A nice summation. — Janus
This is the question of reference? How is it that "water" refers to water, and nothing else?The question I have right now (which may be resolved after reading the article) is this: if we want to say there is a logically possible world in which water is not H2O, on what other basis could it be said that it would count as being water? — Janus
...the issues of locker rooms... — Jeremy Murray
not to lear — Banno
Perhaps the very urge to ask “why is there something rather than nothing?” is a kind of metaphysical craving that misunderstands the role of explanation. Explanations work within the world—given that things exist, why does this or that happen?—but they break down when we try to apply them to existence as such. The impulse isn't deep; it’s a confusion of category. — Banno
...if any role for intuition and understanding is ruled out and reason is 100% discursive, you have an infinite possibility space of possible "games" and no reason to choose one in favor of any other. The authority of reason itself rests on intuition and understanding. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Definitely simpler. — frank
yet...I learn best by trial & error, and question & answer, and self-teaching methods. — Gnomon
but I'm not familiar with Kripke, and Modal Logic is over my head. Aristotelian Logic is more like common sense (the actual world) to me. — Gnomon
...misunderstands modal logic, but in order to see why, one needs first to understand modal logic. And you have said that you are unwilling to do so.Like Multiverse and Many Worlds models of abstractly logical possibilities, his Modal Reality does not seem to be in danger of empirical falsification or actual contradiction — Gnomon
The point is that nothing is the same in different worlds. — J
Hanover clearly agreed with me, — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that it is logically possible that those ratios and standards might be different only goes to show the emptiness of pure logic. — Wayfarer
I never though otherwise. I wasn't aware that this was a potential bone of contention.I can’t seem to make you believe that I think there are non-theological ways to understand and act on, faith. — Fire Ologist
Simply becasue that is the argument I was pursuing....why is it that everything else you bring up about faith has to do with fathers murdering their children and fools acting without evidence or reason? — Fire Ologist
I'm not going over it again. Good to see you struggling with the conceptualisation, though. Keep going.So - how is faith “neither good nor bad” as you said before? — Fire Ologist
There's a lot in this. An ideology is another example of a belief that is not to be subjected to scrutiny.Right, I wouldn't say it's always religion, but it's always ideology, which includes religion. Ideologies are like religions in that they are faith, not evidence, based. — Janus
That might be down to the what your question was phrased, since Janus/ answer seemed quite relevant.Don’t you see how none of what you just said addresses what I asked? — Fire Ologist
Pretty fucking rude. So atheists are none of them "moms and dads, loving their kids"?Religious people, generally, are softies, to the core. Lots of moms and dads, loving their kids. Not many thoughts like you are all having. — Fire Ologist
Imagining impossible worlds — Janus
Yep. But we are going to have to introduce more terms. There's a hierarchy of possibilities:I have no doubt a physically impossible world could be imagined — Janus
Is there a possible world in which water is not H2O? — Janus
Yes. And this interpretation stands. Indeed, the two interpretations are not obviously mutually exclusive.It has such poor resolve I find — Hanover
See what I mean? — frank
That would be easier on you, I presume. But supose that I have understood all you had to say, and yet still reject theism. What's the appropriate response?Maybe you are incapable? — Fire Ologist
ButNot at all. — Fire Ologist
First, because people end up offending others without realizing it and holding on to a sort of subtle bigotry. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Binding of Isaac (Genesis 22), or the Akedah, has often been interpreted as a test of faith, with emphasis on maintaining belief and trust in God despite extreme adversity or incomprehensible demands. Below are several examples across traditions and thinkers where the story is understood as a call to maintain faith despite adversity:
1. Classical Jewish Interpretation – Rashi and Medieval Commentators
Rashi, the medieval Jewish commentator, frames the Akedah as a test not only of Abraham’s obedience but of his steadfast faith in God's justice and promises (e.g., the promise of descendants through Isaac).
The adversity here is internal conflict: Abraham must reconcile God's command to kill Isaac with the divine promise that Isaac will carry on his line. Despite this apparent contradiction, Abraham continues in faith.
This sets a precedent in Jewish tradition that faith includes trust in God's plan even when it seems paradoxical or painful.
2. The Epistle to the Hebrews (New Testament)
Hebrews 11:17-19 in the New Testament explicitly praises Abraham’s faith:
"By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac… He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead..."
The focus is on Abraham's unwavering belief in God's goodness and power, even when commanded to sacrifice his son.
In Christian thought, this is a call for believers to maintain faith in God's promises even when circumstances are dire or absurd.
3. Søren Kierkegaard – Fear and Trembling
Kierkegaard's Abraham is the “knight of faith”, a figure who obeys the absurd with full trust in God.
The “adversity” is radical: Abraham must sacrifice what he loves most, yet believes by virtue of the absurd that he will still receive Isaac back.
For Kierkegaard, the Akedah dramatizes the leap of faith, where reason fails and faith endures without justification.
4. Maimonides – Guide for the Perplexed
Maimonides sees the Akedah as the highest form of prophetic obedience, representing the ultimate test of trust in divine wisdom.
The adversity is ethical and emotional—being asked to violate moral norms.
Abraham is praised for not letting moral confusion or emotional pain shake his trust in God's will.
5. Modern Jewish Thought – Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik
In his existential reading, Soloveitchik sees Abraham’s test as a crisis of religious identity, where one must affirm faith not in comfort, but in the face of horror or paradox.
He uses it to frame the experience of Jews through suffering (e.g., the Holocaust), where the Akedah is seen as a metaphor for holding faith in the shadow of death.
6. Liturgical Use – Rosh Hashanah Readings
The Akedah is read on Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, when God's judgment is central.
It's understood liturgically as an invocation of Abraham’s example: just as Abraham stayed faithful under trial, so too should Israel—and they ask to be judged mercifully in that light. — ChatGPT
if you could show me where I am wrong — Metaphysician Undercover
If water was not H2O in Aristotle's day — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, you can ask folk to burn there books, which would make your life more interesting.BOOORRRRRINNNNNNNG! :D — Moliere
