Why do you assume that existence presupposes a relative difference from another existent? — absoluteaspiration
Couldn't A be different from (in this world) non-existent nothingness? — absoluteaspiration
How do you conceive of this thing which is not A? — Daniel
How do you conceive of this thing which is not A? — Daniel
There are many problems importing classical negation wholesale into metaphysics. The most famous is the Raven Paradox. — absoluteaspiration
If you're not using predicate logic, in what sense are you negating A? — absoluteaspiration
As for the Raven Paradox, this question assumes a world where only one thing exists. — absoluteaspiration
If I want to define A, I need to conceive of it as the negation of everything that it is not. — apokrisis
I don't think this is correct at all. We define "A" with a description, not by saying what it is not. "Man", for example, was defined by Aristotle as a rational animal. — Metaphysician Undercover
I really cannot think of anything which is defined by stating what it is not. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yet even at the level of a logic of particulars, we have Leibniz and the argument from indiscernibles - the differences that don’t make a difference and so speak to identity as sameness. — apokrisis
The simple fact is that we define a thing by describing what it is, not by saying what it is not. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any type of difference makes the two things not indiscernible, therefore different things. — Metaphysician Undercover
But even if it were true and not false, then my argument is about the definition of categories like thingness itself. — apokrisis
An essential difference is different from an accidental difference. One is treated as signal, the other noise. — apokrisis
but descriptions and definitions are not logical processes. — Metaphysician Undercover
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