They're both saying the same thing. The latter sentence just says it twice. Redundant.They are different statements though. One is the statement of x, the other is describing something about x. It's the difference between saying dog and saying a dog is a dog. — Artemis
I recall that during one walk Einstein suddenly stopped, turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it.
One is the statement of x, the other is describing something about x. It's the difference between saying dog and saying a dog is a dog. — Artemis
I recall that during one walk Einstein suddenly stopped, turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it.
That sounds to me like a rhetorical or incredulous question meant to convey Einstein's opinion that he thinks the moon does exist when it's not looked at. — Pfhorrest
You know that Albert Einstein famously asked that very question. The exact quote is:
"We often discussed his notions on objective reality. I recall that during one walk Einstein suddenly stopped, turned to me and asked whether I really believed that the moon exists only when I look at it."
As recalled by his biographer Abraham Pais.
Why did Einstein, of all people, feel obliged to ask that question? — Wayfarer
The questions with which Einstein attacked the quantum theory do have answers; but they are not the answers Einstein expected them to have. We now know that the moon is demonstrably not there when nobody looks. — Boojums All the Way Through - N. David Mermin
Philosophers have an unfortunate tendency to mistake ordinary uses of equality as denoting a physical relation between things rather than as being a linguistic relation between terms. — sime
In what English class did you learn that "x=x" or "it is itself" counts as a description of something, and not earn you a detention for being cheeky? This is a misuse of the English word 'description — StreetlightX
They're both saying the same thing. The latter sentence just says it twice. Redundant. — Harry Hindu
Maybe if you have a bad teacher, but think you just don't fully understand the word "description." — Artemis
Thanks. That was the rhetorical point I was working towards. — Wayfarer
Actually in that reference you give, Pauli says, ironically, that one should no more rack one’s brains about whether something one cannot know exists at all times, than with the ancient question of how many angels might dance on the head of a needle. — Wayfarer
Particles with an integer spin, or bosons, are not subject to the Pauli exclusion principle: any number of identical bosons can occupy the same quantum state, as with, for instance, photons produced by a laser or atoms in a Bose–Einstein condensate. — Pauli exclusion principle
No seriously - if someone says: "describe this dog to me", and you reply "it's a dog", there are a few possibilities - you misheard the question; you were being cheeky; its so obvious what the dog looks like that it'd be redundant to describe it any further; you don't understand English; you're unacquainted with the dog so are unable to elaborate. What you have not done, is give a description of the dog. — StreetlightX
It doesn't describe anything because it presents no information. You could have zero knowledge of what "x" is and still agree that x = x. That can't be called describing anything. — Saphsin
Self-identical is an attribute. That it happens to be an attribute all things in the universe share makes it no less an attribute. — Artemis
This seems like linguistic sommersaults to me. A distinction without a difference for no purpose. — StreetlightX
Logic describes nothing. And translating predicates as 'attributes' is unmotivated and contentious. — StreetlightX
The arrogation of logical terms into metaphysical posulates is a cardinal sin for which philosophers ought be be expelled from the academy for. — StreetlightX
*shrug* I'm not the one who doesn't know English. — StreetlightX
for which philosophers ought be be expelled from the academy for. — StreetlightX
Yes, saying something redundant about x.One is saying x and the other is saying something about x — Artemis
We now know that the moon is demonstrably not there when nobody looks. — Boojums All the Way Through - N. David Mermin
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