Greetings.
Mr. Barnes: It is also worth pointing out that they did apparently did not feel it necessary to "check their premises" to verify if their concept “automobile” was based on "the facts of reality", or was really just a floating figment of their imagination to be suitably pooh-poohed. And it is probably just as well, given that prior to its invention an automobile had approximately the same epistemological status as a mermaid.
Mr. Stolyarov: But the inventors did have an already present understanding of what transportation was in the pre-automobile status-quo, how an automobile could affect transportation, and why this would be beneficial and appealing. They knew that putting together certain parts that could be manufactured in this world would result in a more effective means of transportation. They could almost certainly explain this explicitly to the workers that constructed the first automobiles, as well as the clients that took the initial risk of purchasing or investing in them.
Mr. Barnes: Now, as your example shows, the term “automobile”is of no serious significance to our inventors, and is simply the answer to the question “what shall we call a land based vehicle that is self powered?”
Mr. Stolyarov: You are right to say that the idea of the actual entity came first, before the name. But it is also thus in a filosofical exploration. For example, because I had coined certain terms of my own, I can recall my own logic. In the abortion debate, I thought of the notion that a fetus is not a mere potential, but will definitely be born absent human or circumstantial intervention. Only then did I devise a name for this condition, “futuristic certainty.”
Thus it is with any Aristotelian filosofer. For the Aristotelian, reality comes first. He perceives certain entities and fenomena, and seeks to categorize and classify them in a systematic, consistent manner. When he first discovers something, he identifies its nature first, then gives it a name. But when he has only second-hand information about something, from someone else, he hears only the name. Naturally, he wants to know what is the nature of that, which the name describes. Hence, he insists on hearing the definition.
Mr. Barnes: As you know, the definition in Objectivism, as per Aristotle, contains all our knowledge of the concept, plus all the other concepts (symbolised by words) that are subsumed within that concept - in the case of “automobile”, those subsumed concepts might be “spoke”, “wheel”, “screw”,”axle”, “seat”, “brake” etc; plus, I suppose, the concepts governing internal combustion, accelaration, inertia etc; and aesthetic concepts regarding colour, design; and so forth. And of course, it implicitly contains all the concepts we don’t yet know about and may not know for a very long time, if ever, such as the ultimate nature of its atoms or of the forces that act on it such as gravity.
Mr. Stolyarov: The designers of the automobile must have had quite intricate awareness of all of those subsuming concepts. Moreover, Objectivism does view concepts as open-ended. It acknowledges that our present knowledge about a concept is not final, and that the metaforical “file folder” that is the concept may be filled with more information in the future. (For example, a new shape or engine structure invented ten years later would create a set on new entities which also fall under the concept “automobile.”)
It is possible to produce effective results not knowing everything about a subject or entity. That is granted. However, one should try to know as much as possible in the given context! Definitions are important for this purpose: they enhance one’s knowledge of the entity in question and its constituents, as far as our empirical observations to date permit, when such an entity as an automobile is concerned. An abstraction, on the other hand, does not need further empirical observations to render its explanation complete (it only needs initial universally accessible observations about reality, which give rise to the axioms). It needs further individual thought. Definitions are the only lines along which such thought can systematically proceed.
Mr. Barnes: Now you can immediately see the Aristotelian method, if applied consistently, becomes impractical in the extreme, as it turns even a very short simple story like “automobile” into a very long, very complex one…
Mr. Stolyarov: Ah, but the automobile is a very long and complex story, made possible by thousands of years of human technical progress, and the integration of its components, as well as a scientific understanding of certain fundamental laws of fysics that went into its construction. Its creators had to consider all of these things. Only we, who do not create automobiles, but rather use them for our convenience, can afford to use intellectual shorthand and attempt to render our explanations more concise and cursory. Give an automobile engineer the requirement to produce as cursory a blueprint as possible, and you will never build an automobile.
Each concept contains a very long and complex story within its file folder. Rather than shun this complexity, each man specializing in particular entities or concepts needs to learn it. You would not want heart surgery to be made “a short and simple story,” you would want the surgeon to know why he uses the tools he does, what the nature of your heart and surrounding organs is, and what past explorations existed in that field. Similarly, you would want the filosofer to know the true meaning of selfishness, or freedom, or progress, or practicality, for he performs a metaforical surgery on the very heart and soul of mankind itself.
Mr. Barnes: Further, there is no loss to our knowledge at all by eliminating definitions from our arguments, as we can always reintroduce a longer explanatory formula if and when it is required.
Mr. Stolyarov: This is because an inventor deals with concretes. The concretes to be defined and redefined are still there if definitions change. The filosofer deals with abstractions, which are exclusively organizing tools for the human mind; non-human entities do not have abstractions. The only way abstractions can be organized is by means of a hierarchy of definitions. You destroy the definition, and you destroy the very meaning and importance of a word, so that it can be thrown around with such casual negligence as the terms “love” and “freedom” are, which allows demagogues to equate them with “unconditionality” and “subjective psychological comfort.”
Mr. Barnes: However, I’m not sure you’ve fully taken on board my point: that if the purpose of definitions is to increase the precision of terms, the minute he resorts to using an axiom, *the essentialist has admitted defeat for his method*! For with an axiom your second term is the same as your first, therefore adds no precision at all. So it doesn’t matter *when* you repair to an axiom; all it means is that your method breaks down either sooner, or later. Up to you!
Mr. Stolyarov: All right, how about this:
We ask, “What is a cube?”
*A cube is any three-dimensional entity that is equal in its measurements of length, width, and height, and consists of six planar surfaces at right angles with each other.
*A right angle is the measurement of 90 degrees out of 360, where 360 degrees is the measurement of an angle spanning a full circle.
*A three-dimensional object is any entity, the relationship of whose parts can be expressed by a set of three mutually independent parameters.
*A planar surface is the external part of an entity that exists in only two dimensions, i.e., can be expressed by a set of only two mutually independent parameters.
*An entity is anything that fulfills Mr. Firehammer’s ontological corollaries (see above). [This is equivalent to a referral to the axioms. The word “entity” has come up in the definition, and it can be described by ontology, which is inherently linked to the axiom of existence.]
Where is the infinite regress, or lessening of precision?
This is a fairly simple description, and many objects and concepts would require a far lengthier chain of definitions. So be it. The men who specialize in creating/studying such objects or concepts have all their lives to do this and do it well!
Do you have any other entities for me to analyze, so as to point out where to refer to the axioms?
Mr. Barnes: Now here she has clearly said “consciousness” is very different from “existence”; therefore, it is not part of existence; it is not among the group of things that exist; *therefore it does not exist*! As I don’t doubt that Rand believed in the existence of consciousness, we can assume by existence she actually meant physical reality, as opposed to the non-physical nature of consciousness.
Mr. Stolyarov: What Rand meant was that consciousness does not generate that, which is perceives, or that, which is outside it. It cannot directly alter fysical matter outside itself. I would use the term “external reality” rather than “existence” to describe what is outside of consciousness, to be more precise. I grant that Rand could have used certain formulations that were far from immaculate. Even great thinkers can make slight innocent errors of terminology.
Mr. Barnes: So here’s Ayn Rand, despite being in full possession of the axiom “Existence exists” using the term “existence” in a confusing, ambiguous, and contradictory way. And not just casually or accidentally, but in a way that survived editing, proofreading and numerous editions of publication in a book that claims to be the basis of her philosophy. So I put it to you: if *she* can’t get absolute verbal clarity from an axiomatic definition that is fundamental to her philosophy, *who are we to try*?!
Mr. Stolyarov: So, by that same logic, if she could not restrain herself from the self-destructive practice of chain smoking, who are we to try? I think it is a moral crime for a man to think it metafysically impossible for himself to become more efficient, successful, and right at anything, than a great person of the past had been. We have only the integrity of our own minds and our own reason to serve as our guides, and there is nothing that limits their potential to what has already been reached by somebody else.
We also have the benefit of progress, in all areas of existence, that great individuals of the past did not enjoy. Rather than constructing these earlier steps of progress, we already have them accessible, and can build upon them, so as to minimize our errors. An ordinary engineer today might not be as mentally brilliant as the architects who constructed the Pyramids or the Parthenon, but the knowledge and technology at his disposal are so colossal as to enable him to construct an office building surpassing any ancient structure in both scope and intricacy.
Mr. Barnes: For all they add up to is this: if a thing exists, it must have some qualities; and must be different from other things; but also similar to other things. In other words, *the same old problems* philosophers have been grappling with since year dot, adding no discernable advance at all.
Mr. Stolyarov: Actually, this is quite an advance from millennia of intrinsicism (Platonism) and subjectivism (relativism), which did not acknowledge the ontological corollaries. The third way of Objectivism was hinted at by Aristotle, but consistently integrated only by Rand, and even then without a systematic ontology. Firehammer’s contribution has been to finally formulate the foundations of this ontology.
Mr. Barnes: Ayn Rand was fully aware of this problem, of course, and had to invent a fudge in order to “save the phenomena” of absolute certainty. She called this the “contextual theory of knowledge”.
Mr. Stolyarov: What is so improper about absolute certainty? I am absolutely certain that 2+2=4, that space is Euclidean, that I am alive, that I think, that the Earth contains water, and of thousands of other things. There are, indeed, matters on which I am not entirely certain due to incomplete evidence, but it is possible to be entirely certain of the truth of a given proposition.
I am G. Stolyarov II
The Prologue: http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/eac_prologue.html
Chapter I: Protector's Summons: http://www.geocities.com/rational_argumentator/eac_chapter1.html
Order Eden against the Colossus at http://www.lulu.com/content/63699.
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