Terrapin Station wrote: ↑February 24th, 2020, 7:37 pm
Peter Holmes wrote: ↑February 24th, 2020, 7:13 pm
I apologise for failing to respond to what you said.
But what you say here is incoherent blather, and I don't think you know what you're talking about. You ignore my point about equivocating on 'thing' and 'exist' with regard to abstract things and events. And you seem to content to rehash metaphysical nonsense about the mind and mental things.
And that's fine. Let's leave it there.
I already explained my take on abstracts to you. I wrote this:
"I'm also a nominalist in the senses that I think there are only unique particulars, and there are no real (extramental) abstracts. Abstraction is a mental phenomenon, and as such, it's a mental particular that like everything else, amounts to ((dynamic) relations of) matter."
Again, I apologise for not taking up this point when you made it - particularly as I think it's important in our discussion. Mea culpa.
Am I right to think that, as a nominalist, you deny the existence of Platonic universals? Is what you call an abstract thing, such as meaning, another name for what the schoolmen called a universal? As I understand it, the nominalists thought universals are no more than 'flatus vocis' - merely names, words or sounds. If that's right, to that extent I'm also a nominalist. And names, words and sounds are real things - I'm also a physicalist, as I gather you are. I think we're both non-dualists - though you may reject that label.
But I think the problem with the Platonist-nominalist dispute was (is) that both camps mistake abstract nouns for things which, because they are things, may or may not exist: Platonists assert their existence (somehow, somewhere), and nominalists deny it. It seems to me that thoroughgoing nominalism must involve rejecting that dispute as incoherent. If a name, word or sound has no referent, then it makes no sense to assert or deny the existence of that referent. Why deny the existence of something that can't exist?
Now, what I don't understand is your position with regard to supposed abstract things or abstractions. You seem to think they do exist, but only 'in the mind'. Does that mean you think the universal (Platonic form)
dog exists in the mind? And if not, why do you think the supposed abstract thing
meaning exists in the mind? As a nominalist, why do you think abstractions exist anywhere? And as a physicalist, why talk about things existing in the mind anyway? Isn't that Platonism by another name? (Sorry - so many questions!)
And twice I asked you just what sort of things you believe abstracts are. The first time I asked you, you had written this:
"What an extraordinary metaphysical delusion it is to think abstract nouns are the names of things of some kind that somehow exist somewhere, and that we can describe."
To which I responded: "how do you reconcile this with physicalism? Just what sort of physical things do you believe abstracts are?"
As a physicalst and out-and-out nominalist, I think my position is the only rational one. There are only physical things, such as electrochemical processes in our brains, and signs, including abstract nouns. So it's a mistake to think abstract things and events exist - anywhere.
You never responded to any of that. This is why I don't like doing long posts back and forth or posting too much too soon.
Once again, I apologise. I hope the goes some way to making amends.