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Post 20

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 6:59amSanction this postReply
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Bill,

Please disregard my reply to this comment of yours; it is a bad one and I missed the point.

>>Peikoff would say that you can’t have knowledge of reality ahead of any contact with it.

In other words, there aren't innate ideas because there aren't innate ideas. Again, you respond to a question on why an Objectivist view is true by reiterating the Objectivist view.

I would like to substitute the following reply:

A concept or idea is not true or false and thus cannot by itself provide knowledge of reality. It is judgments or propositions that are true or false. A judgment is not a combination of concepts, but an assertion about something. I think that Objectivists wrongly assimilate concepts to percepts: a concept is not a percept with details left out.

Post 21

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 7:05amSanction this postReply
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Steve,

Thanks for your question.

I wasn't claiming that the view you quote is false, but rather that what Objectivists call the primacy of existence over consciousness is a consequence of the Law of Identity.

Post 22

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 7:14amSanction this postReply
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Ed,

Thanks very much for the reference to the article by Wilcox and Katz. I'll look this up on my next trip to the UCLA Library, which will be sometime this week. It certainly sounds like the theory they are criticizing is a bad one that inconsistently combines direct and indirect realism. When David Kelley's The Evidence of the Senses came out, I reviewed in for the International Philosophical Quarterly and I received a very nice letter on it from Kelley.

Thanks also for your explanation of 'rationalistic". I'm not a supporter of the inside-out view, but I think that other views of mine would count as rationalistic in your sense.

Post 23

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 10:53amSanction this postReply
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Steve,

Sorry--that should be "not a consequence of the Law of Identity."

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Post 24

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 3:02pmSanction this postReply
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Hi David,

What browser are you using? If you're using Safari or Firefox, you're limited to the gimpy textbox and won't be able to gray out your quotations without using html codes. If you have a PC instead of a Mac and are using Explorer, you should see the formatting that enables you to highlight your quotes.

You wrote,
I think highly of H.W. B. Joseph, who was one of the greatest of all philosophical critics, but here he wrongly assumes that an object's nature allows it to act in only one way. Why assume this? If, as you recognize in what you say about my criticism of Peikoff, it makes sense to say that a human being need not always choose the same way in the same conditions, why must non-human entities always operate in the same way?
Well, everything "must" act according to its nature, so in that sense it must always act "the same" way. An orange tree cannot bear lemons; a dog cannot give birth to a cat, and inanimate matter is not goal-directed, as living organisms are. Unlike human beings, it is not in the nature of non-volitional entities to choose between alternative courses of action. So, we have no reason to believe that a meteor falls from the sky or that the earth revolves around the sun because it chooses to, although we do have reason to believe that human beings behave the way they do because they choose to.

I wrote, "Yes they did [have to exist], in the sense that no alternative to them was possible. To say it’s possible for them not to have existed doesn’t make any sense. How could they not have existed? They were not created in the first place. They’re existentially primary."
You are just restating the Objectivist view that the entities that exist have to exist, not offering an argument. What is supposed to be the contradiction in thinking that other entities than the ones that in fact exist could have existed? If someone says that a round square could exist, we can readily grasp why what he says is contradictory. But to say that the entities that actually exist might not have existed is contradictory only if the entities that now exist could not have failed to exist. But that thesis is just what I am questioning. To appeal to it in order to refute me blatantly begs the question.
All right. Then please tell me how the fundamental constituents of the universe (which were not created and were here from the beginning, as it were) could have failed to exist. They were not created, so there is no creator that could have chosen otherwise -- that could have created something different instead. So, how could these primary existents have failed to exist? The possibility of an alternative -- i.e., of non-existence -- simply doesn't apply to them.
There have been people who have claimed that God can violate the laws of logic---I think that Descartes held this. But it has certainly not been the dominant opinion among the Scholastics, or among Jews and Christians generally. Peikoff's short proof of atheism isn't worth much if it addresses a concept of God different from that held by orthodox believers.
Well, if theists don't believe that God can violate the laws of logic, then on what grounds do they believe that God can perform miracles? A miracle is a violation of the law of identity. A thing cannot act in contradiction to its nature. No matter how powerful God is, he cannot perform miracles, he cannot cause existents to act in contradiction to their natures; he is limited by natural law. If your reply is, but God can change their natures, how? Even he has to work within the limits of what exists, and what exists has identity at the most fundamental level. Quoting Bacon, "Nature to be commanded must be obeyed."

I wrote, "approval and disapproval imply the possibility of choice."
On the Objectivist view, a value is something that one acts to gain or keep. If approval and disapproval are tied to this notion of value, then one can't approve or disapprove of what can't be altered.
Approval and disapproval are tied to moral value -- to that which one ought to value. A robber values -- acts to gain and keep -- other people's money, but that doesn't mean that he ought to value it -- that he ought to gain and keep it. We can still disapprove of the robber's values and his actions.
But why should one think that approval and disapproval are limited to what we can value, in terms of the Objectivist concept of value?
It's not limited to the Objectivist concept of value; it's limited to the concept of choice -- of what can be altered or changed.
You have a surpassing knowledge of Objectivist philosophy, based on what is obviously a great many years of careful study and thought; but I must say that you seem to find it difficult to think outside the Objectivist framework. Your response to an objection is often to repeat the thesis that is being challenged.
Thanks for the compliment . . . I think. :-/

I wrote, "Peikoff would say that you can’t have knowledge of reality ahead of any contact with it."
In other words, there aren't innate ideas because there aren't innate ideas. Again, you respond to a question on why an Objectivist view is true by reiterating the Objectivist view.
I wasn't just reiterating the Objectivist view. I was giving a reason for it. You didn't ask me to justify specifically that reason. Isn't an idea a generalization from experience? How could you be born with already formed concepts or ideas?

I wrote, "Not the concept; he doesn’t need the concept to perform this process. He can observe the similarities of the three objects against a background of difference, which is how one forms concepts in the first place. . . . It does not presuppose concepts. You need more familiarity with Objectivist epistemology to understand the theory.
I have no doubt that my knowledge of Objectivist epistemology is deficient, but I'm not here making the mistake of thinking that Objectivists think that observing similarities requires concepts. Rather, I'm denying, or at least questioning, that one could observe similarities in the absence of concepts. This is a very common criticism of abstractionist theories of concept formation, raised by Jerry Fodor and Peter Geach, among others.
So you're saying that, in the absence of concepts, one cannot see that A is more like B than either is to C? -- that you cannot perceive similarities and differences -- that it's conceptual rather than perceptual? I don't think so. Animals can perceive similarities and difference, but they cannot abstract from their perception of them. They can perceive and recognize the differences between (say) dogs and cats, but they cannot arrive at the abstraction 'dog' or 'cat'.
Yes, you are certainly right that "red" does not mean "growing on a tree". But then you can't say, as Peikoff does, that "[A] concept designates existents, including all their characteristics, whether definitional or not." "Red" designates all red objects. Some of these red objects have the property of growing on trees, i.e.,this is one of the characteristics of these red objects. But then by Peikoff's statement, these characteristics become part of the designation of "red". One can then ask, what does "growing on a tree" designate? One must fill in the designations of "growing" and "tree." The process that Peikoff describes is recursive. It is in this way that you will soon get that most concepts refer to most things that exist.
I think I see the problem. The term "existent" in Peikoff's statement does not simply mean entity. An existent, according to Rand, is anything that exists, be it a thing, an attribute or an action. So, the concept "red" designates an existent, because it designates an attribute of an entity. So when Peikoff says that a concept designates existents, including all their characteristics, whether definitional or not, he is referring, in the case of an attribute, to all of the characteristics of the attribute of the entity, not to all the characteristics of the entity of which it is an attribute. So, in the case of an apple, the concept "red" designates all of the characteristics of the color of the apple, including its hue, shade, brightness, area, etc., not all of the characteristics of the apple itself.

I wrote, "Well, they’re integrations of perceptual knowledge, but that doesn’t mean that they can’t be extended to cover future instances of the concepts they’ve integrated."
Here I suggest that you are guilty of the fallacy of the stolen concept, in that what you say is perfectly true of our ordinary language concept of "concept", but you carry this over without justification to the Objectivist theory of concepts. In the ordinary language concept of "concept", a concept has a definition that give a sense, not a reference. Here, anything that meets the terms of the definition falls under the concept. But on the Objectivist view, as Peikoff states it, a concept is an abstraction, derived by "measurement omission" from concretes, and it designates the concretes from which it has been abstracted. A new concrete would then demand a new concept, because by hypothesis the new concrete is not part of the designation of the original concept.
It designates the concretes from which it has been abstracted, yes, and all relevantly similar concretes as well. Why do you assume that just because it has been abstracted from a certain number of objects that it must refer only to those objects and not to any others that are relevantly similar? Once you've formed the concept from observation, you can recognize that any new concretes that fall within that range can be classified under the concept. You don't need to form a new concept, and it would obviously be inappropriate to do so.

I wrote, "He’s not saying that one must choose to be alive in order to choose; he’s saying that unless one’s existence depends on certain actions, one cannot value. . . . It may help to realize that the essential point of the robot example is that values depend on having something to gain or lose by your actions. True, if heaven and hell existed, they would be enough to justify the existence of values to an immortal being. However, because they don’t exist and are mere religious fantasies, the reality is that values depend on the existence of life and on the happiness or suffering that results from actions that are beneficial or harmful to it."
But the point here isn't whether heaven and hell exist: it's rather that if you agree with the conclusion of my thought experiment, then it's wrong that the concept of value conceptually depends on the possibility that one can choose between life and death. It doesn't depend on the possibility that one It doesn't, for these immortal beings; and if you accept what I say, then you have rejected the conclusion that Rand and Peikoff draw from the immortal robot story. If you now say,"But it does depend on this choice for beings like us", I would respond, why? Why does what matters to us rest on the possibility that we can cease to exist?
Again, the point of the analogy is to show that value presupposes that one has something to gain or lose by one's actions. Then you have to recognize that gaining or losing something is possible only to a living organism. There is no heaven or hell. There is no spiritual immortality. In doing philosophy, you have to respect the facts of reality. You cannot continue to deal in fantasies and use these as a basis for drawing conclusions about life and values. This is probably one of the biggest mistakes contemporary philosopher's make. Their orientation is not reality centered. Intellectually, they don't live in the real world, but in an academic ivory tower.

I wrote, "Values are connected to life-promoting action. That which is life promoting tends to give rise to pleasure or happiness, and that which is harmful tends to result in pain or suffering. The existence of value is strictly a function of biology -- of the organism's goal of self-preservation."
This strikes me as true of many values, but I don't see why having a tendency to promote life is a necessary condition for pleasure. Why can't some pleasurable activities be neutral in their effect on life? Eating ice cream in moderation can be very pleasurable; but although, I don't think it is harmful, it is hardly life enhancing.
Well, it is in the sense that one's desire for it is based on one's need for calories, which are themselves required for survival.
Thanks once more for your comments: I really appreciate them. If I may say so, I'm also grateful for your calm and matter-of-fact tone in responding to my very negative comments on Peikoff's book. My review gives in part a misleading impression, in that someone reading it alone would be likely to think that my attitude toward Objectivism is much more negative than it in fact is. Whether rightly or wrongly, I formed a very unfavorable impression of Peikoff, and my animus in the review is directed toward him rather than Objectivism as such. I have reviewed other Objectivist philosophers and Objectivist sympathizers much more positively.
Understood.
One question in conclusion. You said in your original post that my philosophy was "rationalistic". Other Objectivists have also said this about me, but I don't have a good grasp of what is meant by this. I'd be grateful if you would say something more about this.
Sure. For Objectivists, a rationalist is someone who "obtains his knowledge of the world by deducing it exclusively from concepts, which come from inside his head and are not derived form the perception of physical facts . . ." (Rand, For the New Intellectual 31.) I think you reflect that orientation when you question that concepts are gained through experience, and when you consider religious fantasies an important consideration in determining the nature and source of value. Deduction and thought experiments are fine as far as they go, but they cannot serve as the ultimate source of knowledge. Induction -- observation of the real world -- must be our epistemological foundation.

(Edited by William Dwyer on 5/18, 5:37pm)


Post 25

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 6:16pmSanction this postReply
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David,

You can edit your posts by clicking on "Edit" in the upper righthand corner of the post.

I wrote, "Peikoff would say that you can’t have knowledge of reality ahead of any contact with it." Although you already answered me, you've amended your reply as follows:
A concept or idea is not true or false and thus cannot by itself provide knowledge of reality. It is judgments or propositions that are true or false.
Yes, a concept is not true or false, although the term "idea" is sometimes used to refer to a judgment, which can be either true or false, although I understand that you're not using it that way here.
A judgment is not a combination of concepts, but an assertion about something.
Well, the assertion is composed of concepts, isn't it? You could say that a proposition is a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment. In his paper "Concepts and Propositions," David Kelley defines "proposition" as "the content of an assertion or judgment" -- "as the complete thought expressed by a grammatical sentence."
I think that Objectivists wrongly assimilate concepts to percepts: a concept is not a percept with details left out.
It's definitely not a percept with the details left out. According to Rand, "A concept is a mental integration of two or more units possessing the same distinguishing characteristic(s), with their particular measurements omitted." (IOE, 13) Have you read Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology? It's definitely worth reading if you want to understand Rand's theory of concepts.

(Edited by William Dwyer on 5/18, 6:21pm)


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Post 26

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 11:08pmSanction this postReply
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David,

You asked for my comments on Ed's reply. You wrote:
In brief, I don't think that Rand is correct that to acknowledge that reality is what it is requires the view of consciousness that she states in the passage that you quote. Her comments fail to distinguish between an act of consciousness, e.g., my thinking of something, and the contents of consciousness. To deny that the object of consciousness can be an idea or image, or at least an idea or image that has not been abstracted from a non-mental percept, is to adopt a particular view of consciousness, that may or may not be correct. It is not to draw out an implication of acknowledging reality. Again, if one replies to this by saying that ideas must ultimately be derived by abstraction from a non-mental reality, that is a particular theory of concept-formation, not a consequence of acknowledging reality.
So you're saying that consciousness doesn't imply that you're conscious of an external world. You could be conscious of the contents of your consciousness. But to identify something as being the contents of your consciousness, wouldn't you have to understand it in contrast to the contents of the outside world? What could "the contents of consciousness" mean if there were no external world? Consciousness of what? The very idea of 'consciousness' implies a non-conscious world.

It's the same problem that arises with Descartes' dream hypothesis. How do I know that I'm not now dreaming? asked Descartes. The answer is that a dream is understood in contrast to a state of wakefulness. If there were no waking state -- if all consciousness involved nothing more than a dream -- then the concept of a dream would be meaningless. I can know that I had a dream last night only because I now know that I'm awake. I can know that I possess a consciousness only because I also know that there is an external world.


Post 27

Thursday, May 19, 2011 - 8:00pmSanction this postReply
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Bill,
Thanks very much for the tip about using Internet Explorer.
Well, everything "must" act according to its nature, so in that sense it must always act "the same" way. An orange tree cannot bear lemons; a dog cannot give birth to a cat, and inanimate matter is not goal-directed, as living organisms are. Unlike human beings, it is not in the nature of non-volitional entities to choose between alternative courses of action. So, we have no reason to believe that a meteor falls from the sky or that the earth revolves around the sun because it chooses to, although we do have reason to believe that human beings behave the way they do because they choose to
        The logical law of identity says that A=A.  A contradiction violates this law. As an example,  "Light always travels at a constant speed of about 186,000 miles per second, but sometimes light travels slower than this" is a contradiction. "Light sometimes travels slower than 186,000 miles per second" is not a contradiction, absent the antecedent of the previous statement. Thus, the statement "Light sometimes travels slower than 186,000 miles per second", taken by itself, does not violate the law of identity.
In like fashion, "It's in the nature of a non-volitional entity always to act in the same way, given the same causal conditions, but non-volitional entities sometimes act in different ways, given the same causal conditions" is a contradiction. "Non-volitional entities sometimes act in different ways, given the same conditions" is not a contradiction.  It's true that a non-volitional entity can't choose, but the principle, "If something doesn't always act in the same way under constant conditions, it is making a choice" is not a consequence of the law of identity.

All right. Then please tell me how the fundamental constituents of the universe (which were not created and were here from the beginning, as it were) could have failed to exist. They were not created, so there is no creator that could have chosen otherwise -- that could have created something different instead. So, how could these primary existents have failed to exist? The possibility of an alternative -- i.e., of non-existence -- simply doesn't apply to them.
  The claim that the universe has fundamental non-created constituents is not a consequence of the logical law of identity. Once more, the law of identity, taken together with the law of non-contradiction, says that contradictory descriptions of the same entity cannot both be true. The law of identity does not by itself tell us what entities exist or what are the properties of these entities.
But suppose there are fundamental constituents ,just as you suggest.  It doesn't follow that different ultimate constituents couldn't have existed. Maybe we just happen to have one out of many possible sets of such constituents. Maybe you are thinking in this way: because by hypothesis, the constituents are ultimate, no other entity has chosen to bring them into existence, from a range of alternatives. But I'm not suggesting that some other ultimate constituents might have been chosen, just that some other constituents might have existed.
Well, if theists don't believe that God can violate the laws of logic, then on what grounds do they believe that God can perform miracles? A miracle is a violation of the law of identity
   A miracle is usually defined as a violation of a law of nature. Laws of nature do not follow from the law of identity. If Jesus rose from the dead after three days, he violated a law of nature. He did not violate the law of identity.  Again, as I see it, the distinction is this: "No person can rise from the dead, but Jesus rose from the dead" is a contradiction. "Jesus rose from the dead", taken by itself, is not.

It's not limited to the Objectivist concept of value; it's limited to the concept of choice -- of what can be altered or changed.
 I don't see why we can approve or disapprove only what can be altered or changed. I disapprove of the Nazis and Communists' murder of millions of people, but nothing can be done now to change what they did.

Isn't an idea a generalization from experience? How could you be born with already formed concepts or ideas?


 If a concept is a generalization from experience, then there can't be innate concepts, but this is just what's in question.

So you're saying that, in the absence of concepts, one cannot see that A is more like B than either is to C? -- that you cannot perceive similarities and differences -- that it's conceptual rather than perceptual? I don't think so. Animals can perceive similarities and difference, but they cannot abstract from their perception of them. They can perceive and recognize the differences between (say) dogs and cats, but they cannot arrive at the abstraction 'dog' or 'cat'.
The worry raised by critics of abstractionism isn't that one can't perceive any similarities and differences without a prior concept, but that in some cases it may turn out that one can't recognize the similarities without a prior concept. Why should one think all concepts are acquired in the way described in Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology?  (In answer to your question elsewhere, I've read this but obviously need to go over it again with greater care. Thanks for your clarifications of the theory in your next few paragraphs.)

Why do you assume that just because it has been abstracted from a certain number of objects that it must refer only to those objects and not to any others that are relevantly similar?
 If, the concept can be extended to what is relevantly similar, fine; but in that case, why not say that the meaning of the concept is a description of the relevant property instead of saying that the meaning of the concept is its reference, i.e., the existents that it designates?

Again, the point of the analogy is to show that value presupposes that one has something to gain or lose by one's actions. Then you have to recognize that gaining or losing something is possible only to a living organism. There is no heaven or hell
 But there are no immortal robots! I used the heaven and hell example to show that it isn't the robot's immortality that makes the notion of valuing meaningless for it. Rather, it's the fact that nothing matters to it. A robot that was set to blow up in a day couldn't choose either, if nothing mattered to it. Human beings need to act in certain ways in order to live, but how does it follow from this that everything that matters to us depends on its relation to the fact that we are vulnerable to death?


Post 28

Thursday, May 19, 2011 - 8:10pmSanction this postReply
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Well, the assertion is composed of concepts, isn't it? You could say that a proposition is a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment. In his paper "Concepts and Propositions," David Kelley defines "proposition" as "the content of an assertion or judgment" -- "as the complete thought expressed by a grammatical sentence
An assertion is composed of concepts but it's more than a combination of concepts. That would just be a more complicated concept. A judgment asserts that something is true. Kelley's definition elides the distinction between concepts and judgments.

It's definitely not a percept with the details left out
I didn't mean that Objectivists say that concepts are percepts.


Post 29

Thursday, May 19, 2011 - 8:32pmSanction this postReply
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So you're saying that consciousness doesn't imply that you're conscious of an external world. You could be conscious of the contents of your consciousness. But to identify something as being the contents of your consciousness, wouldn't you have to understand it in contrast to the contents of the outside world? What could "the contents of consciousness" mean if there were no external world? Consciousness of what? The very idea of 'consciousness' implies a non-conscious world
You are raising an epistemological issue: if someone were conscious only of the contents of his own consciousness, how would he identify these contents as being the contents of his consciousness, in the absence of a contrast with the outside world? That is a different issue from the one I raised, which is a metaphysical question: must the object of consciousness be external to consciousness? I  do not see why a positive answer depends on the ability of someone who was consciousness of the contents of his own consciousness to be aware that what he was conscious of was the contents of his mind. Your last few sentences just reassert the Objectivist thesis I dispute.


If there were no waking state -- if all consciousness involved nothing more than a dream -- then the concept of a dream would be meaningless. I can know that I had a dream last night only because I now know that I'm awake. I can know that I possess a consciousness only because I also know that there is an external world
If I never dreamed, would it follow that the notion of a waking state was meaningless? Why isn't the distinction between act and object of consciousness sufficient to generate knowledge that a possess a consciousness, regardless of whether the object of consciousness is external to the mind?


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Post 30

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 1:12amSanction this postReply
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Hi David,

You wrote,
The logical law of identity says that A=A. A contradiction violates this law. As an example, "Light always travels at a constant speed of about 186,000 miles per second, but sometimes light travels slower than this" is a contradiction. "Light sometimes travels slower than 186,000 miles per second" is not a contradiction, absent the antecedent of the previous statement. Thus, the statement "Light sometimes travels slower than 186,000 miles per second", taken by itself, does not violate the law of identity.
Well, if you say that light (which travels at 186,000 miles per second) does not travel at 186,000 miles per second, you're saying that light is not light, and that's a contradiction.

I wrote, "All right. Then please tell me how the fundamental constituents of the universe (which were not created and were here from the beginning, as it were) could have failed to exist. They were not created, so there is no creator that could have chosen otherwise -- that could have created something different instead. So, how could these primary existents have failed to exist? The possibility of an alternative -- i.e., of non-existence -- simply doesn't apply to them."
The claim that the universe has fundamental non-created constituents is not a consequence of the logical law of identity. Once more, the law of identity, taken together with the law of non-contradiction, says that contradictory descriptions of the same entity cannot both be true. The law of identity does not by itself tell us what entities exist or what are the properties of these entities.
But suppose there are fundamental constituents ,just as you suggest. It doesn't follow that different ultimate constituents couldn't have existed. Maybe we just happen to have one out of many possible sets of such constituents.
Possible by what standard? Nothing in existence could have made them possible. The fact that one can imagine other ultimate constituents having existed does not mean that they're possible. I can imagine running a mile in 4 minutes, but that doesn't mean that it's possible.

I wrote, "Well, if theists don't believe that God can violate the laws of logic, then on what grounds do they believe that God can perform miracles? A miracle is a violation of the law of identity."
A miracle is usually defined as a violation of a law of nature. Laws of nature do not follow from the law of identity. If Jesus rose from the dead after three days, he violated a law of nature. He did not violate the law of identity. Again, as I see it, the distinction is this: "No person can rise from the dead, but Jesus rose from the dead" is a contradiction. "Jesus rose from the dead", taken by itself, is not.
Again, to say that a man (who, by his very nature, could not have risen from the dead) rose from the dead is a contradiction.

I wrote, "It's not limited to the Objectivist concept of value; it's limited to the concept of choice -- of what can be altered or changed."
I don't see why we can approve or disapprove only what can be altered or changed. I disapprove of the Nazis and Communists' murder of millions of people, but nothing can be done now to change what they did.
You are correct. I should simply have said that it's limited to the concept of choice. You can approve or disapprove only of that which is open to man's choice.

I asked, "Isn't an idea a generalization from experience? How could you be born with already formed concepts or ideas?"
If a concept is a generalization from experience, then there can't be innate concepts, but this is just what's in question.
I still don't see how it is possible to be born with innate ideas, when ideas are based on sensory experience, which can only occur after one has some contact with the external world. That ideas are based on sensory experience is an observable fact, is it not?

I wrote, "So you're saying that, in the absence of concepts, one cannot see that A is more like B than either is to C? -- that you cannot perceive similarities and differences -- that it's conceptual rather than perceptual? I don't think so. Animals can perceive similarities and difference, but they cannot abstract from their perception of them. They can perceive and recognize the differences between (say) dogs and cats, but they cannot arrive at the abstraction 'dog' or 'cat'."
The worry raised by critics of abstractionism isn't that one can't perceive any similarities and differences without a prior concept, but that in some cases it may turn out that one can't recognize the similarities without a prior concept.
I don't follow you. If one can perceive similarities and differences without a prior concept, why can't one recognize similarities without a prior concept?

I asked, "Why do you assume that just because it has been abstracted from a certain number of objects that it must refer only to those objects and not to any others that are relevantly similar?"
If, the concept can be extended to what is relevantly similar, fine; but in that case, why not say that the meaning of the concept is a description of the relevant property instead of saying that the meaning of the concept is its reference, i.e., the existents that it designates?
Because to say that it's meaning is a description of its relevant property is to say that its meaning is its definition. But the concept 'man' doesn't just mean the definition of man -- i.e., rationality and animality; it means (refers to) every individual human being. As Peikoff notes, a concept is not synonymous with its definition, because definitions can change with the growth of man's knowledge.

I wrote, "Again, the point of the analogy is to show that value presupposes that one has something to gain or lose by one's actions. Then you have to recognize that gaining or losing something is possible only to a living organism. There is no heaven or hell."
But there are no immortal robots! I used the heaven and hell example to show that it isn't the robot's immortality that makes the notion of valuing meaningless for it. Rather, it's the fact that nothing matters to it. A robot that was set to blow up in a day couldn't choose either, if nothing mattered to it.
Of course, but I think that Rand is assuming a self-aware robot, one that could value its own self-preservation.
Human beings need to act in certain ways in order to live, but how does it follow from this that everything that matters to us depends on its relation to the fact that we are vulnerable to death?
Well, it's simply a fact that life offers the possibility of happiness, which death does not, and that happiness depends on a successful state of life. Of course, there can be cases in which one's life no longer affords the possibility of happiness -- such as when one is dying in agony of a terminal illness. In that case, one may prefer death in order to end the suffering. But a terminal illness is not a life-promoting condition, to begin with, but rather one that is life destroying. Like physical illness, mental illness is also a dysfunctional condition, which is anti-life because it impairs one's enjoyment of life and one's efficacy in dealing with it. Like the science of physiology, the science of psychology also seeks to treat human illness in order to enable people to live better -- to achieve happiness and well-being. These sciences are based on the standard of life -- of what is life-enhancing and life-promoting.

(Edited by William Dwyer on 5/20, 10:59am)


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Post 31

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 10:12amSanction this postReply
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I wrote, "Well, the assertion is composed of concepts, isn't it? You could say that a proposition is a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment. In his paper "Concepts and Propositions," David Kelley defines "proposition" as "the content of an assertion or judgment" -- "as the complete thought expressed by a grammatical sentence." David replied,
An assertion is composed of concepts but it's more than a combination of concepts. That would just be a more complicated concept.
I agree. I didn't say that it is simply a combination of concepts. I said that it is "a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment.
A judgment asserts that something is true. Kelley's definition elides the distinction between concepts and judgments.
How is that? His definition doesn't even mention concepts. David, you need to read what you're replying to a bit more carefully.


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Post 32

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 10:53amSanction this postReply
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I wrote to David, "So you're saying that consciousness doesn't imply that you're conscious of an external world. You could be conscious of the contents of your consciousness. But to identify something as being the contents of your consciousness, wouldn't you have to understand it in contrast to the contents of the outside world? What could "the contents of consciousness" mean if there were no external world? Consciousness of what? The very idea of 'consciousness' implies a non-conscious world." He replied,
You are raising an epistemological issue: if someone were conscious only of the contents of his own consciousness, how would he identify these contents as being the contents of his consciousness, in the absence of a contrast with the outside world? That is a different issue from the one I raised, which is a metaphysical question: must the object of consciousness be external to consciousness?
No, the object of consciousness can be one's process of awareness, but the object of that process must ultimately be an external world.

I wrote, "If there were no waking state -- if all consciousness involved nothing more than a dream -- then the concept of a dream would be meaningless. I can know that I had a dream last night only because I now know that I'm awake. I can know that I possess a consciousness only because I also know that there is an external world.
If I never dreamed, would it follow that the notion of a waking state was meaningless?
No, where did you get that idea? I said that if there were no waking state, the concept of a dream would be meaningless, not that if there were no dreams, the concept of a waking state would be meaningless.
Why isn't the distinction between act and object of consciousness sufficient to generate knowledge that a possess a consciousness, regardless of whether the object of consciousness is external to the mind?
If I understand your reply, one can certainly be conscious of the contents of one's consciousness; the point is that those contents must in turn imply awareness of an external world.


Post 33

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 11:14amSanction this postReply
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Hi Bill,

How is that? His definition doesn't even mention concepts. David, you need to read what you're replying to a bit more carefully
It doesn't mention concepts; but my criticism is that what it says is more appropriate to a concept than a proposition. A proposition is not just the contents of what is expressed; it is an act of expressing, i.e., a judgment, in words. Similarly, when you say that a proposition is 
a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment
 you are leaving out that the proposition is expressing the judgment; it isn't just an organization of concepts that can express a judgment.  Doug Rasmussen has made the same criticism of Kelley's definition.

Suppose someone defines a tiger as a household pet that likes to play with children and  that also often barks. It wouldn't be a good response to a critic who said that this definition missed the distinction between tigers and dogs to say that the definition didn't even mention dogs and that the critic needed to read more carefully.                            

(Edited by David Gordon on 5/20, 1:52pm)


Post 34

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 5:18pmSanction this postReply
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David,

It certainly sounds like the theory they are criticizing is a bad one that inconsistently combines direct and indirect realism.

I found out about the Wilcox & Katz (1984) paper from reading writings by Paul F. Ballantyne, Ph.D.. Unfortunately, even my old hyper-links to Ballantyne's writings:

Philosophical basis of Psychological Science

History and Theory of Psychology: An early 21st century student's perspective (2001)

Basic Philosophical Choices, metatheory, and theory assessment methodology for a unified 21st century psychology

... have also stopped working. A Google search came up empty (actually: with dead links).

At any rate, W & K (1984) was a criticism of indirect realism as such -- and not of a combination of indirect realism and direct realism. Ballantyne's writings were even more profound. According to Ballantyne, if you are a skeptic, then you are also a solipsist (even if you don't know it yet). Ballantyne outlined how it is that skeptics cannot avoid solipsism.

Ed

(Edited by Ed Thompson on 5/20, 5:19pm)


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Post 35

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 5:39pmSanction this postReply
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I quoted David Kelley's definition of a proposition as "the content of an assertion or judgment" -- "as the complete thought expressed by a grammatical sentence." David Gordon replied that what Kelley's definition "says is more appropriate to a concept than a proposition."

I don't think so. A concept is not a complete thought expressed by a grammatical sentence. A concept is symbolized by a word, not a grammatical sentence.
A proposition is not just the contents of what is expressed; it is an act of expressing, i.e., a judgment, in words.
Well, he says that it's a complete thought -- a judgment if you will -- expressed by a grammatical sentence. So he includes the fact that the judgment is expressed.
Similarly, when you say that a proposition is a combination of concepts organized to express a particular idea or judgment you are leaving out that the proposition is expressing the judgment; it isn't just an organization of concepts that can express a judgment.
Oh, come on! I said organized to express a judgment, implying that the judgment is expressed.



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Post 36

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 6:20pmSanction this postReply
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Yes, my criticism here was unfair and I withdraw it.

Post 37

Friday, May 20, 2011 - 10:51pmSanction this postReply
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David,

The RoRmail that you (must) have explains that you have been awarded "sanctions" (the positive sense of the term). You now have an Atlas icon next to your name and, if I am not mistaken, you can now post here without moderation. Up until now, you -- like everyone without an Atlas -- were being moderated.

Tres, please correct me if I'm wrong on this.

Ed

(Edited by Ed Thompson on 5/20, 10:52pm)


Post 38

Saturday, May 21, 2011 - 3:55amSanction this postReply
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Bill,

You write:

_____________

Well, if theists don't believe that God can violate the laws of logic, then on what grounds do they believe that God can perform miracles? A miracle is a violation of the law of identity. A thing cannot act in contradiction to its nature. No matter how powerful God is, he cannot perform miracles, he cannot cause existents to act in contradiction to their natures; he is limited by natural law. If your reply is, but God can change their natures, how? Even he has to work within the limits of what exists, and what exists has identity at the most fundamental level.

______________

But this doesn't prevent an outside entity from acting on an object. A pencil cannot, "on its own," fly off the table. But I can make it fly if I use an air blower. If God exist, maybe he can too. Now this might be question begging when it comes to God, but I think it shows that a miracle is not contrary to the law of identity.

A couple other points:

1. David (like others before him) has asked for the proof that children and adults form concepts the way Rand said they do in ITO. I think this is perfectly reasonable. Even if Rand's theory is correct when it comes to chairs and tables, what about grammar, logic and abstract concepts just as "justice" or "infinity"?

2. It's probably the case that most all concepts arise from experience. But how does that prove that there is no innate knowledge?

Post 39

Saturday, May 21, 2011 - 6:20amSanction this postReply
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Quote from Neil - 2. It's probably the case that most all concepts arise from experience. But how does that prove that there is no innate knowledge?



Neil -I am not particularly familiar with AR philosophy: but her lexicon is not exclusive to objectivism: it is (from what I can tell thus far) consistent with TRUTH.

So with that being said I would simple say that this comes down to what AR called "primacy of existence" vs "primacy of consciousness" - and the 'truth' is that existence exists independently of consciousness.

It comes down to 'accepting' that your own perceptions to at least imply the existence of an external/physical/real world - but the 'existence' of the physical universe is at least PROVEN - to some extent- by my perceptions. I 'claim' to be certain that I (and the chair I am sitting on) do 'exist': but that certainty is always held to be 'defeasible'.

So to the question of "Proof of innate knowledge"; it is not now - or ever will be possible - to PROVE 'innate knowledge'.

Hope that was in some way helpful, but even better would be the AR lexicon where those terms, "primacy of.....", are more throughly explained.


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