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Post 200

Monday, January 10, 2005 - 2:18pmSanction this postReply
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Nate: “Well, we don't really 'derive' concepts from examples, we take a group of existents that have something in common and regard them, mentally, as an abstract concept of which each such existent is a unit.”

Hi Nate. I’m not sure what distinction you are making here, but the relevant point is that you are telling me that in order to derive or discover a concept, we must first find the referents.

But in order to find those referents we must surely have an idea of what we are looking for, which in turn requires us to understamd what is meant by the relevant term, otherwise we would not know what we are trying to identify. But that means we must presuppose the term we are trying to discover!

Which brings us to “definite”. Using an everyday example such as “table”, and assuming the blank slate, how you would derive the concept “definite”, without presupposing the term?

Brendan


Post 201

Monday, January 10, 2005 - 3:08pmSanction this postReply
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Hi Brendan,

I’m not sure what distinction you are making here, but the relevant point is that you are telling me that in order to derive or discover a concept, we must first find the referents.

That's the only distinction I was trying to make, as well.  The word 'derive' suggests a logical derivation, as though once you have some, others logically follow.  However, the reality is that concepts are empirically formed.  And yes, every concept must have referents.  It's not so much that you "find" the referents in the sense that you're actively seeking them out, since that would suggest that you know what you are looking for already.  The existents which will be the referents are available to you as knowledge, and you begin the concept-formation process by noting similarities and differences.

But in order to find those referents we must surely have an idea of what we are looking for, which in turn requires us to understand what is meant by the relevant term, otherwise we would not know what we are trying to identify. But that means we must presuppose the term we are trying to discover!

You don't have to have the concept in advance in order to form it.  The examples I've given you describe the formation process of concepts which we both know, since I figured that the point would be better illuminated.  If I were to do this with a concept I'm not sure you know (like a topology), I may run into the problem that you don't know what the referents are, defeating my attempt.

You are right that in teaching someone a term that they have no reason to naturally form on their own, you must begin with a definition describing what the referents of the concept are.  Then, depending on how bright the student is or the difficulty of the subject matter, you may need to give some examples of the notion you defined so as to give the students explicit referents.  Without these referents, the term is meaningless, as far as the student is concerned.  However, for every concept we have, someone had to arrive at it naturally, i.e., without being taught the definition first.

Which brings us to “definite”. Using an everyday example such as “table”, and assuming the blank slate, how you would derive the concept “definite”, without presupposing the term?

Ah, now here you touch on a different question: "How does a child learn anything if it is assumed that they are born blank slate?"  Rand addresses this in the epistemology workshop under the heading "Abstraction as Volitional" (IOE, 2nd ed., pp. 150-2)  If you own a copy of IOE, you should give it a look, but I can paraphrase her argument on the matter here.

Rand says that even though a child is born blank slate, the child still has the "will to observe" his surroundings via volition.  In so doing, he forms the first first-level concepts he ever will, and from there the process of abstraction upon abstraction begins.

In any case, given that you know of two red objects, two green objects, and Sartre's term "noughting nought" (or any equally vague term of your choosing), you can validly form the concept "definite."  What else do you want me to do?

Nate


Post 202

Monday, January 10, 2005 - 11:55pmSanction this postReply
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robert malcom wrote:
>It is obvious Daniel is a 'poster child' for public education.

Why thank you...;-)



Post 203

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 1:55amSanction this postReply
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Nate:
>Take, for example, Sartre's example of a "noughting-nought".  I have no idea to what this refers, but it's clear that Sartre meant something by it (or at least he thought so). 

My favourite remark about Sartre is from Simone De Beauvoir, who should know. She said that he was never happier than when he didn't understand what he was writing!

(I blame too much coffee and cheap crank!)

- Daniel

Post 204

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 1:23amSanction this postReply
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(Nate, sorry about the delay - it's holiday time here in New Zealand)

Nate:
>To say that "electricity", "magnetism" and "light" have been overthrown by the discovery of electromagnetism is to say that the concepts are invalid, that we should not refer to them (much as we do not refer to the aether), and that we should only talk about electromagnetism....If not, try to teach a high school physics student the general theory of relativity in order to teach him about gravity, and you'll understand why it is that these "overthrown" ideas still have a vital use in the hierarchy of knowledge.

Well, here I agree of course. This is just what I mean about concepts being put to good use - as rough general ideas, subject to radical correction as our knowledge grows. See how useful they are, even when they are even demonstrably false in some key respects! (Likewise, no doubt our current beliefs about electromagnetic phenomena will be found to be false in important ways in the future)

But where this goes wrong is if we try and establish concepts too precisely in advance - to pretend that we have to have perfectly true concepts before we can have a meaningful debate, or before our knowledge can grow. This is the same as the mistaken belief that we can only move to the exact truth *from* the exact truth! (in fact, we always start *in error* of a greater or lesser degree, and move closer to the truth) If we needed perfect concepts to begin with, well, we wouldn't even be able to *start*, let alone move from relativity to gravity!

So, as your example clearly shows, we shouldn't worry too much about concepts, nor as a consequence the words that describe them! And this is my point.

Nate writes (to Brendan)
>By my last post, the concepts "red" and "green" are subsumed under "definite", since I can tell the difference between red and not red, green and not green. 

So, by this method, I can say I "definitely" know how much money is in my bank account just because it's *not* $1 million dollars!

As I remarked earlier, this is rather like firing a shot at the side of a barn at point-blank range, then declaring yourself an expert marksman because, well, you didn't hit the "not-barns" ie: the tree, or the fence, the passing car..!

But as I say, there is little point arguing over words. If that's what you want to call "perfectly definite" or "absolutely precise" or whatever, that's fine by me. To non-Objectivists, however, it seems rather vague indeed...;-)

- Daniel







Post 205

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 2:46amSanction this postReply
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I N Rand writes:
>Some of the critics of  IOE do not seem to have a first-hand grasp of it, and are trying to fit it into the established outlook.

Personally, I find many *Objectivists* do not seem to have a good first-hand grasp of the IOE. For example, in this debate neither Rick nor Nate had realised Rand *had* made a reasonably clear statement on the status of singular items as a form of concept! It took a non-Objectivist (ie: me) to point it out to them. And this is not the first time it's happened. F'rinstance, young Regi Firehammer had read the thing for 30 years and never noticed that she makes an argument for the non-physical nature of consciousness.

This isn't really their fault however, nor, sadly, a demonstration of the genius of my public education...;-). It's just that in addition to being a particularly poorly written book, it's unlikely to be very closely examined by people who are already convinced of its truth.

- Daniel

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Post 206

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 1:20pmSanction this postReply
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Daniel Barnes writes:
For example, in this debate neither Rick nor Nate had realised Rand *had* made a reasonably clear statement on the status of singular items as a form of concept!
It's difficult to realize that which is not true.

Nowhere did Rand state that a proper name ('singular item') could be a 'form of concept'. What she said was that labels are given to singular items in the same manner as labels are given to concepts so that singular items could be incorporated (integrated) into a conceptual framework.

A concept is a mental integration of two or more units which are isolated according to a specific characteristic(s) and united by a specific definition.

A concept is a mental integration of two or more units possessing the same distinguishing characteristic(s), with their particular measurements omitted.

Rand would never have written such statements if she had meant to allow for 'singular items' to be included in the concept of concept.

Concepts and 'singular items' are two distinct and very different things that both have names so they can both be used in our thinking and communicating. It is quite wrong to claim that 'singular items' are a form of concept.

(Edited for spelling and grammar.)
(Edited by Rick Pasotto on 1/11, 6:53pm)


Post 207

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 1:22pmSanction this postReply
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Hi Daniel,

Well, here I agree of course. This is just what I mean about concepts being put to good use - as rough general ideas, subject to radical correction as our knowledge grows. See how useful they are, even when they are even demonstrably false in some key respects! (Likewise, no doubt our current beliefs about electromagnetic phenomena will be found to be false in important ways in the future)
Well, yes, they'll be false when applied to new phenomena which weren't observed at the conception of the theory.  But this doesn't mean that the theory of electromagnetism has been rendered false in its context.  It only means that it does not apply to every phenomenon universally, which is something I don't think you'll ever catch a decent scientist stating.

But where this goes wrong is if we try and establish concepts too precisely in advance - to pretend that we have to have perfectly true concepts before we can have a meaningful debate, or before our knowledge can grow. This is the same as the mistaken belief that we can only move to the exact truth *from* the exact truth! (in fact, we always start *in error* of a greater or lesser degree, and move closer to the truth) If we needed perfect concepts to begin with, well, we wouldn't even be able to *start*, let alone move from relativity to gravity!
No, no, I'm not claiming that a scientific theory (like Newton's Laws of Motion) apply forever more to every body, ever.  That's wrong, and to claim that would be a serious epistemological mistake.  What you can claim is wherever and to what accuracy Newton's Laws of Motion apply to the real world, they apply there reliably (perfectly in their context)

So, as your example clearly shows, we shouldn't worry too much about concepts, nor as a consequence the words that describe them! And this is my point.

On the contrary, if we aren't sure about what the context of the theory (and its underlying concepts) is, we'll have crazy people running around trying to apply Newton's Laws to human behavior and quarks.  Nonetheless, your point about using a theory to proclaim a dictum to reality: "You can't be any other way ever, it's a law!!!" is taken.  Reality dictates theories, not vice versa.

Nate writes (to Brendan)
>By my last post, the concepts "red" and "green" are subsumed under "definite", since I can tell the difference between red and not red, green and not green.

So, by this method, I can say I "definitely" know how much money is in my bank account just because it's *not* $1 million dollars!
I'm not quite sure how this analogy is supposed to relate to my statements about concepts.  I wasn't claiming that because I know something that isn't red, I know what red means.

As I remarked earlier, this is rather like firing a shot at the side of a barn at point-blank range, then declaring yourself an expert marksman because, well, you didn't hit the "not-barns" ie: the tree, or the fence, the passing car..!
When you crafted this analogy, you forgot exactly what it was I was shooting for.  Concepts exist to delineate certain kinds of existents from others via their similarity to each other and their differences from others.  In this analogy, if "shooting" the barn means identifying it, then our Texas sharpshooter did his job quite well!

Rand mentions in IOE that the concept "flower" is not poorly understood ("woozy") if you can't tell the difference between a rose and a tulip.  The only thing that matters is that you can tell the difference between a flower and a tire, or a flower and a car.

But as I say, there is little point arguing over words. If that's what you want to call "perfectly definite" or "absolutely precise" or whatever, that's fine by me. To non-Objectivists, however, it seems rather vague indeed...;-)
Well, as you wish.  All I can do is give my case-- it'll be up to whatever non-Objectivist browsing through this board to make up their minds for themselves whether what I am saying makes sense or not.

Personally, I find many *Objectivists* do not seem to have a good first-hand grasp of the IOE. For example, in this debate neither Rick nor Nate had realised Rand *had* made a reasonably clear statement on the status of singular items as a form of concept! It took a non-Objectivist (ie: me) to point it out to them.

To be fair, I don't claim to be an authority-- I'm just a student of Objectivism.  I've only seriously studied IOE for a few months, and I don't have a detailed knowledge of the other branches of Rand's philosophy yet.  However, I believe from what I have seen that it is a correct explanation of the world around us.  And don't get me wrong, I am grateful that you're willing to polish the theory with me-- it's brought up many issues I hadn't thought about just reading the book.
This isn't really their fault however, nor, sadly, a demonstration of the genius of my public education...;-). It's just that in addition to being a particularly poorly written book, it's unlikely to be very closely examined by people who are already convinced of its truth.
Well now, I don't think that IOE is poorly written.  Indeed, compared to some of the rationalistic bilge being pumped out by modern philosophers, Rand is crystal clear.  However, your point about accepting things on faith is taken-- I try to keep myself from doing it whenever possible, and sometimes need some help from the outside.

Nate


Post 208

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 1:52pmSanction this postReply
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Nate writes:
>However, I believe from what I have seen that it is a correct explanation of the world around us.  And don't get me wrong, I am grateful that you're willing to polish the theory with me-- it's brought up many issues I hadn't thought about just reading the book.

Well I am very much enjoying the challenge of discussing this with you. My belief is that people with quite different philosophical outlooks can and indeed *must* be able to discuss things like this. To deny that this is possible - to break off discussion, as so often happens, because of alleged differences over "fundamentals" - is a capital-F Fundamentalist error. After all, if you're not discussing fundamentals, you're discussing trivia...;-)

>Indeed, compared to some of the rationalistic bilge being pumped out by modern philosophers, Rand is crystal clear. 

Agreed, certainly.

>However, your point about accepting things on faith is taken-- I try to keep myself from doing it whenever possible, and sometimes need some help from the outside.

As we all must - this is the essence of the critical approach. You are a wise fellow indeed then!

- Daniel

Post 209

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 4:11pmSanction this postReply
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Rick writes:
>Nowhere did Rand state that a proper name ('singular item') could be 'form of concept'.

Now, I've cited Rand saying (IOE Chap 2, "Concept-Formation):
"Proper names are used in order to identify and include particular entities *in a conceptual method of cognition*." (my emphasis)

Rick's reading of this passage differs from mine - he takes it to mean the particular entities are merely a kind of "piece" used in creating the overall mental concept, but not subject to the "conceptual method of cognition" themselves - that they are as mentally different as cheese and chalk.

Leaving aside the fact that proper nouns are words too, with definitions too, and convert particulars "into the mental equivalent of concretes" just like concepts, and that Rand goes on to highlight the definitional similarity between proper names and concepts in the very next sentence* - I think Rick's approach raises far more serious problems than it solves. To wit:

1) If particular entities *cannot* be concepts, then...what the Sam Hill are they?
2) If man's knowledge is conceptual, but particulars are not concepts, *how can we know anything about them*?

If Rick is right, and particulars have no relation to concepts whatsoever, despite being "integrated" into them - that his cheese is made out of chalk, as it were - he must therefore propose that man has some additional *non-conceptual* method of cognition to deal with them - as we can certainly know things about particulars!

So Rand's "Conceptual" theory of knowledge needs to be amended big time to become something like a "Conceptual-plus-Particulars" theory of knowledge. If Rick is right, that is.

>Rand would never have written such statements if she had meant to allow for 'singular items' to be included in the concept of concept.

No great mystery, I suggest she was just confused about the issue.

- Daniel


*(IOE Chap 2, "Concept-Formation" cont.)
"Ob-serve that even proper names, in advanced civilizations, follow the definitional principles of genus and differentia: e.g., John Smith, with "Smith" serving as genus and "John" as differentia-or New York, U.S.A."

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Post 210

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 6:50pmSanction this postReply
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Daniel wrote:
But where this goes wrong is if we try and establish concepts too precisely in advance - to pretend that we have to have perfectly true concepts before we can have a meaningful debate, or before our knowledge can grow.
I have no idea what a 'true' concept is. Concepts are neither true nor false. A particular concept can be useful or not but to speak of a concept's "truth" is to speak nonsense.

Concepts are categorizations of existents. If a concept is validly formed, ie, the units subsumed by it are in fact distinguishable from other units of some larger class and it is useful to make that distinction, then we can make true and false statements about those units specified by the definition. Our knowledge about the units can grow with absolutely no change in the definition -- with no change in the concept itself.

Of course it is possible for the definition to change if we discover better differentia but the set of entities to which the concept refers does not thereby necessarily change. It is also possible for us to discover that some particular categorization is not optimal so we discard one concept and replace it with two or more others, one of which may (confusingly) have the same label as the discarded concept.

Our knowledge is always about the particulars of existence. Some of those particulars can be mentally grouped so that what we know about one of the particulars of the group applies to all the members of the group. That is the function of concepts: to allow us to make statements about one thing (the concept) and have it apply to many individual things.

It's quite clear to me that you have not yet understood what Rand said in ITOE.

Post 211

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 8:17pmSanction this postReply
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Hi Daniel,
Well I am very much enjoying the challenge of discussing this with you. My belief is that people with quite different philosophical outlooks can and indeed *must* be able to discuss things like this. To deny that this is possible - to break off discussion, as so often happens, because of alleged differences over "fundamentals" - is a capital-F Fundamentalist error. After all, if you're not discussing fundamentals, you're discussing trivia...;-)
I agree, with some important caveats: the person with whom I am debating must accept the fundamental axiom, existence exists, upon which rests the foundation of any debate.  Luckily, this isn't a problem with most debates.
As we all must - this is the essence of the critical approach.
At long last, something we can agree on! :-p

Nate


Post 212

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 8:34pmSanction this postReply
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Hi Rick, Daniel,


Daniel : But where this goes wrong is if we try and establish concepts too precisely in advance - to pretend that we have to have perfectly true concepts before we can have a meaningful debate, or before our knowledge can grow.
Rick : I have no idea what a 'true' concept is. Concepts are neither true nor false. A particular concept can be useful or not but to speak of a concept's "truth" is to speak nonsense.
Rick, you picked up on an interesting point that I missed upon reading Daniel's comment here.

Daniel, why do you say that a concept is "true" rather than "useful"?  To say that a concept is "true" suggests that the concept corresponds to some kind of metaphysically existing "ideal" concept.  Is this the way you would characterize things?  If so, you may be holding an intrincisist view of knowledge, and if this is the case, it would explain this entire exchange.

Nate


Post 213

Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 11:36pmSanction this postReply
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Rick writes:
>Concepts are neither true nor false.

Whew, that's more radical than I'd put it, but if that's your position, it looks like we might almost be on the same page! Because this idea has consequences of course, and its consequences turn out to be similar to what I suggest.

For if to speak of a concept's "truth" is "to speak nonsense" as you say (and presumably this goes for its "falsity" too), then there is *surely little or no point in debating concepts or the words that signify them*!! What could be more timewasting? What could you possibly hope to prove?

I couldn't ask for a better example of why we should focus on theories, proposals, statements etc, and steer clear of emphasising concepts!

- Daniel

Post 214

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 12:57pmSanction this postReply
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Nate writes:
>Daniel, why do you say that a concept is "true" rather than "useful"?

But I *don't*. All along I've argued that concepts are useful as instruments, models, rough ideas etc, but that is a far as it goes. I've never said otherwise. While I would not go as far as Rick does with the whole "neither true nor false" thing - I would say that some concepts are closer to the truth than others, and we establish this by testing them with theories - the net result is the same: what's the point of discussing something that is, according to Rick, inherently undecideable?

I don't think Rick has meant to end up here on my side of the argument, but there he is. His post 210 seems written in haste and rather confused, and I will unpack it fully if I have time, but it seems most glaring here:

Rick:
>Our knowledge is always about the particulars of existence.

Yet human knowledge is conceptual, and Rick says concepts don't apply to particulars! Different as chalk and cheese! I ask again:how is it then that we *know* anything about these particulars?

(Whereas I would merely say that it is possible to have concept - ie:a rough or general idea, just as the dictionary would have it - about a particular thing, and - amazingly! - it's possible to have a rough or general idea about *a group* of things! And it's not only possible, it's useful! However this is, apparently, "postmodernist claptrap" ...;-))

...and here:
Rick:
>Our knowledge about the units can grow with absolutely no change in the definition -- with no change in the concept itself.

Then in the next breath he says:
>It is also possible for us to discover that some particular categorization is not optimal so we discard one concept and replace it with two or more others...

First he says our knowledge can grow with absolutely no change in the concept. But then he says our knowledge can grow and cause us to *throw away the concept entirely*, and replace it with others! (Naturally I would agree that concepts can be overthrown and replaced, but this is something that Nate will have to take up with Rick...;-))

So in addition to being neither true nor false, they also *change and don't change...!!* (Part of the problem might be that he confuses concepts with the entities that they refer to, which he appears to do in the preceding sentence to the one quoted above. But I will look at it more closely later)

I think the problem is not so much that I don't understand the IOE, as Rick suggests, but that the IOE itself is incoherent. Thus its uncritical followers must inevitably end up in incoherent positions like the above.

- Daniel







Post 215

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 2:37pmSanction this postReply
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I wrote:
>I think the problem is not so much that I don't understand the IOE, as Rick suggests, but that the IOE itself is incoherent. Thus its uncritical followers must inevitably end up in incoherent positions like the above.

To further illustrate this, it might be useful to summarise some of the things I've been told about Objectivist concepts in this discussion (and others on the same topic):

Concepts are, according to Objectivism:
1) Neither true nor false
2) Both "open-ended" and "perfectly definite"
3) Both changing and unchanging
4) Neither complete nor incomplete

Now, the apparent incoherency of each of these positions can be argued individually of course, and the debate is continuing. But pausing for a moment to look at the big picture, you have to wonder: what really is this theory on about, if it keeps producing such a cluster of dubious positions? How "useful" can it really be? Surely one can rationalise (and jargonise) these positions only so far: one's intellectual warning light must start flashing amber , just as it would if we replaced the word "concepts" with say, the word "God", and then tried to claim the same things!

- Daniel




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Post 216

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 4:49pmSanction this postReply
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Daniel Barnes writes:
All along I've argued that concepts are useful as instruments, models, rough ideas etc, but that is a far as it goes.
No! No! No! Concepts are man's way of organizing the facts of reality. They are not "models" or "rough ideas". They are very specific sets of specific aspects of reality.
what's the point of discussing something that is, according to Rick, inherently undecideable?
I never said any such thing.

BTW, I never write anything in haste.
Rick says concepts don't apply to particulars!
Again, I never said any such thing. Concepts are mental integrations of two or more particulars. You can't integrate a thing with itself. You can't have a concept of a single particular. In order to form a concept you have to have at least three units of comparison: two that are the units of the concept and a third which serves as a "foil", as a way of knowing that the first two are more alike to each other than either is to the third.
First he says our knowledge can grow with absolutely no change in the concept. But then he says our knowledge can grow and cause us to *throw away the concept entirely*, and replace it with others!
Yes, of course. What is your problem with that? There once was a concept of "phlogiston" which was the best explanation for heat transfer available at the time. We now know that was a bogus concept so we threw it away.

The concept man refers to the same entities as it did thousands of years ago yet we are constantly gaining new knowledge about those entities. The concept of man hasn't changed but our knowledge of men has changed.


Post 217

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 5:21pmSanction this postReply
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Daniel Barnes writes:
I think the problem is not so much that I don't understand the IOE, as Rick suggests, but that the IOE itself is incoherent.
You don't understand ITOE and until you do it is not surprising that you find it "incoherent". You have not caught on to the fact that Rand uses words precisely. When she writes concept she has a very specific meaning in mind and that meaning is very much different from the vernacular usage of "vague idea".
Concepts are, according to Objectivism:
1) Neither true nor false
2) Both "open-ended" and "perfectly definite"
3) Both changing and unchanging
4) Neither complete nor incomplete
The first two items are correct but the last two are not.

Concepts are valid or invalid but it is a category error to say they are true or false. Only statements can be true or false and concepts are the building blocks of statements but they are not themselves statements.

Concepts refer to a specific set of entities but some of those entities may not currently exist. Concepts are definite because the entities they refer to all have a specific characteristic (given by the definition) but they are open ended because we do not have actual knowledge of all the entities that are in that set.

Since a concept refers to the units of a particular set of entities it is unchangeable. If you want to refer to a different set of entities then you would necessarily have a different concept.

Since a concept refers to all the entities of a particular type it is complete. What can most likely never be complete is our knowledge of those entities themselves.

Combining the last two, the concept doesn't change since it continues to refer to the same set of entities but our knowledge of those entities themselves does change.

Post 218

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 5:32pmSanction this postReply
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Now Daniel,
Concepts are, according to Objectivism:
1) Neither true nor false
2) Both "open-ended" and "perfectly definite"
3) Both changing and unchanging
4) Neither complete nor incomplete
I know that Rick has claimed #1, and that I have repeatedly claimed #2.  Where are #3 and #4 coming from?  The only thing I can think #3 means is that you're referring to the fact that definitions may require a change in the event that increased knowledge of the referents renders the old definition incorrect; this has nothing to do with concepts, whose units don't change.  As for #4, I'm not even sure what this is supposed to mean-- where exactly did either Rick or I (or any other Objectivist, for that matter) say that?
I think the problem is not so much that I don't understand the IOE, as Rick suggests, but that the IOE itself is incoherent. Thus its uncritical followers must inevitably end up in incoherent positions like the above.
We are all well aware of what you think of IOE.  I don't know what this opinion is adding to the discussion, other than to poison the well.

Nate



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Post 219

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - 8:24pmSanction this postReply
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Rick writes:
>Since a concept refers to all the entities of a particular type it is complete. What can most likely never be complete is our knowledge of those entities themselves....Combining the last two, the concept doesn't change since it continues to refer to the same set of entities but our knowledge of those entities themselves does change.

Now there's the rub!

You're saying a *concept* is complete.

But you're also saying our *knowledge* of that concept is, however, always *incomplete*.

But the problem with this position which you may not have noticed is that according to Objectivism, *concepts are supposed to be how humans know things in the first place*!!!!! They *are* human knowledge!!! So when you say concepts are complete, yet *human knowledge* of them is never likely to be complete, you've unintentionally contradicted yourself (not to mention leaving a rather funky Platonic implication dangling...).

See what I mean? It simply doesn't make sense. Now, you could avoid all this by simply saying our concepts are incomplete because human knowledge is incomplete, and then it's all hunky dory.

- Daniel
(Edited by Daniel Barnes on 1/12, 8:56pm)


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