T
The_Exodus
Guest
We are here agreed.That is, the law of non-contradiction is part of my mental abstraction set – a tool in my mind for making sense of the world around me.
No, that is not and has never been the traditional stance toward the law. Descartes came along and separated thought and existence (or tried to, rather), but he was wrong.But that places the law of contradiction in my mind, not as physical law or some governing natural principle, right?
Just because the law is a concept, does not mean it is automatically “not found” in reality. I’ve always maintained that the law is itself grasped from reality.
The two things - concepts of reality and reality – are not *mutually *contradictory. Perhaps you could show me how they are?
And, supposing you can do this, are you really prepared to go through with it – I mean all the way through? “Color,” “shape,” “size,” “matter,” etc are all concepts. Do they too not exist “outside the mind,” simply because they happen to be in the mind? Where is the mutual exclusion, which pushes one option out of the picture at the expense of the other?
If that followed, all concepts would be separated by an unpassible chasm from what lies “beyond” (whatever that is.) What then could they be concepts of? Solipsism would reign – extreme Idealism – for it is not even rational to conclude there exists *anything *outside the mind, since such a conclusion is necessarily concept dependent.
(And I don’t even mention the obvious problem with the solipsist’s justification of “I”.)
Yes, that is precisely my claim. This is actually a great summary of it, minus a few words.But below, and elsewhere, then again, it seems you are placing the law of non-contradiction “externally” as some kind of physical principle, part of the structure of reality itself, and your intuition (the abstraction in your mind) is somehow metaphysically clairvoyant in “seeing” that physical law, the object of your intuition.
Correct. The abstraction as such does not control what is the case, anymore than me being in error about a particular thing – say the resurrection of Jesus – makes such a fact real. But the abstraction, insofar as it is of a universal kind or principle (and not a particular application thereof), is a true penetration into the nature of reality and being.If we agree that the law of contradiction is a mental abstraction, just the presence of that intuition has NO metaphysical control over reality, right?
Correct. There is no “control-connection” between my mind and nature, whereby nature herself bends under my thinking as such. But this does not mean that there is no connection between nature and my mind at all, nor that that connection is not a true and penetrating one.The abstraction may be wonderfully useful, partly useful, or not useful at all, but in any case, nature itself is not dependent on your and my abstraction we call the “law of non-contradiction”, correct?
“A” photon then is no longer “a” any-thing, but two things simultaneously. What you are doing – using a singular term to denote a plurality of mutually exclusive existences – is absurd.I can imagine a contradictory being – a photon. That’s the whole point of the discussion about Young’s experiment above. It “exists” and “not-exists” in the same respect at the same time, and it’s not just semantics.
As Aristotle said to the sophists of his day: what a man says, needs not be what he thinks.
Evidence requires interpretation – which means it can be interpreted erroneously. I can imagine all sorts of evidence that could be seen as contradictory, and it always is (for that is the nature of confusion, seeing two seemingly contradictory things) until some higher synthesis comes along and puts the facts in the right place.The mathematical formalisms of QM are the grounds for that assessment, backed up by empirical observation.
Any appeal you make to the unassailable god “observation” or “empirical evidence” is a misnomer, and is impotent - void of authority. Observation always requires interpretation and explanation, and I simply deny (on pain of absurdity) that you are accurately interpreting the evidence.
It cannot be. There must “be” some explanatory piece of the puzzle we are missing, and, even supposing it is beyond our ken, it cannot be beyond it in such a way that is contradictory. For the contradictory is what is intrinsically impossible, unrealizable, in-coherent. We could not even denote such a “contradictoy thing” as potentially having being, for having being always implies intelligibility, or some mode of existence. If we did give such a thing being, we would be uttering an empty phrase.But for all we know it may be a fundamental offense to our macrophysical, human-centric intuitions.
If such things were “true,” all our notions of coherence would be destroyed and backwards. We could not even say such things “may be,” for that phrase would be equivalent to such things “cannot be” in our thought. Reality would be a meaningless term. Or rather it would be equivalent to un-reality, or what is not-real. All our thinking would be not-thinking. Further, there would be no intelligible difference between what is rational and irrational.
If it is not enough to show you that all thoughts (including this one and any one you may have while reading this and any conclusion you may draw or any argument you may fire back) would be incoherent; that what we meant by true would mean false, and that reason and intelligibility would be actually un-reason and un-intelligibility, I’m not sure we can continue dialogue.