Myself. of course!You type that like Philosophy is a person. So which philosopher has your favorite answer on God?
This only is an argument against invention if invention is defined as, "bringing a new idea into existence", and we allow that this Platonic design space exists. However, we could easily tweak the definition of invention to "bringing a new idea into physical reality" (the brain counts as physical reality) and your objection has absolutely no relevance.
Platonic
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Inventions do not exist.
(What we call an invention, is actually the realization of a possibility that already existed - irrespective of the discovery of it. The invention of the paperclip for instance is, when we look at it closely, the d i s c o v - e r y of the paperclip. Or, to be more precise, the i d e a of the paperclip. The fact that paperclips did not exist before they were invented, does not matter. Similarly, the fact that the atomic bomb did not exist before, does not exclude the p o s s i b i l i t y of its existence - again, irrespective of the fact if someone had the idea to construct it. In other words, the fact that no one had the idea to invent something, has no bearing on the fact that the idea of something already exists. The idea simply has not come into reality yet. Once again: ideas can be as real as what they represent.)
This only is an argument against invention if invention is defined as, "bringing a new idea into existence", and we allow that this Platonic design space exists. However, we could easily tweak the definition of invention to "bringing a new idea into physical reality" (the brain counts as physical reality) and your objection has absolutely no relevance.
One might object to this definition tweaking, but you have to remember that "invention" is actually defined by usage in the English language, and we're just trying to formalize our intuitive notions.
Following which argument?
Dennett puts it like this: What would make a particular decision "more free?" Take out emotional factors that cloud your rationality, perhaps,
take out biological factors that predispose you to a certain pattern of behavior, [...]
If we want to have a free will, it can't be separate from all of these things that, at first glance, seem to be out of our control.
which are the non sequiturs I complained about.JEELEN said:To have a free will would be like making a decision purely by chance. Or, if one had a free will, a decision would not be influenced by any factor.
which are the non sequiturs I complained about.
I was wondering about that. Care to elaborate?
To have a free will would be like making a decision purely by chance. Or, if one had a free will, a decision would not be influenced by any factor.
a waste of time.
/thread.
I thought the point was "Inventions do not exist." which is bogus.It seems you are missing the point; no "Platonic design space" (whatever that is) is asserted, merely that, as you put it, ideas are being realized through invention. I see no need to redefine "invention" here.
This only is an argument against invention if invention is defined as, "bringing a new idea into existence", and we allow that this Platonic design space exists. However, we could easily tweak the definition of invention to "bringing a new idea into physical reality" (the brain counts as physical reality) and your objection has absolutely no relevance.
One might object to this definition tweaking, but you have to remember that "invention" is actually defined by usage in the English language, and we're just trying to formalize our intuitive notions.
Really, I don't think it's that interesting. If we call this platonic idea space as real, we have to tweak common use definitions to fit in the formal structure. These tweaks are semantic quibbles that might be important if a more important argument hinges on them, but not interesting in themselves.