In the words of a realist, we could all be totally ignorant and illogical all we want, but the universe would be here.So what is the difference between a logically consistent object and a real object? Can you imagine that? — litewave
And same things viewed under ordinary observation could have different relations viewed under quantum existence.What do you mean by 'following relations'? Different things have different relations. — litewave
In the words of a realist, we could all be totally ignorant and illogical all we want, but the universe would be here. — L'éléphant
And same things viewed under ordinary observation could have different relations viewed under quantum existence. — L'éléphant
I can imagine a logically consistent object and a real object.I asked you whether you can imagine a difference between a logically consistent object and a real object. Are you saying that if you were totally ignorant and illogical you could imagine such a difference? — litewave
And here you are even more out of line for asking the ontological nature of relations. Relations are our perceptual interpretation of the tangible objects. And I say 'tangible' as a rule, for gravity is invisible and not readily available to us, except that we, the objects, do not readily float at will because something is keeping us grounded. There is no instance where you yourself have understood relations except in situations where there is at least one physical object as an element in your analysis.I am talking about things and relations in the ontological (existential) sense, not in the epistemical sense. — litewave
I can imagine a logically consistent object and a real object. — L'éléphant
Perhaps one object is only logically coherent, but not metaphysically possible in any possible world? — Bodhy
Such as infinitely tall unicycle. Not logically contradictory, but not metaphysically possible. — Bodhy
Or the existence of literally only one thing. That's not a logically incoherent notion — Bodhy
I can imagine a logically consistent object and a real object. — L'éléphant
And what is the difference between them? I can't imagine the difference. — litewave
. Water is not meant to be logical -- just liquid. — L'éléphant
Logical possibility just means it can be stated in a way that doesn't violate an axiom of logic, but metaphysical possibility requires there is a possible world where such a thing can really exist. — Bodhy
A mile high unicycle is not incoherent, but it's not metaphysically possible because of the impossibility of an actually existing infinite set of things. So it is definitely possible for something to be logically coherent but not existentially possible. — Bodhy
But do sets exist? That's an unresolved metaphysical debate. — Bodhy
To put this in simple terms, how or why does modality exist? — Shawn
what are the leading theories of causality, nowadays? I ask because if indeterminism is at hand and how intuition grapples with indeterminism, then are we at a limit of how to interpret nature? If the preceding is true, then where do we go on from here? — Shawn
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