'For the person or persons that hold dominion, can no more combine with the keeping up of majesty the running with harlots drunk or naked about the streets, or the performances of a stage player, or the open violation or contempt of laws passed by themselves than they can combine existence with non-existence'.

- Benedict de Spinoza. Political Treatise. 1677.




Sunday, June 21, 2009

on certainty 35


35. But can’t it be imagined that there should be no physical objects? I don’t know. And yet “there are physical objects” is nonsense. Is it supposed to be an empirical proposition?

And is this an empirical proposition: “there seems to be physical objects”? 



any description is first and foremost a response to the unknown –

the point of any such description is to provide a basis or ground for action –

if a description does this – it has function –

if it doesn’t it is of no use

can it be imagined that there are no physical objects?

is to ask could the description ‘there are no physical objects’ be of use?

this is an empirical question

and the description – ‘there seems to be physical objects’ –

again is that of use?

and if it is – it is an empirical proposition

if it is usable – it is testable

one thing is obvious –

these descriptions have a use for Wittgenstein –

right here

                                                                                                                                  
 © greg t. charlton. 2009.