Please try reading before you reply. The notice is information - not the presupposition. As information it may lead to some presupposition, but is not the "source" of it. — tim wood
When you ride the train to work, is it the train you ride or the schedule? You can tell the difference, yes? And does it arrive before it arrives? Maybe your trains are different from ours, but ours only arrive when they arrive, not before or after. Please read for comprehension. Before the train gets there, it is your presupposition that the train will get there. If, after the train has arrived, you wish to say the train got there, you're free to do so. And if you want to call that a post-supposition, again, you're free to do so, although I don't see how it would be coherent to do so. — tim wood
That out of the way, consider the fact that life as a brain in a vat is indiscernible from life as an actual human being. If so, it follows, from 2. identity of indiscernibles, that life as a brain in a vat is identical to life as an actual human being in the sense that they're the exact same thing. — TheMadFool
Presuppositions are not things, you are the source of your own, — tim wood
Example: you take commuter rail to work every day. You receive notice of a change of schedule. — tim wood
But before you waste your time on presuppositions, I know from previous posts of yours that you a) have opinions about them, b) you don't anything about them, and c) you have disdained doing any research on them, being persuaded you know it all already. Until and unless you do a little research, you're a waste of time on this topic. — tim wood
Stop being an idiot. Why is carbon dioxide stable? Because one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms collectively form a lower energy state than the same three atoms wandering around by themselves. — apokrisis
So out of spite, you will spread your arms, step off the cliff, and thus demonstrate your contempt for the constraints of gravity? — apokrisis
We are the end-point. Our world has already been shaped by a succession of increasingly specified constraints that start at the brute physical level, work their way up through biology, sociology and culture, and right on through in terms of our community, our family history, every other aspect of our world that is shaping out habits of thought. — apokrisis
Thermodynamics constrains what we can do. The ethical question then becomes, is there some good reason to resist the general tug of its flow? What kind of reason would that be? — apokrisis
And I find this hinted at in the above. To flesh it out, it has to do with the axioms and presuppositions that people have held, and to be sure, hold, because people do have axioms and presuppositions in their thinking. And to push this investigation as deep as possible. This an historical science of assembling facts about people's thinking. Which in a substantial way is what Streetlight's link above is about: the meaning of being to an ancient Greek, and how that differs from modern thinking on the same topic. — tim wood
You are making shit up because you don't even seem to have even a schoolboy grounding in molecular chemistry.
The first thing they teach you is why atoms form molecular arrangements that minimise their collective entropy budget. It literally explains everything. — apokrisis
Suppose there was a thermodynamic analysis that was able to tell us what we will in fact do. Suppose we do the calculations, and they show that we will indeed vote for Trump.
Now that we have this analysis, what is it that rules out our going against it? Can't we take that into consideration, and then vote for against Trump anyway? — Banno
greed, but temporal existence seems neither strictly an ontological nor metaphysical predicate. If time, then time-when, or age, or lots of things, and then we're well out of "most general." — tim wood
That is, to be and to be present in time seem not quite the same thing. — tim wood
"Ontology" is a word often used here and elsewhere. What does it mean? This from online, "Branch of metaphysics concerned with identifying, in the most general terms, the kinds of things that actually exist." The more I think about this definition the less I understand it. And implied is that it is a species of, metaphysics. These are often referred to as sciences, but that doesn't seem right: what would they be sciences of? — tim wood
So we can say of something that exists, that it is. — tim wood
Ontology seems self-limited, then, to the proposition that being is - and no more than that can be said. And metaphysics, pending a good definition for a "general" feature, seems about in the same circumstance. That is, that they're both empty - almost empty - concepts. At least as defined above. Is that the final word? — tim wood
Once photosynthesis had evolved, and bacteria had “poisoned” the atmosphere with sufficient oxygen, and so long as the climate generally favoured liquid water, then the conditions for life were very steady state — apokrisis
Not to mention we are stuck with the trapped waste in terms of CO2. — apokrisis
So the story is that life will entropify as fast as it can. — apokrisis
Life is arranged to maximise long run entropy production. — apokrisis
The long term outcomes of exponential entropy production have now come into view. What is now “good” will be whatever counts as a shift to a long-run sustainable balance within environmental limits. — apokrisis
I am not assuming anything about the duration of time or the finite or infinite nature of the universe. — TiredThinker
Apparently he had done everything and seen everything. — TiredThinker
We harm this planet and each other and we can't contribute nearly enough to justify the harm. — TiredThinker
So nothing stops the US curling up within the comfort of its own North American empire and saying the world can go f*** itself. The inbuilt advantages are so many that even really bad political leaders can't actually sink the ship. — apokrisis
Perhaps you also believe Saddam Hussein had WMDs — Asif
It's funny folks believe chynah and other states are corrupt and issue disinformation but never there own just because the word democracy is bandied about. — Asif
The US elite are just as corrupt and worse than the chinese elite. — Asif
Im saying STOP believing. — MAYAEL
The free world is losing it’s meal ticket. The elites are watching their power wane. No more free rides. — NOS4A2
And let's not forget how there are literally dozens of other things that kill 10 times as many people annually — MAYAEL
These are the same meaning of the word "animal", with a definition such as: "a living organism that feeds on organic matter, typically having specialized sense organs and nervous system and able to respond rapidly to stimuli." — Luke
This implies the same meaning of word "value" across all "types of values". — Luke
It's as though I am talking about the bank of a river and you keep telling me that I must be talking about a financial institution. — Luke
And the sense conditioned by the knowledge at the time, so when Thales says the world is made of water, or Heraclitus fire, these are appropriate for their respective times and purposes, and to be understood in their contexts. — tim wood
There is a meaning of the word "value" which is a synonym for "number". — Luke
I'm not talking about a type of value, as in the values that people hold or in what people value. — Luke
It's just another word for a number, or the number represented by an algebraic term. — Luke
assume you saw the phrase "mathematical object" in the Wikipedia article on value and now you want to argue over the meaning of "objects". — Luke
A mathematical object is an abstract concept arising in mathematics." — Luke
Theological fatalism claims that god's Omniscience entails a necessity for the specific action that god knows will happen in the future, now a friend I was debating this with, claims that god's knowledge is independent of the universe, and therefore does not entail determinism, which I find illogical and faulty,
but I want to ask is there a way for god to know the future without ultimately causing determinism? — Augustusea
Suppose that the future is determined, either by god or by physics.
Does that tell you what it is that you will do next? Does that help you decide wether to have an egg or cornflakes for breakfast? — Banno
They are different meanings of the word "value", as demonstrated by the Wikipedia article I posted. If you can't accept this, then I wish you well. — Luke
This is what I object to. In no way can a value be an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
A value is a number. Do you acknowledge that? — Luke
Given your two claims above, it looks like you now accept that the “abstract feature” of a value/number exists between the symbol and what the symbol refers to. — Luke
First you claim that there is no intermediary between symbols and objects, but now you claim that there are both numbers and sets between them? Make up your mind. — Luke
I simply meant that numbers can also be predicated of numerals and numbers themselves. — Luke
Exactly my point. So you need to review your claim that “ there is no need to posit "a number" as existing between the symbol "1", and what the symbol refers to”. “4” refers to neither the symbol nor the objects themselves, but instead to an abstract feature/grouping of those objects: a number. — Luke
Then you must concede that there exists an intermediary between a symbol (numeral) and an object: a value. A value is a number.
No, I just explain why this is not the case. Why just go and assert it anyway?
— Luke
Numerals represent numbers which are predicated of objects. — Luke
But a numeral or a number can also be an object. We can speak of three numerals or four numbers, for example. — Luke
Both expressions have a value of 4. A child could tell you that. — Luke
You still need to explain how you can count objects without first being able to count numbers. — Luke
Different numerals can represent the same number (or value), such as "4" and "IV" — Luke
Also, different expressions can represent the same number (or value), such as "2x2" and "1+3". — Luke
This indicates "a number as existing between the symbol(s)...and what the symbol(s) refer to". — Luke
So "1" is not a number? — Luke
Who is claiming that "1" is an object? — Luke
In general, a mathematical value may be any definite mathematical object. In elementary mathematics, this is most often a number – for example, a real number such as π or an integer such as 42.
— The value of a variable or a constant is any number or other mathematical object assigned to it.
— The value of a mathematical expression is the result of the computation described by this expression when the variables and constants in it are assigned values.
— The value of a function, given the value(s) assigned to its argument(s), is the value assumed by the function for these argument values.
