FBI agents searched for classified material about nuclear weapons, among other items, when they served a warrant at former President Donald Trump’s home in Florida earlier this week, the Washington Post reported Thursday night.
Citing sources familiar with the investigation, the Post reported that government officials were deeply concerned that the nuclear documents believed to be stored at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence could fall into the wrong hands.
Separately, the New York Times reported the documents were related to some of the most highly classified U.S. programs, and that officials feared they were vulnerable to be stolen from Trump’s home by foreign adversaries.
The Post said their sources did not give details about the nuclear documents, such as whether it involved U.S. weapons or those of foreign countries.
Sensitive information about U.S. nuclear weapons is usually restricted to a small number of government officials, the Post reported, noting that material about U.S. weapons could be an intelligence coup for adversaries, and that other nations could see classified U.S. information about their nuclear programs as a threat.
You, in that world, might not know, in that world, that all that exists is your mind — Isaac
Under 1, do I know everything? — Isaac
You, in that world, might not know, in that world, that all that exists is your mind — Isaac
The quotes make it clear that what is true is an utterance, in a specific circumstance - a quote. — Banno
You are going to get into all sorts of trouble by treating truth as a first-order predicate. — Banno
I think maybe warranted beliefs are what's important. I'm not sure truth plays much of a role. But I'm willing to be corrected. — Pie
To me, his not knowing about his own mind...gives him something external to that mind. If a man has a Freudian unconscious, he has an unexplored basement, an other to him as ego.
I prefer to join 'world' with 'something I can be wrong about.' — Pie
If my mind is the only thing that exists then "God exists" is false. If my mind and God are the only things that exist then "God exists" is true. The solipsist doesn't know which of these two scenarios is the case.
Mathematical facts might be like facts about norms. The irrationality of root 2 seems about equivalent to the fact that mathematician ought to endorse the claim. — Pie
So for you it preexisted us...and you are not a platonist ? — Pie
But if no one else had ever existed, it's hard to find a meaning for 'pi.' — Pie
But I speculate that it doesn't make much sense to get math wrong if you are the only being. — Pie
How do you feel about Hamlet ? Or Charlie Brown ? — Pie
But could that-which-exists be understood as including tendencies and relationships ? What of the conception of an entity as essentially relational ? An electron 'is' what it might do with what other entities might do and so on. — Pie
OK. John doesn't know that he knows of everything that exists. I'll add that to my computations. — Pie
I think the coins are a different scenario. — Pie
If only your mind exists then you must know everything — Isaac
You're ignoring what p implies. Why? — Isaac
It does. — Isaac
But what do we ever see of N but transformed English assertions — Pie
If all that exists is in one's mind one cannot be wrong about anything. — Isaac
Are we forced into talk about something 'behind' our expressions ? — Pie
OK, but what is it to be the case ?
To me, it all boils down to P. — Pie
But one could not point. — Pie
My issue with this is ....to what does it correspond...if not the reiteration of that which it is supposed to make true ?
"The cat on the mat" is true if the cat is on the mat.
I guess I want to avoid some weird stuff that is and is not language at the same time, some kind of quasi-physical cat-on-the-mat-ness. It's as if we are tempted to say too much, to merely muddy the water.... — Pie
I think I am using 'fact' in a biased way (accidentally taking for granted a point of view which is not yet established.) I would 'like' to understand facts as true claims. — Pie
Correspondence, a popular and maybe even default choice, also seems problematic. "The theory says that a proposition is true provided there exists a fact corresponding to it. In other words, for any proposition p, p is true if and only if p corresponds to a fact." But is it not cleaner to just understand p as a fact, iff it is true ? — Pie
one of my concerns, truth-makers, which seem like unnecessary entities. — Pie
Nobody who is assuming 1 is true can, yes.
Assuming 1 is true, is the same thing as assuming god doesn't exist (the use of 'only').
One cannot coherently assume god doesn't exist and believe god does exist. — Isaac
Because if 1 is true, then nothing else exists other than their mind. It follows from that, that if a thing is not in their mind it doesn't exist. Therefore they already know (under the assumption of 1), that no other things exist.
They might be wrong about 1, but they obviously cannot be wrong about 1, assuming 1 is true. — Isaac
If 1 is true, they cannot believe 2 is true. — Isaac
1 specifically states that nothing exists other than my mind. So how can I be wrong about the existence of other things under that assumption? I've already declared (by assuming 1), that no other things exist. I can't simultaneously hold a belief that some do (so as to be wrong about that).
I can be wrong about assuming 1, but even without any further data about the rightness or wrongness of 1, I can say that if I assume 1, I can't be wrong about anything else, following from that assumption.
Since I want to retain the possibility of being wrong about things I must reject that assumption. — Isaac
This is just saying that the solipsist could be wrong about solipsism. That's not my argument. My argument is that the solipsist cannot be wrong about anything else, if they are right about solipsism. — Isaac
