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Munitz - 'The Question of Reality' Conferring or discovering intelligibility -----------------Plato's 'Rational art' within the universe, truth to be discovered

----------------------"The heart of Kant's crtical philosophy is the claim that there are certain a p riori, universal and necessary conditions and rules of ordering experience that belong to the mind's cognitive constitution" p.71 -the nature of human beings own innate perceptual and conceptual apparatus is pe rhaps a limiting factor in the type of understanding that can be achieved. Then what is reality?---------------------Normally to explain something is to give a casual (empirical) account of a situa tion. For Wittgenstein - explaining the meaning of a word or phrase - "one makes expli cit, teaches, and appeals to rules that, for some community, govern the correct use of some linguistic expression. This type of explanation belongs to the domai n of stipulation and convention" - grammatical rules of use explain meanings - ostensive defintion versus verbal definition - "Grammatical rules comprise a collection of forms of representation that allow s them to serve as norms of representation". Grammatical rules (as norms) are arbitary and not fixed. These rules do not disc lose and conform to what is contained in reality. A factual judgment is not a grammatical rule, it rests on two factors: 1.the arbitary coventionally adopted grammatical rules that assign their meaning to the expessions used in stating the judgment. 2.the situation in reality that determines whether the statement is true or fals e. Mathematics is an activity of constructing grammatical rules. empirical judgment based on observation sucess of theory is based on the extent of evidential support for the empirical judgments encompassed by the theory, as well as by logical simplicity and elegan ce. For W. the main task of philosophy is attain a "perspicuous representation" W.- "Whenever we say that something must be the case we have given an indication of a rule for the regulation of our expression" - expesses a grammatical rule Grammar is antecendent to factual or empirical truth, since it determines only c onceptual connections; it is not in itself a source of factaul truth or a way of stating such a truth.

The rules that govern the meanings of our language are not fixed, unique and uni versal, and their necessity consits only in specifying and establishing conceptu al connections or representations.Their 'relation' to objects is simply the appl ication of these meaning-rules in various ways, including the formulation of emp irical propositions. p103-104 Choosing a set of rules does not establish which necessary proposition matches t he putatively real or objective "facts", because there are no objective facts of the matter. R. explanatory power establishes 'truth' World picture Does W. take for granted that the grammars of different nguages are inherently a nd fundementally different and arbitary? Could there be a 'deep grammar' that al l languages share? -----------------------------mankind seeks intelligible order this order is linked to human conciousness and it is connstituted by the searchi ng and discerning of relations or combinations in the various objects, factors o r elements in the subject matter. ----------------Instead of 'Reality'- x is real. Predicate 'Reality' with an example or its mani festation. But Reality can not be pointed out, cannot be given an ostenstion, or a literal description. -----------------------Differentiate the observable universe - what varous astronomical instruments sho w and detect - and the theoretical universe or universe as a whole. the observable universe is still a theory-laden term. Cosmological models offer an interpretation of the observable universe thus prov iding intelligibity to the 'universe as a whole'. Cosmological models (theories) are a set of consistent grammatical rules "When explaining and understanding the leading idea's (main cosmological theory) meaning, it is inappropriate and irrelevent to raise questions with respect to its truth or falsity. These evaluative judgments come later, when the idea is ap plied for purposes of factual description, prediction, or casual explanation."

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