 charleton
charleton         
         Some men alive today may well be rendered immortal by means of technological progress. — Arkady
 Arkady
Arkady         
          charleton
charleton         
         Practical impossibilities aside, this says nothing about the logical impossibility of an immortal man, — Arkady
EDIT: in any event, this is all rather beside the point, as what is at issue here is the derivation of non-tautological premises from tautologies, not the derivation of tautologies from tautologies. — Arkady
 Arkady
Arkady         
         Sorry, but that first sentence isn't even grammatical. I know that no one is claiming that there exist any immortal men: my point was simply to contest that "all men are mortal" is tautological. Again, even if contingent features of the universe made it true that no man can live forever, it doesn't follow that man is definitionally mortal.Man is mortal is tautological is man is mortal is definitive. And since none are claiming there are immortal men, then the point is mute. — charleton
I know. I was speaking of my discussion with Sam26 (re: whether tautologies can imply substantive - here defined as "non-tautological" - conclusions), which is what prompted your response. But this still has little to do with ID per se, so my comment is also applicable to the title topic.Whatever your 'in any event' is, may I remind you of the thread title??? — charleton
 Arkady
Arkady         
          Sam26
Sam26         
          Arkady
Arkady         
          charleton
charleton         
         ↪charleton
"Definitive" is not the same as "definitional." I agree that it's pretty definitive that man is mortal (again, at least at present), but I disagree that that implies that man is thereby mortal by definition. There can be accidental features or properties which apply to every member of a class. — Arkady
 Arkady
Arkady         
         Suit yourself. However, I don't know that it's "pedantic" to point out that "definitional" and "definitive" are distinct, as "all men are mortal" is definitively true, but not defintionally so. Kind of an important distinction regarding our conversation...Off topic and overly pedantic. I see no value in pursuing this line of enquiry. — charleton
 Arkady
Arkady         
          CasKev
CasKev         
         It's hard not to compare the behavior of quarks and such to the bits and bytes in the computers we program. — CasKev
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