GrahamH wrote:jamest wrote:Zeno's argument - if correct - would explain 'the paradox', so that it no longer is a paradox - that is correct. Basically, Zeno saw motion as a paradox because he didn't think that it should be mathematically possible, and yet he 'observed' it to be happening. If his reasoning was sound, then the conclusion must be that motion is something beheld by the mind alone - paradox explained.
But, as we now know, his reasoning was unsound.
How do we know that? As I said, I think that the counter has confused conceptual infinities with tangible infinities - considering that any mathematical counter must apply to
something definite in order to counter Zeno. There's not much more to be said on this issue, short of starting a new thread about the validity of the paradox itself. I'm not averse to the idea, if anyone's interested.
The thing perceived (a valid logical argument) was not as it appeared. That is the definition of an illusion. The logic was illusory.
Correction: the argument was [arguably] judged to be erroneous. Nevertheless, the argument itself was a real event occuring within the mind that beheld it. The argument can only be right or wrong, but not 'illusionary'. Talking about something as though it were an illusion implies that it isn't really there and never really happended - but the argument is really here and did really happen.
Your certainty that you are right, and thinking rationally, might also be an illusion.
Correction: my thoughts might be wrong. But they are real thoughts nevertheless.
It is the same with your perception of a tree. The processes are happening, whatever they may be. You experience, but the object of that experience, be it a tree or an idea, may be quite different to the way it appears.
Yes - the experience of there being a tree is a real event. The only thing that we cannot be certain of, is whether trees happen outside the mind. Likewise, my thoughts are real events, but it is questionable whether those thoughts apply to 'reality':
1) The experience of the world is not an illusion - that experience is a real event. But we do not know whether our observations apply to 'reality'. (whether trees exist beyond the mind).
2) My thoughts are not illusions - they too are real events. But we do not know whether these thoughts apply to 'reality'.
The only thing to add about 1 & 2, above, is that we know that 'observation' cannot transcend the mind, since all observation is within the mind. However, thoughts have the capacity to transcend what is observed (to speak of 'reality') and are only verifiable if they are sound - observation as a counter is futile.
... That is, Zeno's reasoning - which transcends observation because it speaks of 'reality' (i.e., motion is something that cannot occur in reality beyond the mind) - is something that cannot be refuted with observation. Since it is an argument constructed from reason, only reason can be utilised to deconstruct it.
Back to square one.