If so, then the question of universals is the wrong question. It's not why things are similar, it's why they're different that needs explaining. — Marchesk
Now that you mention it, I think that evolution may possibly also have a role in the type of logic we mostly tend to use - eg a preference for including double-negative elimination in our rules rather than restricting ourselves to constructivist logic, but I am less sure of that. — andrewk
Also, there is a distinction between cognition and re-cognition. Although it might also be said that cognition must always already involve recognition. In any case recognition is not merely the registering of a pattern, but the knowing of that pattern as being the same as or alike to another. Such a thing obviously cannot be rationally deduced, so I conclude that it must be intuited. — John
On this definition, I maintain that something logically contradictory is conceivable, and while I do not expect you to accept this assertion, I would request any proof if you continue to maintain that "if x is contradictory, then x cannot be thought of" — maplestreet
Universals are more vague than particulars. — darthbarracuda
Theology doesn't try to be a science, because it's subject matter isn't scientific. — darthbarracuda
Such fine distinctions are always going to be, at least to some degree, terminological issues. — John
If, however, the Universe expands and contracts through an endlless cycle of big-bang-and-bust, then there's your machine — Wayfarer
You're imbuing thermodynamics with the status of divine will, as always. — Wayfarer
Likewise laws and principles are causal in the sense that the provide the matrices of possibility along which things tend to unfold, but they are not causal in the sense that efficient or material causes are. So your description of what is real being 'entities with causal potency' is still physicalist. — Wayfarer
The point about scholastic realism (i.e. acceptance of universals) is that it provides a connective principle, a telos, which has on the whole been lost to modern thought: — Wayfarer
In my view, insofar as those things are real (again, read "extramental"), you can have an encounter with them. — Terrapin Station
but there are many things that are real that you can't 'have an enounter with'- like the Gross National Product, the inflation rate, and the probability of the Mets winning the World Series. Some are abstract but have real consequences, others are 'real possibilities'. — Wayfarer
For the record, I don't think it's necessarily true, much less trivial at that, that all the typewriter-monkey-brains would eventually think up anything possible. — maplestreet
I guess I'm unclear on a lot of things you find important or relevant here. — maplestreet
Or equivalently, just because we can mash together all the words in the world in any sort of combination doesn't mean that there is something possible out there that is unexpressable in any sort of string of words... — maplestreet
Physics is either inaccurate, or is just a few specific types of perceptions. I dislike it on a whole as an enterprise, because it is often used to conclude far more than the actual perceptions it is based off could conclude themselves. — maplestreet
Definitely not in agreement with the notion of physics determining what is possible or with the notion of self-consistency determining what exists either — maplestreet
o give you a better idea of what I take conceivability to mean, I interpret 'x is conceivable' to be more or less equivalent to 'x can be thought of' (even if for reasons of practicality, no one ever actually DOES think of it) — maplestreet
It would seem hard to affirm this, since it seems hard to know the limits of conceivability. — maplestreet
For example, "It claims states of constraint"--I'm not sure what "It" is given the way you've constructed your sentences. — Terrapin Station
I just can't follow you most of the time. — Terrapin Station
Yet if I remember correctly Peirce included second-ness and third-ness. So first-ness would be vagueness (which is a vague term itself - a placeholder for what is impossible to predicate?), second-ness would be universality and third-ness would be the "crisp" particularity. A crude image would be gas-liquid-solid. — darthbarracuda
Universality comes before particularity simply because we particulars cannot exist without universals, i.e. constraints and repetition. The very class of particulars is a universal. So indeed you are correct that we never come across universals "by themselves", but this is well-accepted as the instantiation relation objects have with their properties. — darthbarracuda
Thus universality is ultimately prior and foundational to particularity. Particularity emerges from universality as various combinations and configurations of universals. — darthbarracuda
A: I said, "I have a dog."
If one knew everything about my dog, one would know all sorts of things about how she relates to aspects of the universe... that she likes tennis balls, that she weighs 15 lbs, how far she is from Neptune, and so on. These are truths entailed by A. Is that right? — Mongrel
Things follow from "I have a dog," but it's easier to understand first if you understand it in terms of an argument, so that we have a set (>1) of premises. — Terrapin Station
Uncertainty on the part of whom? — Mongrel
Practicality, social commitments, fears, inner tensions can hinder that impulse but psycho-behavioral coherence doesn't seem like something learnt. — aporiap
I think there's a disconnect between individualism and authenticity. One can value communal living or strongly identify with some over-arching socio-cultural label and work to align with the norms and pressures of that. I think -if that's what one feels aligned to- then that counts as living authentically. — aporiap
But that web doesn't necessarily have to align with what's valued by the person in the centre. And so while there might be a more stable; more comfortable way of being, it takes energy and emotional untangling to change that. I feel like that fear and reluctance and the like comes from that. — aporiap
But ultimately there can be more 'stable' states that one can be in. — aporiap
So I think of authenticity as being rooted in something more innate/biological. We tend towards stability. Stability involves inner coherence. Inner coherence for a human involves alignment of action with values or strongly-held beliefs. — aporiap
There're values, deeply held beliefs, feelings. Acting / living / habituating oneself in accord with those -and being unafraid to express one's 'creative unpredictability' — aporiap
Well because the nervous system controls movement and bodily processes, and so does consciousness. — darthbarracuda
Certainly I am supposing the phenomenological experience of being a self of sorts. But I don't really have an ambitious metaphysical structure of the world. I find idealism to be theoretically satisfying but not entirely believable in some sense, while I see a real, external world as probably existing in some form or whatever. A giant abyss of darkness, with matter bouncing into matter on the macro-scale and random events happening on lower levels. But basically I hold a position I suspect most people do: the universe is a spatio-temporal container and we are one of its many contents. — darthbarracuda
Well, I said that then existence of a nervous system would be a starter. — darthbarracuda
And you of all people should know that "naturalism" is such a vague buzzword that it literally is meaningless outside of esoteric circles. — darthbarracuda
Where, according to your pan-semiotic theory, does qualitative experience reside? — darthbarracuda
Rather I am saying that there is a distinct difference between the firing a C-fibres firing (an outdated theory nowadays but one that continues to be used out of tradition) and the experience of pain. Whatever is going on in the brain when I experience something is different than the experience itself.
The point being, however, is that a numerically-distinct experience can only be experienced by one subject at a time. A teleporter kills me because the copy of me at time t+1 is not identical to me at time t.
Only one mind can exist in a single perspective at a time, just as how only one object can exist in a single space-time location. Access to the mind would be akin to access of the exact same perspective as another person at the exact same time - impossible. My head cannot co-exist with your head at the same time. The perspective I have is unique. Of course, you can make perfect copies of my mental experience, just as you could make perfect copies of the perspective I inhabit at a certain time. But they would not be identical - it would not be true access, but rather access by "cheating". — darthbarracuda
But not at the same time nor place, i.e. perspective. — darthbarracuda
So mind just "arises" out of structure/process? This doesn't explain anything really. Just seems all hand-wavy and actually kind of poetic. — darthbarracuda
You would be accessing a duplicate copy of my brain state, not my brain state. — darthbarracuda
My mind does not seep into the world, or at least I don't think it does (re: externalism). It doesn't come out of my ears. Mind is the one thing that I am certain about having, yet I cannot locate it in the world I assume surrounds me. — darthbarracuda
So a better analogy would be that I have my own container filled with stuff only I have seen. You can take an x-ray and get a general idea of what is inside. But you cannot actually see the contents. Only I can see the contents, only I am allowed to. Nobody else is allowed inside. Mind is subjective. Like a Liebnizian monad. — darthbarracuda
If we look at the brain, we can presumably see the structure of fatty tissue and analyze the various synapses and whatnot going on. We can dig through the whole brain, but we'll never find mind. There's hair, skin, scalp, skull, brain tissue, then skull and scalp and skin and hair again. So where is the elusive mind? Where is it located? — darthbarracuda
I don't think the explanatory gap shrinks more than it is just flat-out ignored. — darthbarracuda
The point was that the reference point that we inhabit ourselves - mind - is inaccessible to anyone else but ourselves. It is our personal, private sphere. — darthbarracuda
I'm having a mental cramp over it. — Question
As far as I can tell, anything lacking a nervous system cannot have a mind. — darthbarracuda
So my thoughts on this are that, since mind appears to be so wholly different than ordinary material objects and processes..., — darthbarracuda
Then there's also the question as to what purpose consciousness actually serves to an organism. Presumably everything necessary to survive could have been done without the use of subjectivity. — darthbarracuda
A decisive, yet accidental, mutation in genetic information created an organism that accidentally happened to live alongside more simple organisms. — darthbarracuda
The rise of complex, sentient creatures was entirely unnecessary and accidental, not inevitable, but happened anyway thanks to goldylocks luck. — darthbarracuda
As you may have noticed Occam's razor flies out the window when confronted with the infinite amount of realities in the world. Everettian QM is an elegant solution when confronted with apparent infinities, which supersedes Occam's razor. — Question
The point of the OP was that the phenomenological experience of being a black box is in friction with a universe that is seemingly open to observation, and vice versa. — darthbarracuda
Mind is of life, but life is not mind. — darthbarracuda
The question - and I'm channelling the biologist Robert Rosen here - is whether or not this type of system has a rich enough 'entailment structure' to model the world in it's entirety. — StreetlightX
This matter-symbol separation has been called the epistemic cut (e.g., Pauli, 1994). This is simply another statement of Newton’s categorical separation of laws and initial conditions.
Why is this fundamental in physics? As I stated earlier, the laws are universal and do not depend on the state of the observer (symmetry principles) while the initial conditions apply to the state of a particular system and the state of the observer that measures them.
What does calling the matter-symbol problem “epistemological” do for us? Epistemology by its very meaning presupposes a separation of the world into the knower and the known or the controller and the controlled. That is, if we can speak of knowledge about something, then the knowledge representation, the knowledge vehicle, cannot be in the same category of what it is about.
The dynamics of physical laws do not allow alternatives paths between states and therefore the concept of information, which is defined by the number of alternative states, does not apply to the laws themselves.
A measurement, in contrast, is an act of acquiring information about the state of a specific system. Two other explicit distinctions are that the microscopic laws are universal and reversible (time-symmetric) while measurement is local and irreversible.
There is still no question that the measuring device must obey the laws. Nevertheless, the results of measurement, the timeless semantic information, cannot be usefully described by these time-dependent reversible laws (e.g., von Neumann, 1955).
http://www.academia.edu/3144895/The_Necessity_of_Biosemiotics_Matter-Symbol_Complementarity
Under realist no-collapse quantum mechanics, measurements are no different from any other type of interaction - they are reversible. — tom
