Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
Temperature is a measure of matter, i.e. the motion of atoms. All measurements are concepts, not "things" in and of themselves, just as numbers aren't "things".
Right. Numbers are actually my favorite example of non-material objects. They exist, but have no material properties. We even classify them into real and imaginary, rational and irrational. If you are willing to accept that concepts as numbers and temperature exist but have no material properties in and of themselves (that is, they are not as you said above "things"), you are accepting that certain concepts exist without being comprised of matter.
The question then becomes not, "does anything matterless exist?" but rather whether such concepts as 'love', 'justice', and 'consciousness' also fit into the category of matterless concepts?
or whatever.