Philosophim
You might want to read the paper that I linked in this instance.
— Philosophim
That paper relies on treating necessity as causation. — Banno
RogueAI
However, we can conceive of the object floating upward, or vanishing when released. These conceptual possibilities are not physically possible. — Relativist
Banno
What do I mean by 'no limitation'? Prior causality is the discovery of some other state that necessarily lead to another state. If X didn't happen, Y would not form in that way. But if Y formed in 'that way' without a prior cause of X, then it is not necessary that Y formed in that way, it 'simply did'. This also means that it could have 'simply not'. It did, but it wasn't necessary that it did. It necessarily is because it exists, but it didn't necessarily have to exist. — Philosophim
frank
But in saying that, was he say that, of all the things that there are, none of them exist in every possible world? Or was he saying of nothing, that it exists in every possible world?
That's the trouble with continentals... so vague... — Banno
Philosophim
↪Philosophim
Hmm. — Banno
Esse Quam Videri
Banno
Banno
Relativist
Yes, if one of those logical possibilities is true, then it is physically possible.Quibble: they are physically possible, under certain conditions: you're in a simulation, you're a Boltzmann Brain, the laws of nature, for whatever reason, suddenly change, some magic-seeming alien technology is at work — RogueAI
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