TheTrendyCynic said:
Three objectively true facts:
(A) Existence exists.
And...how do you determine what really exists? There is a theological system (in Hinduism I believe), that posits that the world is a part of God's dream. If this is so, then your existence is no more concrete or real than the Thundercat's. This isn't an objectively true fact. It is a pragmatically true fact. If we deny it, then from the only perspective we really have experience with, we die. Still, we can't prove it.
TheTrendyCynic said:
(B) All existents have identity (characteristics or attributes that distinguish one existent from another).
This is purely an arbitrary distinction. What constitutes the identity of an object? Is it where the mateiral ends? Well, in that case, you and I are both the same thing. The Earth's atmosphere is a part of me, and it is a part of you. If you want to posit that all objects have an identity that can "distinguish one existent from another," then you had best propose a method whereby we can make such distinctions objectively.
IMO, there is no distinction between a mountain and a valley...except for the fact that we perceive mountains differently, but that is subjective interpretation, not an objective attribute. Likewise, the prime difference between a lake and the air is the quantity of water, and the amount of heat it has absorbed. The difference really is arbitrary, but it serves us well.
TheTrendyCynic said:
(C) Consciousness is conscious.
That doesn't explain anything. It's like saying "a definition is defined."
TheTrendyCynic said:
How are these objectively true? Because any attempt to disprove them affirms them. Try it. You cannot disprove any of the above concepts without first affirming that they objectively exist.
Now, that doesn't say a thing considering my objection. I said that data only becomes evidence when it is interpreted. So what if in order to "disprove them" I must "affirm them." It simply means that we are human beings, and there are certain perceptions common to us. It doesn't make them any less arbitrary.
I don't need to "disprove" them directly. I only need to clarify how we perceive reality. By doing so, I render your criteria into the realm of human perception, and away from objective reality. Once that is done, there isn't any need to "disprove" them. Their nature, in and of itself, does not extend to being an objectively true facts.
TheTrendyCynic said:
Some objectively true facts that follow from the above three:
(1) (From B) Identities cannot contradict each other (ie. a tree cannot both have leaves and not have leaves).
Solely because we have defined leaves in such a way as to allow that. Without our assigning an interpretation of what constitutes "tree" and "leave," the distinction would be irrelevant. This is not an objectively true fact. It's merely our defining a property in how we perceive something that we also perceive to be an object.
If we were to define it differently, the statement would be meaningless.
TheTrendyCynic said:
(2) (From 1) An existent has only one identity. Identity, it should be noted, does not refer to our description of the existent -- it refers to what the existent is. A pigeon is a bird and an animal. That does not mean it has two identities; it only has one identity. 'Bird' and 'animal' are two distinct concepts under which the single identity of the pigeon is subsumed. In fact, 'pigeon' is itself a concept under which the the identity of the specific, distinct existent being described is subsumed.
See above. We are incapable of knowing what an existent is. We only describe them, and that assumes the objective existence of the world and its contents. Making a distinction between something's being and its description is meaningless. All we have are definitions and perceptions, unless of course, when you see a pigeon, you perceive everything about it from the subatomic to the cellular to the tissue, to the organisms contained within it. I don't do that, and neither does anyone else.
We simplify what we see so that we can comprehend it. Without that simplification, we would be rendered unable to operate. This distinction assumes the conclusion, but it doesn't prove it.
TheTrendyCynic said:
(3) (From 2) The Law of Causality: In any given situation, an existent will behave as its identity necessitates, and cannot behave in any other way (to do so would contradict its identity, violating 1). If a ball (a concept formed in consciousness (C) containing the identity (B) of an existent (A)) hits another ball, the identities of the inclusive existents ("ball", "the motion/relationship of hitting") will demand an outcome that does not contradict those identities -- there can be only one outcome, for multiple outcomes imply multiple identities, which implies inherent contradiction.
Like the preceding, this is based on our perceptions of things. If something behaves "as its identity necessitates, and cannot behave in any other way," it does so because we have defined it to do what we have observed. When its actions contradict our definition, then we generally modify our definition. This isn't an attribute inherent to reality, but it is an attribute inherent to models.
All we can perceive, though, are actions and definitions. We are incapable of perceiving things as they are, their core being. If we did so, then we would have no need of definitions. They would simply be a means of obfuscating what we already know.
TheTrendyCynic said:
From there, the rest of objective logic springs -- all of it based on the above objective truths.
I can see how objective logic springs from it, but logic is only as good as its premise. I think this is an inadequate means of interpretating of reality.