Yes, I address that here. — Michael
People disagree with the premise because we are not confident we can use such intuitions when the — unintuitive — concept of infinity is involved.The status of the lamp at t1 must be a logical consequence of the status of the lamp at t0 and the button-pressing procedure that occurs between t0 and t1 because nothing else controls the behaviour of the lamp.
You are interested in exploiting that to define metaphysics. Perhaps that works, perhaps it doesn't — Ludwig V
If jorndoe is representing the view well, I am confident both have good reasons to make such equations; I was exploring ways to make the semantics of "metaphysical" not fully overlap with "logical" or "physical".By Chalmers, logical = metaphysical; by Shoemaker, metaphysical = physical. — jorndoe
Given that in C2 X cannot be defined as either "0" or "1" but must be defined as either "0" or "1" then C1 is necessarily false. The supertask described in C1 is impossible. — Michael
Given that in C2 X cannot be defined as either "0" or "1" but must be defined as either "0" or "1" then C1 is necessarily false. The supertask described in C1 is impossible. — Michael
In all cases the definition of X at t1 must be a logical consequence of what occurs between t0 and t1. — Michael
Who's to say humans are worth more than cockroaches? — BitconnectCarlos
If time is continuous then supertasks are logically possible. — Michael
Therefore I cannot start. — Michael
Going back to the first page of the thread, such a "recitation" for the state of Thompson's lamp, or just isolating the "state", could be construed by taking a time period and associating it with the states the lamp takes in that time period in order. If Thompson's lamp has states in a time period, they'll be picked out by that. However, the function which generates the values of Thompson's lamp has the property that for every time period X, there exists a time period Y such that max( Y )>max( X ) contains at least two states (on or off). You get those by going further toward the completion time. That property implies there is simply no "state" of the lamp at limit of 2 minutes. So it having a state is logically impossible.
What makes Thompson's lamp a paradox, then, is a physical or metaphysical intuition about the concept of the state of the lamp. There needs to be a beginning to the process, and it needs a unique isolable end state. Both the geometric series and Thompson's lamp have no unique isolable end state. — fdrake
St Faustina Helen Kowalska saw apparitions of Jesus Christ in the 1930s, which have served as the basis for a popular devotion. — Hallucinogen
a proposition cannot be made true or false relative to a belief, and this is why they have to rewrite it as "I believe <...>" as they can't evaluate coherently "<...>" relative to a belief — Bob Ross
He believed that Japan had lost touch with its cultural heritage and traditional values — Alkis Piskas
no phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is a measured phenomenon — Wayfarer
I see that I misunderstood your idea. You are counting time backward. Ok I'll respond to that. But just wondering, when you realized I misunderstood you earlier, why didn't you point that out?
Ok. Suppose that I start at 1 and count backward through 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, ... — fishfry
Whatever we do to keep ourselves happy, are we doing it to mitigate the suffering that is life? — Arnie
the fact that number is real — Janus
by saying that numbers are real beyond our recognition of number in the world — Janus
They should begin with Plato and only descend to Russell if they feel the need. — Leontiskos
Can you state just why you think that incompatibility obtains? — Janus
So instead of questioning why it is we can understand numbers, how about interrogating the claim that we are, in fact, 'physical creatures whose capacities for learning are exhausted by our physical bodies?' Or is that such an important principle in our 'best epistemic theories' that it has to be saved at all costs? That seems the point of the sophistry of the 'indispensability argument'. — Wayfarer
If committing war crimes against people that use war crimes as an everyday weapon is the only viable method of stopping them from continuing their evil ways, then fucking well stop them. — Sir2u
which is self-evident when they rewrite "one ought not torture babies" as "I believe one ought not torture babies" — Bob Ross
My question is....are there any stupid questions?? — Gingethinkerrr
Since any putative "director" logically must exist outside the system to be directed, and thus beyond our capacity to detect it, I think the more relevant question is as to whether we have any good reason to think evolution is directed. — Janus
then your belief that it is true is independent of the truth-value of the proposition itself; otherwise, you have to concede that the proposition is notdistinctindependent from the belief — Bob Ross
Over 390 bodies have been discovered at Nasser and Al Shifa hospitals, including of women and children
my “seven” is a real object (from materials existing in space and time) inside my brain — bioByron
In connection with numbers, one strategy is to take numbers to be universals of some sort — e.g., one might take them to be properties of piles of physical objects, so that, for instance, the number 3 would be a property of, e.g., a pile of three books — and to take an immanent realist view of universals. (This sort of view has been defended by Armstrong (1978).) But views of this kind have not been very influential in the philosophy of mathematics. A more prominent strategy for taking number talk to be about the physical world is to take it to be about actual piles of physical objects, rather than properties of piles. Thus, for instance, one might maintain that to say that 2 + 3 = 5 is not really to say something about specific entities (numbers); rather, it is to say that whenever we push a pile of two objects together with a pile of three objects, we will wind up with a pile of five objects — or something along these lines. Thus, on this view, arithmetic is just a very general natural science.
definitely disagree that 'all heterogenous societies are chaotic.'... — Shawn
The problem wouldn't be that these beliefs are arbitrary, but rather that they are determined by a biology, social and personal history, etc. that can be completely explained without any reference to "goodness," — Count Timothy von Icarus
I interpret these to mean the same exact thing: am I missing something you are trying to convey? How have I changed it? — Bob Ross
then your belief that it is true is independent of the truth-value of the proposition itself; otherwise, you have to concede that the proposition is not distinct from the belief — Bob Ross
The point you--in my opinion, correctly observed--supports, for me, the conclusion that the "reality" we are trying to decipher, is as it turns out, "causily connected to itself," a "loop," all of it, the "thing," the proposition (about thing)and the belief, taking place as a single process "appearing" as separate, giving rise to more propositions about subjects, objects, Beings and Truths. — ENOAH
Pimps and organ traffickers too?Every job that exists exists for a reason — finarfin
If this description is accurate, could this result in a mathematical realism that is not platonic but physicalistic? — bioByron
what role does education have in society and perhaps more importantly in our daily lives? — Shawn