What does this have to do with the Barcan formulas? — Snakes Alive
The Barcan formula has generated some controversy because—in terms of possible world semantics—it implies that all objects which exist in any possible world (accessible to the actual world) exist in the actual world, i.e. that domains cannot grow when one moves to accessible worlds. This thesis is sometimes known as actualism—i.e. that there are no merely possible individuals. There is some debate as to the informal interpretation of the Barcan formula and its converse. — Wiki
In your standard modal semantics, all formulae are evaluated with respect to a possible world. — Snakes Alive
At the other extreme is what was sometimes said of Marcus Aurelius - that he distanced himself so far from his family and friends that he lost all zest for life. — andrewk
A stipulative definition is a type of definition in which a new or currently-existing term is given a new specific meaning for the purposes of argument or discussion in a given context. When the term already exists, this definition may, but does not necessarily, contradict the dictionary (lexical) definition of the term. Because of this, a stipulative definition cannot be "correct" or "incorrect"; it can only differ from other definitions, but it can be useful for its intended purpose. — Stipulative Definition, Wiki
Huh? — Terrapin Station
Dimensionality other than three dimensions (plus time if you want to consider that a dimension) isn't real. It's just a mathematical game that we can play. — Terrapin Station
When asked whether the glass is half full or empty, a Buddhist would reply that it's broken. — Anthony
Anyway, this will be dealt with when treating the Tractatus. — Pussycat
Some of that is in the cyber realm these days. Have you ever been approached by a recruiter online? — frank
Not that cognitive science, like cybernetics, isn't useful for understanding up to an extent, it's just that the human mind works quite differently than these disciplines allow for. — Anthony
Was Afghanistan a required player in the attack on the WTC? Weren't the main operatives Saudis? Did the pilots learn to fly in Afghanistan? No. Maybe the terrorists trained in effectively deploying violence -- it seems like Afghanistan would be a good place to practice. — Bitter Crank
It would have to be 'flattened' in order to put it there. — andrewk
It depends on what you mean by describe. — andrewk
It is a proven theorem of topology that the answer to that is NO. — andrewk
What are you trying to ask? — andrewk
Since this would only be a mathematical game, the only answer that would make sense would be based on how we're setting up the rules of the mathematical game we're playing. — Terrapin Station
So if the problem is that we are social animals and but other people are frustrating, how does one resolve this tension? Is it better to habituate ourselves to be alone or is it better to resign ourselves with dealing with the frustrations of other people as just the cost of being a social animal? — schopenhauer1
Not yet. After Kripke. — Banno
Then I think this topic deserves its own thread. — Banno
Yes, we are predominantly a social species, so communication assumes huge importance. I find this especially difficult, being an autist. Setting aside the many variations within the autistic community, most of us share communications difficulties, because we do it a little differently. I don't think it would help or entertain to delve into autistic communications any more than that, but our issues clarify the huge importance of communication to us humans. If you can't communicate easily and fluently, you are at risk of being outcast, as lepers once were.
People come in all shapes and sizes, and some of them can be difficult to get along with, as the OP observes. But we manage it anyway, or we disappear (as a species). :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Stop taking advice from strangers. You can start with this post if you'd like. :smile: — Jake
I don't think this is a terribly interesting case, because it's clearly baked into the style of an encyclopedia; if there were another wiki-format encyclopedia of similar breadth it'd likely follow the same pattern if it used the same broad style in its lead paragraphs. Sure, the specifics might vary, but as long as there's a context-broadening link as the "first link" in most cases, we're likely to end up at something existential if we follow that pattern repeatedly. — Quora
Rigid designators are graspable without any descriptive content. — frank
If Hesperus=Phosphorus is necessary a posteriori, then these two proper names can't be de jure rigid designators, which one can grasp without any descriptive content. — frank
But bipolarity has to do with propositions that have sense and can be either true or false, which is why they are called bipolar in the first place. The "That which we cannot talk about must pass over in silence", refers to non-bipolar propositions, in the realm of the nonsensical. — Pussycat
Are you talking about frame conditions? (E.g. the properties of what worlds access others?) — MindForged
No, a frame is just a set of worlds that share some relevant feature(s). — MindForged
An accessibility relation tells you which worlds can quantify over which other worlds in some particular frame. — MindForged
Your whole lotto thing is a perfect example, you're constraining your modal discourse to worlds where the lotto exists, you exist and in which you play the lotto. That's a frame. You can quantify over other worlds, I'm not sure what the problem is. — MindForged
The same. An accessibility relation is a feature of a modal logic, not of reality (controversial, depending on how you think reality and logic relate). — MindForged
That's not an accessibility relation obtaining — MindForged
It depends on how we constrain the set of possible worlds. — andrewk
I don't understand what you're saying hers. How does an accessibility relation obtain (that is, become actual in the real world)? — MindForged
I'm just trying to answer your questions, which seem irrelevant by my lights. — creativesoul
