2. Identity of Indiscernibles: If what is true of X is also true of Y then, X and Y are identical — TheMadFool
Perhaps with respect to what is true. I have two legs, you have two legs; that does not make me you, nor the same as you, except in that regard. — tim wood
All that's true of X must also be true of Y and only then is 2. the identity of indiscernibles applies.
The rest of what you wrote is gobbledygook. Sorry. — TheMadFool
Cars have models - there can be thousands upon thousands of cars of a particular model. — TheMadFool
Don't be, yours the blunt edge speaking to the caborundum stone. I understand, and this will hurt me more than you.
The idea is that if you rely on yourself - what you discern of observe, then you're subject to error. How, for example, would you know that all that's true for X is true for Y? If, on the other hand, you rely on the objects themselves, then more likely you will not be in error. Two "identical" cars are by no means at all in-themselves identical, and suitable inspection makes that quite clear. — tim wood
The different cars are discernible in that there are properties of them that they do not have in common: for example, one is here while another is there. If even those positional properties were made the same, then you would have truly only one car, because otherwise you would be in the strange situation of saying that right here in front of us right now at the same time are two (or more) indiscernible cars coexisting at the exact same place and time, even though of course in that situation it would to all appearances seem to be only one car. — Pfhorrest
In other words, if I remove spatial properties from the equation, identity of indiscernibles is false — TheMadFool
So if you don’t count some properties, then two objects with all the same properties (besides the ones you’re ignoring) can’t be told apart. That’s not surprising.
The indiscernibility in question though is of a type that accounts for all properties.
If you look at a red car of a certain model and then a blue car of the same model, but both of them through black and white video screens, you won’t be able to discern them either. — Pfhorrest
Logically possible. Seventh-cousin thrice removed from reality, from possibility. Logic a tool, reality - possibility in reality - the engine. On the way from tool to engine, the very best one can do, if it's a very good tool, is make some inferences about the engine, which may be, or may not be, true.What needs to be understood is there's no logical contradiction, ergo it's possible, — TheMadFool
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