Not if they are at different locations. — Janus
I'd say two different things cannot be the same. — Janus
As to your 'force/ mass x accelaration example" is that a claim of identity or proportionality — Janus
Other examples might be cases of different descriptions of the one thing — Janus
I'm dubious about his hidden-variables theory, but let's not get into that - it's a guaranteed de-railer. — Wayfarer
started to fall into question. That's why many of the first-generation of modern physicists — Wayfarer
If we are talking about beginnings- nothings becoming something's, why does nothing auto become the universe? — Varde
We have to raise almost impossibly deep levels of presupposition in our own thinking and imagination to the level of self-consciousness before we are able to achieve a critical awareness of all our realistic assumptions
To be the same is the logic of being the same. What else could it be, since it's not a physical relation? — Janus
For Aristotle dialectic was the pursuit of truth and rhetoric is the art of persuasion. They are opposites. — Jackson
that just because to be the same is a matter of logic, and there is no unnecessary logic; it is entailment all the way down. — Janus
As far as fossil evidence is concerned, there is abundant fossil evidence to validate in broad outlines evolutionary history — Wayfarer
Those are your personal, impressionistic locutions. Real analysis doesn't have such terminology. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your question suggests that you are not familiar with the basics of the subject. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When he described coding all facts in the universe I quietly arose from my seat and left the theater. :cool: — jgill
>. By definition, every real number is a point — TonesInDeepFreeze
The delayed-choice quantum erasure as just one example which I'm personally astounded by. — javra
Secondly, your reply doesn't seem to address the logical necessities of identity, of noncontradiction, and of the excluded middle — javra
Seems like a bit of a non sequitur ... Can you either cite references of this being "the magical teleportation of quantum particles which they willfully enact" or else independently provide rational evidence for the same? — javra
A Chimera (from Greek mythology) can magically teleport itself or it cannot. — javra
The diagonal argument is constructive and intuitionistically valid — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's just that she can't reflect about it.
9mOptions — Olivier5
Not external. — Jackson
but if it can't be tested — T Clark
The program is the process — Jackson
And yet, something does. A physical system, the body, the brain, underpins conscious thought — Olivier5
The way the brain functions. It's a finite object. — Jackson