Eric - great fun.

But, both the nominalist and the realist, when dealing with individual 
'things', acknowledge that those individual things exist in time and space. So, 
both can pick those apples quite happily in a similar fashion. [And after all, 
that is one valid definition of 'realism']. And in all probability, neither 
cares about such irrelevant ideas as 'generals'. So, does the concept of 
'general' have any  value?

I think so - not when one is busy at quantifying individual 'things'. But, when 
one is dealing with concepts which are common to a number of things and have 
continuity over time and space, such as 'wise', various moral concepts, and 
general concepts such as 'tree', 'water'..etc.. then, philosophical realism 
moves in to declare that these concepts have a general reality that is 
articulated in individual instantiations. TREE--->this particular tree.

What's the point? As you say, in daily life it makes no difference. But I think 
that it does, socially and politically. Realism removes the individual as the 
key agent of thought and moves the community, the long-term community, into 
that role. It prevents subjective relativism, prevents the notion that each 
individual can directly and individually perfectly KNOW the world and insists 
instead on that community of scholars and indeed, denies full 
knowledge...because, realism says that information is not found in ONE 
individual object but in the GENERALITY of objects, and as such, requires a 
different approach than direct singular observation. 

I think the difference is important in the societal and political effects of 
the two different approaches. I don't think that there is any great difference 
in actual knowledge of our external world.

Edwina




  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Eric Charles 
  To: Peirce List 
  Cc: Nicholas Thompson (Google Docs) 
  Sent: Monday, February 06, 2017 9:58 AM
  Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Generals, Realism, Individuals, Nominalism


  JS said: In other words, the nominalist says that reality consists entirely 
of individuals, so generals are only names we use to facilitate discourse; 
while the (Peircean) realist says that reality consists entirely of generals, 
so individuals are only names we use to facilitate discourse.  If so, how does 
this help answer Eric's original question about the practical differences that 
one view manifests relative to the other?


  Uh oh. 


  I was rather satisfied with having decided, aided by the list discussion, 
that - from a pragmatist perspective - nominalists were just people who denied 
that collective inquiry into categories leads to convergence of ideas. But now 
(here and elsewhere) Nominalists are again being attributed more positive 
beliefs, and my original question resurfaces: What difference does it make? 
That is, what distinction-of-consequences allows us to consider the ideas to be 
different. This seems like the context in which parables are helpful. 


  -----


  Imagine if you will, two apple pickers. They both pick apples, fill baskets, 
and deliver the baskets to the back of nearby trucks. At the end of the day, 
they get paid based on the number of baskets they deliver to the truck. "Look 
at  how similar those two are," you say to yourself one day while watching 
them. 


  "Heck no," someone next to you says, and you realize you must have been 
speaking your thoughts. You look inquisitively at the interlocutor, and he 
continues. "I've known those two my entire life, and they couldn't be more 
different. One is a nominalist, and the other is a Peircian realist." You 
continue to look inquisitively, and the stranger goes on. 


  "You see, Bill, on the left there, he doesn't believe that categories or 
generalities like 'apple' exist at all. He conceives of himself as picking up 
distinctly individual objects, and collecting them into baskets, with each 
basket being distinct in every way from the next basket. He sometimes points 
out, for example, that the 'red' color is not identical between any two 
picked-objects, and that any two containers of picked-objects are mind 
bogglingly different at an atomic level. The whole notion that he is collecting 
'apples' into 'baskets' that have any equivalence at all is just, he insists, a 
weird language game we have agreed to play, and doesn't correspond at all with 
reality." 


  After that barrage of ideas, the man settles into silence, watching the 
pickers. 


  "... and?..." you ply. 


   "Well, you see," he continued, after some thought, "in contrast, Jim, over 
there on the right, believes that only generals are real, and the idea that 
these apples are individuals is the flaw in our thinking. After all, what makes 
'that apple' any less misleading than any other label of individuality. What 
about 'that apple' will be the same when it gets to the store shelf? Heck, he 
would even claim that it is odd to believe that Bill-on-the-left is the same 
person he was a year ago. Bill-on-the-left has the properties of being a 
singular thing, but the identity label itself is just convenient ways to refer 
to complex composite beings, and don't get at any sort of 'essence' at all. 
Those individual names are just, he insist, a weird linguistic device to 
facilitate discourse. Quite to the contrary, Jim would insist, if there is 
anything going on here that honest inquirers would agree about after the dust 
settles, it is that 'apples' were put in 'baskets', and that makes those 
generals real."


  "Huh," you insist, "that is all very fascinating, but I can detect no 
difference in their behavior that would correspond to such a dramatic seeming 
difference in thinking. Do they not both pick, and bucket, and deliver in the 
same manner? And wait in the same line, in the same way, to receive the same 
pay, with the same sullenness?" 


  "Well yes," says the stranger, "but trust me, they are very, very different. 
As I said, one is a nominalist, and the other a realist in the pragmatic vein. 
Men with such contrasting sets of ideas couldn't be more different." 


  "Huh," you repeat, "aside from the words and phrases they would invoke in a 
conversation about the specific topic you brought up, what conditions could we 
arrange so as to see the difference in belief manifest as clear differences in 
behavior? (Granting probability, and all that.) " 


  "Well, you couldn't," says the stranger, "they are differences in belief, not 
differences in habit." 


  "Ah," you reply confidently, "it is too bad your thinking is not as clear as 
mine. Belief is habit. As such, if there is no difference in habit between the 
two that would - granted probability, and all that - manifest itself under some 
arranged circumstances, then the two beliefs are equivalent, no matter what the 
words might mislead you into thinking. Thus, if you don't mind, I'll continue 
to think that the two people are very similar." 


  Another long pause ensued, and the man offered, sounding less certain, "Well, 
I suppose they would relatively-reflexively complain differently, under 
circumstances we could arrange, and those differences-in-verbal-complaint would 
be logically connected with the distinction I have pointed out."


  "Ah," you reply again, "I suppose that might indeed count as a 
habit-of-thought, or something like that. But I already mentioned that I am 
concerned with the ideas, not the words used to express the ideas. And even if 
I were to allow mere differences in verbal responses, which I am not sure I am 
terribly inclined to do, that would surely be amongst the least of differences 
worth considering, and so I will still - thank you very much - view them as 
quite similar. Good day." 










  -----------
  Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
  Supervisory Survey Statistician

  U.S. Marine Corps



  On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 12:36 PM, Jon Alan Schmidt <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Jon A., List:


    These comments strike me as getting to the heart of the matter.


      JA:  It is a maxim of nominal(istic) thinking that we should not mistake 
a general name for the name of a general. But should we then turn around and 
mistake an individual name for the name of an individual?


      JA:  Peirce makes the status of being an individual relative to 
discourse, that is, a context of discussion or a specified universe of 
discourse, and so he makes individuality an interpretive attribute rather than 
an ontological essence.


      JA:  This does nothing less than subvert the very basis of the 
controversy between nominalism and realism by dispelling the illusion of 
nominal thinkers that the denotations of individual terms are necessarily any 
less ideal than the denotations of general terms. Whether signs are secure in 
their denotations has to be determined on more solid practical grounds than 
mere grammatical category.


    Am I right to interpret this as supporting the notion that all individuals 
are general (to some degree), rather than truly singular (determinate in every 
conceivable respect)?  In other words, the nominalist says that reality 
consists entirely of individuals, so generals are only names we use to 
facilitate discourse; while the (Peircean) realist says that reality consists 
entirely of generals, so individuals are only names we use to facilitate 
discourse.  If so, how does this help answer Eric's original question about the 
practical differences that one view manifests relative to the other?


    Regards,


    Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA
    Professional Engineer, Amateur Philosopher, Lutheran Layman
    www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt - twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt


    On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 10:44 AM, Jon Awbrey <[email protected]> wrote:

      Peircers,

      I continue to review the multiple threads from January
      on Generals, Realism, Individuals, Nominalism (GRIN),
      forming as they do such a near-at-hand microcosm of
      eternally recurring themes.  In the process I found
      myself drawn back to previous encounters with the
      whole panoply of puzzles that always arises here.
      So here's a few pieces of prologue from the past:

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      November 2000

      
JA:http://web.archive.org/web/20020322102614/http://www.virtual-earth.de/CG/cg-list/msg03592.html

      
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/C.S._Peirce_%E2%80%A2_Doctrine_Of_Individuals

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      November 2002

      
JA:http://web.archive.org/web/20070226082502/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04332.html

      Any genuine appreciation of what Peirce has to say about identity,
      indices, names, proper or otherwise, and the putative distinctions
      between individual, particular, and general terms will have to deal
      with what he wrote in 1870 about the “doctrine of individuals”.

      Notice that this statement, together with the maxims
      that “Whatever has comprehension must be general”
      and “Whatever has extension must be composite”,
      pull the rug — and all of the elephants —
      out from underneath the nominal thinker's
      wishful thinking to find ontological
      security in individual names, which
      said nominal thinker has confused
      with the names of individuals,
      to turn a phrase back on same.

      
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/C.S._Peirce_%E2%80%A2_Doctrine_Of_Individuals#DOI._Note_1

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      January 2015

      JA:https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/arc/peirce-l/2015-01/msg00175.html

      By theoretical entities I mean things like classes,
      properties, qualities, sets, situations, or states
      of affairs, in general, the putative denotations of
      theoretical concepts, formulas, sentences, in brief,
      the ostensible objects of signs.

      A conventional statement of Ockham's Razor is —

      • “Entities shall not be multiplied beyond necessity.”

      That is still good advice, as practical maxims go, but
      a pragmatist will read that as practical necessity or
      utility, qualifying the things that we need to posit
      in order to think at all, without getting lost in
      endless circumlocutions of perfectly good notions.

      Nominalistic revolts are well-intentioned when they
      naturally arise, seeking to clear away the clutter
      of ostentatious entities ostensibly denoted by
      signs that do not denote.

      But that is no different in its basic intention than
      what Peirce sought to do, clarifying metaphysics
      though the application of the Pragmatic Maxim.

      Taking the long view, then, pragmatism can be seen as
      a moderate continuation of Ockham's revolt, substituting
      a principled revolution for what tends to descend to
      a reign of terror.

      http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15467
      
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2015/01/20/pragmatism-about-theoretical-entities-1/

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      March 2015

      JA:https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/arc/peirce-l/2015-03/msg00096.html

      Inquiry Blog:
      
http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2015/01/20/pragmatism-about-theoretical-entities-1/

      Peirce List:
      JA:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15467
      FS:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15800
      JA:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15817
      FS:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15818
      JA:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15826
      JC:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15832
      FS:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15857
      FS:http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/15858

      I don't see that we differ much on the question of Peirce's realism,
      not so much on the question of what he knew as when he knew it, maybe.
      I have never bought that multi-stage story of Peirce's development as
      much as others do. The way I read him, he started out writing technical
      works for audiences trained in mathematical and scientific disciplines.
      They may not have had quite as much mental flexibility as he assumed but
      their natural dispositions and practical training possessed them of that
      basic “scientific attitude” that I tried to thumbnail sketch recently on
      a not unrelated thread.  This had the effect that Peirce simply did not
      have to articulate a whole of lot of assumptions that were already taken
      for granted by his audience.  That would have been a case of “teaching
      grandpa to suck eggs”, as the folksy idiom goes.  As various not-so-simple
      twists of fate would have it, one of the big things that changed with the
      passing years was the increasing diversity of audiences that he addressed,
      and I think this accounts for a greater share of the variance in what he
      wrote than is widely acknowledged.  Just for instance, the acceptance of
      “real possibles” that makes up the bread-and-butter of probability theory
      and statistical inference would hardly need arguing in those early papers
      with the same dogged insistence it took to justify it to later audiences.

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      March 2015

      JA:https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/arc/peirce-l/2015-03/msg00099.html

      Because it has come up once again, let me just mention one more time
      why I think Peirce's theory of individuals has such a radical bearing
      on the whole question of nominalism vs. realism.

      It is a maxim of nominal(istic) thinking that we should not mistake
      a general name for the name of a general. But should we then turn
      around and mistake an individual name for the name of an individual?

      Peirce makes the status of being an individual relative to discourse,
      that is, a context of discussion or a specified universe of discourse,
      and so he makes individuality an interpretive attribute rather than an
      ontological essence.

      This does nothing less than subvert the very basis of the controversy
      between nominalism and realism by dispelling the illusion of nominal
      thinkers that the denotations of individual terms are necessarily
      any less ideal than the denotations of general terms. Whether
      signs are secure in their denotations has to be determined on
      more solid practical grounds than mere grammatical category.

      If I may append a self-quotation,
      here are a few from the turn of
      the millennium:

      
http://web.archive.org/web/20030927022020/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04332.html
      
http://web.archive.org/web/20070705085032/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd24.html#04332
      
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/Mathematical_Demonstration_and_the_Doctrine_of_Individuals

      Additional References:

      
http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2015/02/22/mathematical-demonstration-the-doctrine-of-individuals-1/
      
http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2015/02/23/mathematical-demonstration-the-doctrine-of-individuals-2/

      o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

      inquiry into inquiry: https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/
      academia: https://independent.academia.edu/JonAwbrey
      oeiswiki: https://www.oeis.org/wiki/User:Jon_Awbrey
      isw: http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/JLA
      facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/JonnyCache



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