That's pretty close. And "A property had by a thing that we cannot imagine it existing without" works for many purposes. The formal definition is somewhat different. The trouble is not just that we can imagine alls sorts of odd things, but that what one person can imagine might be quite different to what another person can imagine....an exploration of what we can coherently imagine... — Janus
Ok. Anyone in this thread?Lots of thinkers. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The step further, that claims that essences themselves change, — Count Timothy von Icarus
Leon.Whom? — Moliere
In recent philosophy a large number of other identity statements have
been emphasized as examples of contingent identity statements, dif-
ferent, perhaps, from either of the types I have mentioned before. One
of them is, for example, the statement "Heat is the motion of molecules."
First, science is supposed to have discovered this. Empirical scientists in
their investigations have been supposed to discover (and, I suppose, they
did) that the external phenomenon which we call "heat" is, in fact,
molecular agitation. Another example of such a discovery is that water is
H₂O , and yet other examples are that gold is the element with such and
such an atomic number, that light is a stream of photons, and so on.
These are all in some sense of "identity statement" identity statements.
Second, it is thought, they are plainly contingent identity statements,
just because they were scientific discoveries. After all, heat might have
turned out not to have been the motion of molecules. There were other
alternative theories of heat proposed, for example, the caloric theory of
heat. If these theories of heat had been correct, then heat would not
have been the motion of molecules, but instead, some substance suffus-
ing the hot object, called "caloric". And it was a matter of course of
science and not of any logical necessity that the one theory turned out to
be correct and the other theory turned out to be incorrect. — Kripke
Ley says they have no choice but to move to the centre, and I think they will have to do that, otherwise the Teals will continue to eat their breakfast. — Wayfarer
Retiring MLA Nicole Lawder admitted on the ABC's election night broadcast that some within the ACT branch of the party were less interested in being elected than pushing it ideologically to the right. — ABC News
On Saturday night, Ms Lawder lashed out at what she described as "a couple of very powerful players in the party" who "have pushed the Liberals too far to the right".
"I think there are some people that are so ideologically driven that [they] would prefer to sabotage the pathway to winning," she said.
The Australian Labor Party is a democratic socialist party and has the objective of the democratic socialisation of industry, production, distribution and exchange, to the
extent necessary to eliminate exploitation and other anti-social features in these fields. — ALP Constitution
Can we say water is necessarily H2O, D2O, HDO and T2O? (Because all of these naturally occurring in nature when analyzing water) — Richard B
Only if we reject "Water is H₂O". Taking ☐(water =H₂O) as true limits our access to only those worlds in which water=H₂O.Or would we say no because I can imagine a possible world where water is just H2O? — Richard B
Meaning is in your head. — Hanover
What do you think? Should we allow the sacrifice of willing, compliant adults?Would it be ok if Isaac were an adult? — BitconnectCarlos
This is a reading of the Binding that is told in parallel to reading it as an admonition against human sacrifice. It's the target of much of my argument. In an alternate story, Abraham says to god "This is an evil thing you ask, and I will not do it, even for you", and then god comes clean and says that it was all a test, solving the Euthyphro by showing that god wills what is good, not the good is what god wills.Kierkegaard's focus wasn't as much on Isaac's acceptance of his fate as it was on Abraham's pure faith in not resisting or questioning God. — Hanover
Pretty much.I read Banno as referencing the Akedah story as he has often done, and equating the institution of sacrifice with murder. — BitconnectCarlos
But will you happily judge a faith sufficient to risk one’s life to save another as good?
If so then there is nothing good or bad necessarily involved in acts of faith qua acts of faith.
So your argument’s reliance on child murder is smoke.
You are avoiding. — Fire Ologist
The most substantive part was where you agreed with my general point.You didn’t address the more substantive parts. — Fire Ologist
...believing something without good evidence is fraught with peril, and then acting on what is already perilous is reckless, and further, we’ve seen horrible atrocities committed based on such perilous recklessness. — Fire Ologist
An odd thing to say. A lesser evil, sometimes.Acting without sufficient evidence is a good now. — Fire Ologist
A non sequitur. I will happily judge that a faith sufficient to murder a child is not a good faith. If you can't do likewise, that's on you. Your argument is invalid.So if both are true, we can’t use good acts or bad acts as some kind of measure of the faith those acts were based on. — Fire Ologist
Nationals leader David Littleproud has confirmed his party won't be re-entering a Coalition agreement with the Liberal Party. — ABC
I didn't think you were, and couldn't care less anyway.I'm not trying to convert an atheist. — BitconnectCarlos
...which I answered, then a long pause filled with empty posts, nowA few questions for the atheists: — BitconnectCarlos
if we were to start with, e.g., Ezra-Nehemiah and work backwards, when would the atheists start taking issue? — BitconnectCarlos
Fuck the logic, it doesn't qualify as wisdom so why waste time trying to understand it, when all that has ever done is produce faulty interpretations. It's best to leave logic as it is, impossible to understand. — Metaphysician Undercover
