. I don't believe that the world itself is mathematical per se. — Terrapin Station
I don't mind so much if they ask 'describe some causes of the Great War' although personally I prefer the talk to be about enabling conditions. — andrewk
I'm afraid I don't understand these rhetorical questions, but they sound interesting. Can you explain them, and how they relate to the discussion? — andrewk
If we want to say that the state of the entire system at time t was the cause of the state of the entire system at time t+1 then I'd be happy to agree, but I doubt Aristotle would like it. — andrewk
That you can spin your wheels forever identifying 'causes' at any arbitrary level of scope is a symptom of dissonance between the paradigm and the world itself. — Roke
We can describe the mechanism of how all the tributaries flow into one another to end up at the Nile Delta. — andrewk
There's definitely enough for everyone to live comfortably, we have the technology and the resources to provide a high standard of living for every person on the planet, it's our current system of dollars and cents that creates the massive disparity. We could have a post-scarcity world now if we really wanted it, but most people prefer the zero-sum game of winners and losers because they believe it offers them the chance to become rich. — Sivad
Life is but a game. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. — Harry Hindu
Life is a game, boy. Life is a game that one plays according to the rules.”
“Yes, sir. I know it is. I know it.”
Game, my ass. Some game. If you get on the side where all the hot-shots are, then it’s a game, all right—I’ll admit that. But if you get on the other side, where there aren’t any hot-shots, then what’s a game about it? Nothing. No game. — Catcher in the Rye
So...am I over-thinking this? Is it just a metaphor that went over the edge? Or does it suggest that Dawkins in spite of himself believes in an invisible spirit-world? — mcdoodle
What is the actual, practical difference between some very few exceptional individuals understanding how everything works and no one individual at all understanding how everything works, even within any given science? — John
So since the issue of suffering can't be resolved through voluntary extinction, it becomes an ethical imperative for some species or entity to thread that needle and reach something like Tippler's Omega Point — Sivad
Procreation brings it into sharp focus. — schopenhauer1
The antinatalist argument, to the extent it's anything beyond preaching to the choir, is distastefully presumptuous about the ineffable inner worlds of others. — Roke
If you don't believe in God, then God talk isn't very convincing. — Bitter Crank
If we see God working in history, through actual people, places, events... then don't we have to make an attempt at a historical understanding of what God is about? — Bitter Crank
Isn't a desire by its very nature something you're aware of? What would it mean to have an unconscious desire? I have a desire for X, but I'm unaware of it. If I am aware of it, then it's not unconscious. — Sam26
Human interaction can include their interactions with slabs, apples and stars. — Banno
But I don't think it will help us to do so. Very few 'Why' questions have answers. — andrewk
The thought experiment seems to want to ask how you can represent experience without having experience. I don't see how a description of anything could usurp experience. — Andrew4Handel
