7. Metaphysics I: What is reality? Flashcards
Primary qualities (locke)
are the properties of solidarity, extension, figure, and mobility that cannot be eliminated through division. They are objects when we perceive them or not (mind-independent).
Secondary qualities (locke)
the power that is in any body, by reason of its primary qualities to operate on our senses and produce in us ideas of colour, smells, tastes, sounds, textures (mind/sense dependent).
What is an example of a secondary quality?
An example of a secondary quality is the power that is in the object sufficient to generate the idea of colour, smell, and texture.
“what is reality?” is a question about…
“what grounds what?” not a question about what everything is made of.
What is our foundation of reality? (possible answers)
Is it the mind? Consciousness? Language? Matter? Energy? Turtles all the way down? Language all the way down? What goes all the way down? Turtles on ‘we know not what’? Is there a foundational turtle? … or turtles to infinity?
Maybe ‘turtles’ all the way down!
Implications of Locke’s View (3)
- We can never perceive the material substrate of a thing.
- Senses represent “reality”; they do not transmit reality.
- Locke is accused of being a sceptic and for opening the door to a-theism (i.e., without theism).
Classical (monistic) Idealism
George Berkely was a Christian Empiricist, and according to Berkley, there is but one underlying and existing reality – IDEA! Sensible things do not and cannot exist independently of being perceived.
TO BE IS TO BE…
PERCEIVED
(and ultimately, things have existence because they are perceived by God)
Sapir Whorf Thesis
language shapes reality. Language precedes thought and determines one’s conception of reality.