Yin = Yang the same way E = Mc2
Nope, where does it say that you can transform yin into yang, where exactly in a chinese sourse does it say that?
Because they are a balance of each other.
http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.23...id=2129&uid=2&uid=70&uid=4&sid=21101159128541
I would claim Putnam tried making a similar claim as I am.
I am not sure you really understand Putnam, or at least in the interpretations you are pretending they made, objects are what they are, the concepts we apply to them are concepts but to say that because concepts are relative the things we observe about objects are relative is a huge mistake. Newtonian momentum is accurate until you approach the speed of light, then you add other concepts from Einstein to the concept. This does not mean anything about the Newton definitions except you add to them, it is obvious that concepts change and are not constant through time.
Now that makes sense as does the contextual parameters of the way humans use language. However realism is not metaphysical realism, object within the world appear to behave consistently and behave consistently, the mass of the electron does not vary unless it approaches the speed of light and it does so consistently.
Now the fact that two people may may disagree upon the labels used to describe reality does not mean that the world is not real, it appears to be until you can show otherwise. Any statement about the 'truth' of some statement are dependent upon the assumptions and idiomatic usage of the individuals in discussion.
However the mass of an electron is accurately described by the Newtonian mechanics plus Einstein's. It is trivial and obvious that the way we describe things in concepts and language matters in teh accuracy of statement.
Where you err Kblood and I don't think you understand is this, teh variation in semsnatic descriptions does not mean that reality doesn't exist and that it is someehow a fuid concept subject to change, it means that our words and concepts change.
You can not defy gravity, you can not violate the laws of physics, as long as you understand that the 'laws of physics' are an ad hoc semantics description of the behavior of objects in reality. the fact that the use of the word gravity changes and has contextual parameters does not mean that is you step off a high cliff with no means of saving yoursllf that you will nopt smassh into teh surface below you.
Even if you call gravity bob, your momentum george and the surface sally, the force of bob will increase your george and when your body contacts sally your body will smash into it propotional to george and likely harm you.
Now that does not mean that all concepts have some validity