TheGreatArcanum
I'm a nominalist, by the way — Terrapin Station
nothing is identical through time. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
but then the phrases ‘nothing is unchanging’ and ‘all is changing’ become predisposed to that their own presuppositions. — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum
Before you post something, read it out loud. Does that sentence make sense to you when you read it out loud? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
TheGreatArcanum
"Predisposed to that their own"? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
TheGreatArcanum
Is English your first language? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
TheGreatArcanum
It makes no sense in conventional English. "<Past participle> to that their own" makes no sense in conventional English. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
good thing logic isn't bound by the English language. — TheGreatArcanum
Terrapin Station
TheGreatArcanum
Your responses to this do not bode well for you wanting an editor, by the way. You won't even fix something simple that makes no sense as conventional English. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
if they change from moment to moment in time, well what do those phrases then become? — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum
Okay, so moving on, we already answered this. They are non-identical instances of the phrases.
Maybe it's not clear what you're asking, though. What sorts of answers would you accept to other "what do they become" questions? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
the phases have lost their original meaning altogether and language is altogether senseless and therefore without value. — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum
Re this, let's clarify how you're using "senseless" there. Is it basically just a value statement? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
TheGreatArcanum
How would we arrive at the idea that in order for meaning to be meaning, it can't change. It it's changing meaning, it's not meaning at all? — Terrapin Station
Again, I'm pretty sure that you're not even familiar with nominalism.
Note that what nominalists are saying is that this:
A
and this:
A
are not actually identical.
What they're not saying, and I think you're thinking that they are saying this, is that we get something like this:
A
changing to something like this:
B
They're not saying that.
They're saying it's:
A
and
A
But that those aren't actually identical. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
by if the original state is to retain its truth value, — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum
Truth value is a judgment that an individual makes on each instance, by the way. They do that in conjunction with their meaning assignments on that instance. — Terrapin Station
Shawn
TheGreatArcanum
Since you asked, go ahead and pick one. I'd go with the pig. Oink oink. :_) — Wallows
TheWillowOfDarkness
TheGreatArcanum
You missed option 4:
There is an underlying catergory error taking that a change in the world involves a change in meanings or abstracted ideas.
In this instance, the nominalist has a position which obtains: all events of time are change (moments of existence), while every meaning is it's own and the same regardless of point in time ( which is, in turn, how change is coherently defined, since being a change, every moment must stand as it own unique meanging ). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Terrapin Station
yet still, the truthiness of the statement is true whether or not the individual makes the judgment of its truthiness or not, — TheGreatArcanum
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.