Does this apply to judges who refer to statute, convention, constitution, case law, etc? — unenlightened
No, it's not just a semi-infinite number line, because that omits the temporal context. Time does not exist all at once, as does an abstract number line.
Consider the future: it doesn't exist. — Relativist
The present is the END of a journey of all prior days. That would be the mirror image of reaching a day infinitely far into the future, which cannot happen. A temporal process cannot reach TO infinity, and neither can a temporal process reach FROM an infinity. — Relativist
No, I outlined a mapping of a possible finite past, and pointed out there are cosmological models based on a finite past (Hawking, Carroll, and Vilenkin to name 3). I am aware of no such conceptual mapping for an infinite past. — Relativist
Yes, conceivability is subjective, but conceptions can be intersubjectively shared, analyzed, and discussed. — Relativist
But an infinite past still entails an infinite series that has been completed; that is the dilemma. Consider how we conceive an infinite future: it is an unending process of one day moving to the next: it is the incomplete process that is the potential infinity. The past entails a completed process, and it's inconceivable how an infinity can be completed. — Relativist
Mathematical entities are abstractions, they have only hypothetical existence. — Relativist
How is this different from the infinity of mathematical operation of dividing 3 into 1? Just because it equates to an infinity of 3's after the decimal doesn't imply infinity exists in the world. — Relativist
Is there a theory of Absolute infinity? Please tell me if there is!!! — ssu
I don't see how an instantiated infinity could ever be established empirically since we can't count to infinity. — Relativist
On the other hand, I think in some cases, infinity can be ruled out. For example: the past cannot be infinite. Here's my argument:
1. It is not possible for a series formed by successive addition to be both infinite and completed.
2. The temporal series of (past) events is formed by successive addition.
3. The temporal series of past events is completed (by the present).
4. (Hence) It is not possible for the temporal series of past events to be infinite.
5. (Hence) The temporal series of past events is finite. — Relativist
I myself believe Absolute Infinity as an mathematical entity exists. It's just a personal hunch that it is so. — ssu
It's discrete and not a continuum at all. — LD Saunders
There's no "constructing" here, space is just infinitely divisible. There's no such thing as a smallest possible distance. — MindForged
Well, actually in physics, space does not seem to be infinitely divisible. — LD Saunders
That's paradoxical. — frank
It is amazing how taste can trump analysis. — Dfpolis
The resolution of singularities is in part due to the precedence of them turning out to be the result of mistakes in our models. — MindForged
Nobody expects Quentin Tarantino or Ryan Gosling to have anything particularly interesting to say about the world, but they do expect that of JM Coetzee and Hilary Mantel. — andrewk
How can something essentially inadequate to a task perform the task? — Dfpolis
Now, my question is the following : how would you attack this argument, in a way other than denying (P2), i.e. that there exists a series of all grounded facts ? — Philarete
Why do athiests have Morals and Ethics? — AwonderingSoul
Well, that is excellent news. Tell me, do you believe JTB is the best description for knowledge in a non-general sense? I know you can justify it, but I'm curious as to whether you believe it. — Cheshire
I'm not so much interested as how its used 'in language', but rather how it's used in reality. — Cheshire
And before you object, I mean to say especially philosophers, when I say people. My primary reason for making JTB a target is just because it's so well guarded from criticism and taught as if were a law of thought; when as Gettier showed in nearly satirical fashion the emperor has no cloths. — Cheshire
I greatly appreciate the charitable read and I agree. So long as JTB isn't meant to actually describe the real world and is only maintained for the purpose of an exercise I suppose I no longer object. Thank you for the reference to Gettier; I'm aware my arguments or causal assertions must appear quite naive.
Do you think you could produce an example of these two different types of knowledge? The general and the technical?
I suppose I'm agreeing with Gettier in a sense, but avoiding his objection. He's saying hey your system doesn't work because it can produce mistaken knowledge. I'm saying some knowledge is mistaken. — Cheshire
The theory of knowledge that serves as the foundation of philosophy is flawed. — Cheshire
God states that killing is wrong, Gob states that it is not. — Joe Salem
The "existence" is based on scholastic realism's belief in the extra-mental existence of universals. Once that is made explicit, the significance of the "proof" as a proof evaporates. It remains, however, as an artifact of a certain kind of thinking. The presentation of the "proof" as a proof without making its realist underpinnings clear (if known - a material qualification), is simply fraud. — tim wood
Every time I hear the cosmological argument or, in recent years gaining popularity, the kalām argument, it's generally based around a fundamental flaw in which it assumes properties of the first cause in order to call it god or gods without there ever being any support through the premisses about the properties of that first cause. If that first cause is, let's say an "anti-universe", a negative mass and energy that reach a fulcrum point that balance over into a burst that we would then call big bang, then the first cause is just a pile of negative energy and mass, not a god. But those arguments are used as arguments for god, which is by any standards around, a pure fallacy. — Christoffer
Has Aristotelian logic been subjected to the same critiques as Euclid's geometry. In other words is there a non Aristotelian logic to be derived by a critical examination of it's axioms? — jlrinc
Regarding the Law of identity "a is a" is it wrong to argue that a is not a because one a is on the left side of the copula and the other a is on the right side, and having different properties they are clearly not identical — jlrinc
This is absolutely necessary for the evolution of human like intelligence. — yatagarasu
Maybe not if the tape was rewound, or another planet. — Marchesk
I think the meaning of the dinosaurs going extinct where the big ones occupying all the niches that kept mammals to a small size. — Marchesk
I find it very unlikely something like Humans would have evolved without the extinctions of the dinosaurs. What type of reptilians do they even suggest would have led to humans evolving? Two of the biggest adaptations that led humans to evolving the way they did was the brain and the stamina humans have. (our ability to generate a thin layer of sweat) I don't see how these would develop in a world dominated by massive reptiles. — yatagarasu
Also that our ancestors came out of the trees. I don't know that the Velociraptor line would have gone to the trees for long enough to develop the kind of hands we have. — Marchesk
Somehow, for the 3rd or 4th time, you have skipped over the core of the answer: Thinking about reality is correct when it preserves the truth of what we know of reality (is salve veritate) -- and preserves that truth, not accidentally, but in virtue of the processed followed (i.e. essentially). This is an operational, goal-oriented definition.
It is amazing that, while noting that I said, "essentially, not accidentally," you seem unable to grasp what essential note is required. Just so you do not miss it again the essential note is truth preserving (salve veritate),
I am not discussing any "them" such as rules, but the definition of correct thinking. — Dfpolis