Except perhaps in your first citation above:here is no cite, no source, no reference that says such a thing. — TonesInDeepFreeze
and (a->~a) doesn't "hold.""if a conditional holds... — TonesInDeepFreeze
But the description does not seem to be grounded in epistemological terms, hence my not seeing the observer involvement.
Perhaps tim wood would care to elaborate. — noAxioms
Really?I didn't define cause and effect in terms of observer. — MoK
What is, where is, the relation?Causation, Relation that holds... — MoK
A cause either is a cause or is not a cause.Maybe one of them or perhaps a combination. — MoK
And this the bones of a probably useful story. But what exactly is an event? Does an event take up a certain amount of time? Or no time? And what exactly is a cause? How does something that exists cease to exist? And how does something that does not exist come into existence? Anything can happen in a story; that's among the charms of stories. But as any sort of exact or rigorous account it won't do.Let's stick to three events, A, B, and C. A causes B (B exists in the immediate future) at now. At the next moment, A ceases to exist, and B exists at now and causes C (C exists in the immediate future). Etc. — MoK
Causation, Relation that holds between two temporally simultaneous or successive events when the first event (the cause) brings about the other (the effect). — MoK
The cause and effect cannot lay at the same point of time — MoK
Agreed! And also, if they were at different times, then what's 'tween times?You're just getting tangled up in words. The effect is not some separate entity, it is the change. — T Clark
Lol! Amen! For my own purposes I remind myself that I have no interest in translating Greek but instead being able to read it. That means trying to "listen" and to hear/read/understand as would an ancient Greek. The best I do is sometimes discern a bit the alien nature of the language itself.A long time ago, I made an attempt to learn Ancient Greek.... What I learned was that even simple words, sentences and texts are challenging and difficult. — Amity
Two cents' worth here. There are times when ancient Greek words cannot be correctly understood through what seem English equivalents. (And I suppose the same can be said for any two different languages.)I think care lies at the core. So, 'carelessness' seems to be negative. — Amity
If there's any solid ground to my ideas of morality, it's mostly in the way of being deontological - and in small ways I actually meet that standard.I am curious, have you revised your position that goodness or "this is good" is just a way of saying "I approve of this," and that morality is just personal preference derived from social norms? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Fair enough. People do not always live up to their own highest cultural standards. Good on them for having them, bad for scanting them.Like Jewish refugees in Palestine? Or Palestinians in Egypt, Kuwait, Libya, Lebanon, etc.? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Lets engage in philosophy, the logic of it all. — Philosophim
Last things first: philosophy is not logic. — tim wood
It's annoying to deal with someone who is so apparently uncaring about clarity of language, and so careless in reading. You want to engage in 'the logic of it all." I observe that "it" isn't logic. And you jump to "without logic." And further, in this context I have no idea what you mean by "logic."I highly disagree Tim. Without logic.... — Philosophim
I'm just going ("near as I can tell") on what you write. If what you write isn't connected to what you mean, that's a problem.You are assuming things that I don't think are true here. — Philosophim
A lot of people in America are angry about a lot of things, and in some cases, some even justified. For most the anger is just a sign of disorder, like road-rage. And there are those who play the angry like a violin, in manipulative and ultimately immature and disgusting ways.It's those crossing the border without permission that generate much of the anger in America. — Philosophim
Just so, the "logic of the thing." Sorry, the problems of immigration are not soluble in solicitate of logic - it's not a math or a logic problem.I don't care about politics, and I like to think of the subjects from a stable base that builds a compelling argument. — Philosophim
Last things first: philosophy is not logic. Morality is not an emotional issue. The morality of the immigration does not correspond to the laws of the place he or she is immigrating to. They, the laws, may well apply, and even properly apply. But there is also a moral component if the immigrant is also a supplicant. And the matter of refugees who arguably have no choice even a separate matter. Your views (near as I can tell) are reductionist, legalistic, amoral, and inhuman. Which to be sure the law in part has to be. But not entirely.Then please explain how it can be moral....
This is a lot of assuming.... Can you note when you think it is moral to illegally immigrate somewhere, and why it is moral for a country to allow that illegal immigrant to be there? This is not an emotional issue for me or a "Its obvious" question. Lets engage in philosophy, the logic of it all. — Philosophim
Forget Godel in this context. He has nothing to do with it. The question of Pv.NP is about, basically, how long it takes a computer to solve a problem, and how much longer it takes as the problem has more inputs. "The travelling salesman" is a well-known example of the kind of problem considered. A salesman has to visit several cities: what is the best routing for him (quickest, shortest, cheapest, whatever)? If it's four cities, not too hard to figure out. If a lot of cities, then it takes a long time to figure it out. Time in this case meaning computer steps.personally interested but clueless smile — kazan
So the categorical statement that "asbestos causes disease" is categorically false. And this, really, isn't about asbestos or any thing else. It is about the usage and understanding of language and the traps and rabbit holes that people can fall into or walk into eyes wide shut.
This is just sophistry and bad faith lol — Count Timothy von Icarus
Utility in the eye of the beholder.why exactly are some stories more useful than others? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Apparently - please correct if I'm mistaken - you say that the airlines crashing into the WTC towers is what caused them to collapse. And no one as a practical matter would disagree. Unless he or she was a person actually interested in what made them fall. Because it is blindingly obvious that the airlines crashing into the WTC did not cause them to fall: they stood after the crashes for quite a while. And that's why yours a convenient descriptive fiction true in the context of the "story" being told. But beyond that, not true.I would not say that airliners crashing into the Twin Towers is what caused them to fall had I not seen airliners crash into the Twin Towers — Count Timothy von Icarus
Responsibility and cause are different words....Nonetheless, smoking is responsible.... — Count Timothy von Icarus
No moral issue? Another categorical statement? Well, maybe not for you. No moral justification for illegal immigration? What does that even mean? Think! If they're not here, they're not illegal immigrants. If they're here illegally, then they're here illegally. Assuming they have a good reason for being here, likely necessity, there is nothing immoral about it - the necessity being instead grounds for a moral claim.and I see no broader moral issue here. In any case, I see no moral justification for illegal immigration. — Philosophim
Does it? Truth is a noun, by assumption a person, place, or thing. The only "thing" it can be is an abstract noun. That is, truth as a genus, its species being true statements, the only thing them having in common being truth. So, no. Truth (itself) not an existing thing.Truth exists though no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Bingo! And if informally you want to say "cause," not a problem (for me). But if formally you want to assert that the cause exists, then it's a fair question to ask what, where, when, why, and how it exists. And that a difficult - and I think ultimately impossible - set of questions to answer.Here is my position: it is useful to believe.... — Count Timothy von Icarus
You're implying (again), and here with respect to immigration policies, that "a democratic nation," in establishing its immigration policies, can do no wrong. If that's so, please so state. If on the other hand you believe there can be wrong immigration policies, then there can be a discussion. But not if you hold there cannot be, there being then nothing to discuss.What's wrong with a democratic nation deciding how much immigration it wants to let in? If you believe that a democratic nation can make a wrong choice in its immigration policy, what is it, why? If there is a problem, what would fix it? — Philosophim
You're missing my point. One way for you to see it is to try to explain exactly how asbestos causes illness. And you will see that asbestos never did and never will cause any illness.Asbestos only causes disease within the context of a fiction? — Count Timothy von Icarus
How do you feel about slavery? Do you think the Taliban are doing a good and admirable job of governing Afghanistan? How abut Iran? How about if the will of the American public is to deliver all of its "illegal" immigrants to England. Why should the English object? Or if the US state of Texas (et al) criminalizes abortion, well done them, yes?If it is the will of the people of that state, I do. Why would you disagree with this? — Philosophim
The laws should be whatever the citizens desire in a democratic nation. Do you disagree? — Philosophim
Then you are content with whatever any country decides to do within its borders - without qualification? I doubt you mean that, but it's what you seem to be saying.The only fair way to judge is to let the society as a whole decide. If you are fairly letting people decide through democratic and representative processes, then that is what works for that society. — Philosophim
It's not clear to me that anyone here has understood the question. I read it as applying only to people who have presented themselves as candidates for entry. The gatekeeper consults his rulebook and on that basis admits or rejects the applicant.My question is this: How do you decide who to let in and who to deny entry? — Samlw
Can't let this pass. Care to qualify this in some way that will move it from nonsense to sense?The laws should be whatever the citizens desire in a democratic nation. Do you disagree? — Philosophim
Is what most people think your criterium? What do you say an investment is, what "investment" means in a financial context, then we can consider whether gold is an investment.I think most people consider gold to be an investment. — hypericin
So the existing is existence? That's incoherent. Can you do better?What do you mean by "existence" in P1.
— tim wood
The perceptual aggregate, all observables across space and time. — Hallucinogen
At best this is a conceptual template, meaning that your arguments apply (at best) only to your concepts."Series" is an abstract term; do you mean the Universe is an abstract term?
— tim wood
The objects within the universe are the terms and the functions/natural laws of the universe can be abstracted as the formula of a series. — Hallucinogen
I find this definition of "entity": a thing with distinct and independent existence. By "series" and "sequence" do you mean ordered in some way, as perhaps before-after? By "transformation of an object in space" do you mean a change in an entity?What is a series of entities?
— tim wood
By entity, I mean the dictionary definition, and by series, I mean a sequence of transformations in space or in abstraction.
What is a series of events?
— tim wood
By event, I mean a transformation of an object in space. — Hallucinogen
I think American immigration issues and European differ enough to be separate discussions.My question is this: How do you decide who to let in and who to deny entry? — Samlw
Um, there seems some things unclear here. In my spaceship, no matter how fast I'm going, or how I change speed, my clock always runs at the same rate. if it didn't, then my clock would also be my speedometer - which it isn't, and does not happen. Two clocks in motion relative to each other run at different speeds, but that's in comparison to each other.n special relativity, the faster an object moves relative to the speed of light, the slower time passes for that object. In general relativity, the closer an object is to a source of gravity, the slower time appears to pass due to the warping of spacetime. — Echogem222
No. From what you wrote, here:Are you being annoying on purpose. You think I wrote 'the Clochard' meaning 'the homelessness'? — I like sushi
I thought you did not know what it meant at all. And I think you still do not. Near as i can tell, it's a French word that refers to a kind of low-life rogue or ruffian who is not devoid of a certain Gallic charm. How such could re-emerge as any kind of digital device is beyond my understanding. But I agree; we should leave it.Personally, I see something of the possible reemergence of the clochard in the form of mobile devices. — I like sushi