Here you seem to be saying that we can determine the set of facts from a well constructed dictionary.This is ALL there is to expressions of language that are true on the basis of their meaning
(1) Some expressions of language are stipulated to be true thus providing semantic meaning to otherwise totally meaningless finite strings. These expressions are the set of facts. — PL Olcott
And here you seem to be re-stating the Correspondence Theory of Truth.Actual facts are expressions of language that correctly model the actual world even if everyone in the universe disagrees or no one in the universe knows them. — PL Olcott
When I show how this can be coherently accomplished then the Tarski Undefinability Theorem is refuted. — PL Olcott
Actual interaction with the world that requires sense input from the sense organs is specifically excluded from the body of analytic knowledge. — PL Olcott
A 128-bit integer GUID refers to a single unique sense meaning, thus the class living animal {dog} has its own unique GUID. — PL Olcott
3ab2c577-7d38-4a3c-adc9-c5eff8491282 stands for the living animal dog — PL Olcott
Dogs exist as conceptual objects — PL Olcott
Dogs exist as conceptual objects even if all of reality is a mere figment of the imagination. — PL Olcott
Only in the sense that facts can be looked up in an encyclopedia and encyclopedias can be updated with new facts. Actual interaction with the world that requires sense input from the sense organs is specifically excluded from the body of analytic knowledge. That dogs exist is analytic. That there is a small black dog in my living room right now is synthetic. — PL Olcott
Classical and quantum physics go together quite well. You can read a very technical discussion here (which I don't pretend to fully understand) - but the essence of this is that "So after averaging out the quantum-behaviour you just get classical mechanics."Why don’t classical and quantum physics go together? — Wolfgang
First, I'm not a physicist which is why I linked you the material to read. But I think what you're looking for is that we either do not know the exact mechanisms or we are unable to know after the fact. Our lack of knowledge or inability is of course not enough to declare it as a first cause however. That's because we've clearly defined what a first cause is so can easily identify it. — Philosophim
We know the mechanism - and the randomness in outcomes is baked into the mechanism. This is not like rolling the dice or flipping a coin - these can be predicted with sufficiently accurate measuring systems.we do not know the exact mechanisms — Philosophim
This describes the necessary conditions for decay to occur, but what is the specific event/cause X that causes the specific Y at that specific time?there is too much internal energy within an atom due to a proton, electron imbalance, there is not enough force to keep the atom together. — Philosophim
What's your answer? Yes or no?Could a quark simply appear somewhere in the universe than vanish out five seconds later, all without a prior cause? — Philosophim
For example, if a first cause is possible, can it not happen any time? Is it not unlimited in to what it could be? Could a quark simply appear somewhere in the universe than vanish out five seconds later, all without a prior cause? — Philosophim
Here’s a better quote because we don’t want to accidentally spread a little misinformation.
So look. All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have because we won the state.
And of course, as is evidenced by the transcript, he’s looking for fraudulent ballots, the ones that were shredded, and so on. — NOS4A2
Jesus born a Jew and within such a shitty way of life and tradition rejected the whole of the Jewish tradition and faith by representing God's undying love and faithfulness. — Vaskane
Tempral causality simply means that a prior event is the reason why a current event is happening. — Philosophim
Bell's theorem assumes that free will already exist, it used that to prove that true randomness exist. I'm with Einstein on this one. — mentos987
Agree.You may be right that OPs version of causality requires determinism. — mentos987
Einstein got it wrong. EPR supposedly showed flaws in quantum mechanics. But . . .“God does not play dice with the universe” --Albert Einstein — mentos987
It's the opposite. Bell's theorem showed that there are no hidden local variables.The more we learn, the less random the universe appears. — mentos987
The lack of data/knowledge is a key feature of quantum mechanics. That's how the universe works.the reason we can't do the same with decay is likely that we lack the data/knowledge to do so. — mentos987
If there truly was no prior cause, then yes. I'm fairly certain that radioactive decay has pretty clear causes though. — Philosophim
Well yes, that was my point. But just to be clear, the statistics only work in the aggregate level. Each individual atom that decays does so in the absence of any prior event.No, it is random by statistics. It is not actually violating the laws of physics. — Philosophim
Something without prior cause exists, simply because it does. There is no prior reason. — Philosophim
Either all things have a prior cause for their existence, or there is at least one first cause of existence from which a chain of events follows. — Philosophim
There are "things" which do not have a specific prior cause for their existence. When an atom decays radioactively from one element to another there is no prior event or cause for this to happen - it is completely random.Either all things have a prior cause for their existence — Philosophim
The current trend of climate change fits perfectly into the prehistorical pattern of climate change, so why is it now attributed to human activity as opposed to natural causes as it is in every previous case? — Merkwurdichliebe
The words true/truth have very different meanings/usages in math vs talking about the real world of human interactions.As noted above, I think, like 12*12=144, this is an objective truth known by a subject. — Leontiskos
These are all huge red flags indicating dictatorial ambitions. I just don't see how a Trump supporter can be unaware of all of this -- or, if aware, then unconcerned. — GRWelsh
But when we comes to things that are killing us in real time, such as microplastics and hormones in food, they stay really quiet because it is not a topic covered by the BBC or New York Times. — Lionino
Nice, definitions from the 19th century. Thanks for clearing that up. — NOS4A2
We all agree to the fact that coffee is delicious — Banno