On paradoxes, for example, Zeno’s paradoxes, there is a very simple solution if you take the view that the actually infinite is impossible:
- Assume time is continuous
- Examine any system over a fixed time period
- Then the system goes through an actually infinite number of states in a finite period
- Actually infinite is impossible so reductio ad absurdum time is discrete
- Time is discrete so Archilles only has to cover a finite number of steps to reach the tortoise — Devans99
↪Magnus Anderson What defines an event? You have made event sound as though everything came to a stop between periods of “duration”.
Time, as I see it, is a method of measuring motion. Motion does not cease.
“Events” are really just points of a duration which impress more so upon memory. — raza
This seems to imply that time could be constructed from events of zero duration, which is about as sensible as space being composed of points of zero extension. I fail to see the logic in either assertion. — prothero
Or is an individual occasion like the present moment, of zero duration, therefore not actually existent?
Yep. It implies that induction is invalid. — Banno
We had agreed that induction was (deductively) invalid. You didn't see that as an issue. — Banno
It's not a method; its not algorithmic. It's just seeing the pattern. — Banno
But for fun, do you believe the tower is 324m tall yourself? Just tell me yes or no! And how.
And when during the day is it so exactly 324m tall? Are we now talking about the hot Eiffel tower that is 15cm taller in the heat of the midday sun, or the one that is 15cm shorter when night falls and its cools down?
Do we in fact now have two Eiffel towers. Or a vast ensemble - one for every nanometre of variation.
Oh goodness, how do we measure the height as it expands/contracts unevenly as the sun hits only one side. It can bend 18cm away from the sun. So which is its true height now - the actual distance to the ground or the full distance if it were standing up straight?
Of course, Banno the tourist guide doesn't need to care. He just reads his facts off Wiki. But Banno the scientist might want to rely on some more careful process of inquiry. A hand-waving approach always makes for poor philosophy. — apokrisis
Gender to me is similar to state of a system, like gas, liquid, solid in water. — bahman
Because the state of system is a function of the properties of its parts. — bahman
I believe that there could be a correlation between different variables depending on state of system. I however don't recall any physical example. Correlation is the result of interaction. It however cannot leads to consciousness. — bahman
↪Magnus Anderson I cannot teach you how to conceptualize a problem. Unfortunately, there is no training for such a skill I'm any educational courses other that art. So you either have to train yourself through hard work or be at the mercy of others to tell you the answers for the rest of your life. I can only suggest that you try to conceptualize the problem in your mind. — Rich
Brain cannot become conscious if atoms and molecules are not conscious. — bahman
You are just START/STOP which is the nature of the Paradox and my very first question to you. Do you believe feel like your life is coming stopping and going? This is rhetorical. I don't need an answer. — Rich
↪Magnus Anderson How something can be at rest all the time and moving? Hmm. I'll try it out later today and see if I can teleport myself somehow. — Rich
Well apparently you are fine with this so nothing is going to convince you otherwise. For me, it is strange and doesn't coincide with every day experience. — Rich
If a moment is without duration, exactly how many moments does it take to make one second? The stuff that the clock is measuring. That science it's measuring. — Rich
If you understand the paradox, then you understand why moments and spatiality yields it. — Rich
Well then you have an expected paradox. It is an outgrowth of your ontology which brings us right back to my first question, if you think you are moments then do you feel each moment starting and stopping. — Rich
If the moments are continuous there are no moments. That was Bergson's point. This is what Zeno's paradoxes are all about. When you do away with points (the arrow never stands still) the paradoxes vanish. Whenever there are paradoxes there are problems with the ontology. Moments are the problem. Spacialization of time creates these paradoxes. — Rich
I believe meditation is a technique for focusing ones mind, no? I suppose it could be considered a denial that unfocused use of the mind delivers the truth, or perhaps there is the denial of the ascetic who runs away to live on a mountaintop. There's good and bad denial right. Denial of a lie could be pretty important. — Perplexed
Are you sure it is not just the conception of time as only a succession of moments that he is opposed to? As this is a very simplistic and linear way of describing it. — Perplexed
Time is exactly as you are experiencing it. Is time starting and stopping for you as a succession of moments? Mine is continuous. — Rich
Bergson opposes spacialization of time. If you don't understand what I just said, you have to either think about it or read about it. — Rich
↪Magnus Anderson What you are describing is not mysticism but denial. i.e. hiding from valid distinctions. The trouble is that a great deal of discrimination takes place without us being aware. — Perplexed
It seems to me that Bergson takes a phenomenological approach to time so he would be interested in discussing distinctions as they appear rather then by comparative measurements of different observers via the objectification of space-time. — Perplexed
Here's the first paragraph form the Shorter Rutledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, inductive inference.
According to a long tradition, an inductive inference is an inference from a premise of the form "all observed A are B" to a conclusion of the form "All A are B". Such inferences are not deductively valid, that is, even if the premise is true it is possible that the conclusion is false, since unobserved A's may differ from observed ones.
Now, does anyone here think that this is wrong? Surely at least we have agreement on this. — Banno
You problem is that you just don't know what you are talking about.
If you don't find out, people are just going to laugh at you. — charleton
Rubbish.
This is just poor logic. A broken deduction, pretending to be something. Nothing to do with induction at all.
An inductive argument is more like X happens after Y all the time. So maybe X is caused by Y.
Post hoc ergo propter hoc is only fallacious if it is wrong. — charleton
↪bahman The only experience that I have had that is fully emergent is a new idea or epiphany. This would represent growth of the mind. — Rich
"Emergence" is a complicated topic (in part because there is no common view of what it is). — SophistiCat
Constraint is, as I understand it, simply a limit to what is possible. The opposite of it is freedom.
— Magnus Anderson
Yep. Simple really.
The world we live in, in other words, is stable enough to make induction good at making predictions. This makes perfect sense.
— Magnus Anderson
Yep. You got it again. — apokrisis
↪Magnus Anderson
No I can't comprehend your eccentric account of the rules of reason. — Janus
↪Magnus Anderson
I would have to first understand what you mean (and you haven't explained it in any way that makes it all clear to me) before I could agree or argue against it. So, best leave it, I guess. :s — Janus
"Truth-preservation" is really just consistency, which means not having premises which contradict one another or the conclusion. The validity of deductive arguments is independent of the truth of premises, maybe that's where you're becoming confused; I don't know. — Janus
I understand the problem. NOTHING, defined as nonexistence, is difficult to grasp. We're in the habit of or are confined to understanding in terms of attributes/properties which, by far, are positive in nature. What I mean is we need some attributes that are attached to a concept or object and only then do we even begin to understand them. However, unlike most objects (mental/physical) NOTHING is defined in the negative. In fact it is the ultimate negative - the absence of everything. In a way we could say "There's NOTHING to understand." — TheMadFool
This probably doesn't make sense give what I've said above but I have commented on how math can make sense of NOTHING by equating it to zero. — TheMadFool
I think "nothing", the word, is quite different from other words. Other words have physical/mental referents but "nothing", by definition, lacks any referent. — TheMadFool
Any thing can exist only once — Daniel
which happens when it becomes; after becoming, it cannot be anymore, for it is subject to change, and necessarily "becomes" something else. Before becoming, it certainly is not the thing that it will be. So, it is as if something exists (potentially) up to the point it becomes an actuality; after that, it "becomes" literally nothing, for the memory of it is totally different to the thing itself. — Daniel
Constraints generate regular patterns in a probabilistic fashion. So that is how science understands physical systems. And it is how we would speak of nature if we take a systems view where we grant generality a reality as a species of cause.
So again, it is simply a reflection that I am arguing from a consistent metaphysical basis. It is how reality would be understood if you believe in an Aristotelean four causes analysis of substantial being. — apokrisis