When he says this though, I think he means that everything that obeys the principle of non-contradiction is possible.anything and everything is possible — Terrapin Station
Which is the point I made initially with regards to modal realism.You couldn't say, "Well, anything and everything possible," because that would obviously be vacuous in this case. — Terrapin Station
You're a joke man >:O I can't be bothered so much with you, honestly.If you have a complain about modal realism, then provide citations. — mosesquine
Which is why I didn't bother clarifying "anything is possible" with "except contradictions." Contradictions are excluded from the possible by definition, so it doesn't make sense to treat them like they are something that could be true. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yeah, you'd say that one can only be referring to the possible things that are possible.Logically, one cannot say "anything is possible" and be referring to contradictions. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In your question, you are trying to say that talking about a impossible outcome (contradiction) can amount to talking about a possible outcome (such that a contradiction is a possible state). — TheWillowOfDarkness
The regret of not being plants brings us closer to paradise than any religion. One is in paradise only as a plant. But we left that stage a long time ago: we would have to destroy so much to recover paradise! Sin is the impossibility of forgetfulness. The fall - the emblem of our human condition - is a nervous exacerbation of consciousness. Thus a human being can only be next to God, whereas plants sleep in him the sleep of eternal forgetfulness. The more awake we are, the greater the nostalgia that sends us in quest of paradise, the sharper the pangs of remorse that reunite us with the vegetable world — E.M. Cioran
Only if you are accepting the incoherent argument that contradictions are possible. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I don't understand your points here. God healing someone is not a logical contradiction, for example. And what does "falsification of incoherence" mean? — John
It is when there's no God doing healing. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I don't think they would, unless they're in some special philosophical mood such that they will even think about logical contradictions. When I tell someone "anything is possible", they think that any imaginable empirical event is possible - but any such event is always already constrained by the PNC.So your claim is that most people wouldn't read "anything and everything is possible" any differently than "all possible things are possible"? — Terrapin Station
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