All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them. — creativesoul
All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them. — creativesoul
In quantum entanglement, any measurement of a property of a particle performs an irreversible collapse on that particle and will change the original quantum state. In the case of entangled particles, such a measurement will be on the entangled system as a whole.
Apparently, such property has no definite value until you measure it. — alcontali
So, what exactly did not exist - in it's entirety - prior to the first report of it? — creativesoul
All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them.
I like that much better. Seems odd. I'm willing to defend the assertion.
Any takers? — creativesoul
All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them.
I like that much better. Seems odd. I'm willing to defend the assertion.
Any takers?
— creativesoul
Fiction...
...Ahab became captain of the Pequod when Melville decreed it. Before Melville wrote the novel, there was no Pequod and there was no Ahab. — fishfry
All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them. — creativesoul
Are you saying that sub atomic particles have no spatiotemporal location, spin, momentum, etc. prior to our measurement? — creativesoul
All things exist in their entirety prior to the first report of them. — creativesoul
The novel existed in it's entirety prior to the first report of it. Melville reported upon something that existed in it's entirety while writing the novel as well. Prior to the report, Ahab and the Pequod was a collection of Melville's own thoughts, beliefs, and ideas. — creativesoul
the novel existed in it's entirety prior to the first report of it. Melville reported upon something that existed in it's entirety while writing the novel as well. Prior to the report, Ahab and the Pequod was a collection of Melville's own thoughts, beliefs, and ideas.
— creativesoul
Wait, what? Did Ahab and the Pequod exist before Melville existed? — fishfry
Of course it's an interesting fact that Moby Dick is based on a true story. The whaling ship Essex was attacked and sunk by a whale. But of course all fiction is based on or inspired by some aspect of reality. That doesn't mean the characters of the novel existed before the author conceived of them.
Is there a point in time, in your opinion, in which Ahab did not exist? Or perhaps you mean to regard him as an archetype? The charismatic fanatic luring others to their doom? That's an eternal theme in human affairs.
But I'm not sure how to take your remark literally. The sun has always been a flaming ball of ga; but Ahab has not always been the captain of the Pequod. That's the thesis I am putting forth.
Perhaps we can refine your idea to: Truths about actual things were always true long before we discovered them. But truths about fictional things become true... — fishfry
The novel existed in it's entirety prior to the first report of it. — creativesoul
The novel existed in it's entirety prior to the first report of it.
— creativesoul
:rofl:
It's not possible for anyone to have an entire novel of that size in their head! Your title is spot on.
(And no, a rough outline or collection of ideas is not an entire novel). — S
So, what exactly did not exist - in it's entirety - prior to the first report of it?
— creativesoul
That what they will measure, does not exist, until they measure it. — alcontali
The first level of all measurement is 'nominal' i.e. 'identifying and naming a thing' That necessarily involves directed focal interaction of an observer with a selected aspect of what is considered to be 'the world'. That is why physicists call 'things' - 'repetitive events' — fresco
Yes. The novel reports the thought, belief, and ideas of Ahab. — creativesoul
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