The laws of logic were produced, and developed by human beings. — Metaphysician Undercover
. The claim that there was a time when the universe didn't consist of a collection of objects would need to be justified — Metaphysician Undercover
The laws of logic are rules of predication, how we attribute predicates to a subject. If your subject is the general notion of a triangle, the rules apply. The subject is identified as the triangle, by the law of identity, and the other two rules of predication apply. — Metaphysician Undercover
The PNC and LEM rely on the law of identity, the identification of a subject. Until you ,move to identify a particular, it is a foregone conclusion that the laws of logic do not apply. — Metaphysician Undercover
The quantum spin that creates the frequency of the Planck scale temperature, does it still exist or is it conceptual? The rest of the radiation of the universe is the result of the growing expansion of the wheel? — MikeL
It would have had a frequency of one meaning it was a line with a point moving vertically up and down it. — MikeL

You say that any particular triangle, must be one of a number of different types of triangles. Where does the LEM not apply? — Metaphysician Undercover
It doesn't make sense to say that the concept of triangle in general must be a particular type of triangle, — Metaphysician Undercover
It doesn't make sense to attribute a species to the genus, that's a category error, not a failure of the LEM. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your claim seems to be that if there is no particular triangle, then this particular triangle the potential triangle, may be both scalene and isosceles. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's difficult to make sense of what you're trying to say here because you're using words differently from Aristotle it seems to me. — Agustino
Matter is inert, it is form which is act, and actualises. So form is imposed on the inert matter (which is potential), and this form would be the fluctuation. But note that form must be independent to and prior to matter. — Agustino
Right, so then the mathematical concept of space as infinitely divisible isn't how real space actually is. It's important to see this. — Agustino
Yeah, so reality eliminates all those infinities that are inherent in our mathematical models. Our initial predictions that blackbodies would emit infinite amounts of UV were based on the mistake in our mathematical model of assuming an infinite continuity going all the way down, while the truth is that things are cut off at one point, they become discrete. — Agustino
Regarding the recursive eq, are you talking about fractal dimensionality? As in log(number copies)/log(scale factor)? — Agustino
If that’s correct, then it would seem to follow that the expansion of space would cease once that figure is reached (the Heat Death is reached) - but I know that the cessation of expansion isn't supposed to happen. This can only mean that the full conversion never happens. — MikeL
Do you know the problem. Is it the wavelength of radiation - can it never become linear and thus disappear back into the initial condition? The exponential curve that never hits zero? Why would it keep expanding do you think? (I don't buy momentum from the Big Bang) — MikeL
This sounds reasonable, but isn't the surest way to minimize surprise to reduce the information content of your beliefs? — Srap Tasmaner
Surely it could be a fluctuation I do not care what it is for the purposes of this discussion, but it must be something actual, not an infinite potential, vagueness and the like. — Agustino
Aha! Exactly. Now we're getting onto something. So the phenomenon is very similar to this. — Agustino
There cannot be any primordial chaos, infinite potential, vagueness and the like - some minimal degree of order and act are always required. — Agustino
If there is a fluctuation it seems to me like there is some act already. — Agustino
why would there be any sort of fluctuation in the first place if there is a necessarily inert vagueness in the first place? — Agustino
I will make an argument once you explain to me how you go from the vagueness in the map to vagueness in the territory. — Agustino
But I do have an issue if you want to claim that vagueness is ontological, and exists at the level of the terrain, not just of the m — Agustino
That being said, we must define what the debate is. The debate is the nature of mental events. — schopenhauer1
The metric expansion of space is the increase of the distance between two distant parts of the universe with time.[1] It is an intrinsic expansion whereby the scale of space itself changes. It means that the early universe did not expand "into" anything and does not require space to exist "outside" the universe - instead space itself changed, carrying the early universe with it as it grew. This is a completely different kind of expansion than expansions and explosions we see in daily life. It also seems to be a property of the entire universe as a whole rather than a phenomenon that applies just to one part of the universe or can be observed from "outside" it.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_expansion_of_space
In a hypothetical universe undergoing a runaway big crunch contraction, a cosmological blueshift would be observed, with galaxies further away being increasingly blueshifted; the exact opposite of the actually observed cosmological redshift in the present expanding universe.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blueshift
Seems to work very well around here ;-) — Wayfarer
If experience is there all the way down, experience is accounted for as a foundation. — schopenhauer1
What I fear about your brand of semiotics philosophy is that it has a hidden dualisim (because it is not accounting for the nature of the difference between quality and material interactions) in that there is a spooky-like quality that results from the semiotic process. — schopenhauer1
However, this hard ground at the bottom of the well, it really doesn't say much- thus the very speculative and imaginative answers to this question. — schopenhauer1
Now, perhaps ideas like sign processing, the epistemic cut, hierarchical complexity, systems causality, etc. may be the light which leads out of this cave, but it has to be done with at least keeping in mind what I stated earlier about how the experientialness of certain processes should not be taken for granted as just "there" as the result of a series of processes without account for what "there" is. — schopenhauer1
Are geometric forms, or Euclid's axioms, subject to entropy? Do they degrade over time? — Wayfarer
It seems to me that you are also insisting on some naive realism every time you talk about reality being a triad, as if it were ultimately true. — Harry Hindu
What I'm saying is that the contents of a mind are just as real as everything else. Colors are real. Sounds are real. They exist. They are both effects and causes themselves. They are the cause of me saying, "The apple is red.", or eating the apple because I like red apples. But colors are also an effect - the effect of light interacting with a visual sensory system. If they weren't then how can I say anything about the apple's state (like it being ripe or rotten)? — Harry Hindu
The question I asked (also evaded) was that the distinction between the symbolic and the physical that you generally refer to, seems to originate with Von Neumann's idea, as then picked up by Pattee, in the paper, Physics and Metaphysics of Biosemiosis. I am saying, this is distinction that only appears evident in living systems - that is why, in scanning the universe for life, NASA has some idea what to look for. There is a particular order which is characteristic of living systems, is there not? And that is where the symbolic/physical distinction really comes into play. — Wayfarer
I have no idea what that means, sorry. — Wayfarer
It is inorganic precisely because it is not ordered in the way that living things are ordered, and so the distinction between symbol and matter is not evident in it. — Wayfarer
Unintentional noise. — Wayfarer
There have been huge efforts to detect life on other planets, under the acronym SETI. That search is looking for the telltale signs of life. So far, other than a few anomalous messages, and the strange behaviour of some distant stellar objects, no such telltale signs have been found anywhere in the vast universe - it would be a huge news story if they had been.
So aren't these searches looking for a particular kind of order, the existence of which indicates a footprint of biological order? And it was in the context of that order, in which the division between 'symbolic' and 'physical' was made, wasn't it? How can that be extended to any old matter? — Wayfarer

How can you go about testing your theory when the outcome of any test will have your purpose imposed on it? All you are saying is your theory is the result of YOUR purposes and your interests, which means that it is only useful to you, not anyone else. — Harry Hindu
This can be explained by conservation of energy. Natural selection must make compromises in "designing" sensory systems as the amount of energy available isn't infinite, and it would probably take an infinite amount of energy to be informed of the world in it's completeness. So, we would be limited by the amount of energy, not some self deciding which parts of a sensory system are more useful than another part. — Harry Hindu
Well if you want your vagueness to apply only to mathematics and epistemology that is fine, but I thought we were talking about ontology. — Agustino
You were asked in the conversation with MU to provide an example of vagueness which showed that vagueness was ontological, not epistemological. In other words, that it belonged to the terrain, not to the map that we have. — Agustino
I'm an engineer (by degree anyway), and so it's been very well-ingrained into my blood to be sceptical of mathematics and mathematical models and to be aware that they are very limited in describing reality. You seem - coming from a background of theoretical physics/science - not to have this awareness of the limitations of mathematical modelling. — Agustino
Anyone can simply say to go read their favorite philosopher and end the conversation. — schopenhauer1
The thing is though, you are so close to being on the cusp of saying that, like Whitehead, the triadic hierarchies are experiential in their prehension and novelty all the way down — schopenhauer1
