Rick wrote: ↑Wed Jan 30, 2019 5:28 pm
It sounds like you're saying that the meaning of X either reflects my experience or is a <mere> intellectual exercise ... ?
Ultimately, it is your own experiences that you are attempting to form concepts (e.g. "to exist") about, right?
No, I'm not limiting the field of inquiry to my experiences. If I did, the world would disappear when I closed my eyes!
Ultimately, all of the concepts you form have basis in your personal experience. There can certainly be no way around that. You were born into the world and began to learn about it, learning along the way the notion of other people having experiences which you can infer to be like yours. And then, for example, your concept of happiness may expand beyond your own immediate well-being to include their experiences insofar as you understand or infer them. (Some pre-schoolers latch onto that one faster than others, incidentally.) But the concept that there are others having experiences separately from one's own, that they might be having a bad day even though you're having a good one, was derived entirely from your direct experience. You have no other basis by which to obtain it.
But at a certain point, as we begin to rely on concepts building upon earlier concepts — we can find ourselves out on a limb, debating over who or what is moving the planets around in Spirograph shapes. Or maybe debating the qualities of the luminiferous ether, the substance that
simply must be the material medium through which light travels. Like whether that substance is properly classified as Air, Earth, Fire or Water, because everything naturally fits that scheme…
So what I'm trying to say is that it's important, in order not to get lost in concepts and end up chasing your tail over nothing, to be aware of your foundation — your personal "ground truth" direct experience — and of how things connect back to it. In that spirit, I refer to things which do not have such a linkage as "intellectual exercise" or "going out on a limb". It's important to recognize the potential for fallacy when out on a limb. Does that make sense?