You’re too unwilling to state the obvious. — I like sushi
"Numerically identical": if you define that as meaning that an entity is absolutely unchanging from one moment to the next then you have defined away the possibility that any entity could be the same entity throughout its life, and that is pretty much trivially obvious. — Janus
As usual this is nonsense/strawmanning. If I am to view things from a nominalist perspective I can certainly account for change. I highlighted already in my previous post the duplicity behind this. Just because things that are very similar - and often within a limited set of experience - appear as being as good as the SAME it doesn’t mean they are NON-CHANGING. If two bananas are rotting at the same rate then relative to each other they are NON-CHANGING, so to suggest that anyone saying so isn’t accounting for ‘a thing changing’ is simply deceptive. — I like sushi
Your first passage above seems to be speaking not about nominalism but about those who disagree with it; — Janus
Where have I said that people do "universally deny identicality multiply instantiated". — Janus
No, fuckwit, it only "defines it (identity) away" for those who accept that definition of identity, such as yourself. — Janus
You're calling me a fuckwit and you still can't even get straight if we're talking about identicality or identity per the distinction you introduced earlier. — Terrapin Station
"if you define that as meaning that an entity is absolutely unchanging from one moment to the next then you have defined away the possibility that any entity could be the same entity throughout its life" — Terrapin Station
What do you think "that' refers to in the passage below — Janus
There are people, including philosophers, who posit that multiple instances of things, whether temporal or spatial or both, can somehow be (not just conceptually, not just in name, etc.) identical in some regard--that is "exactly the same," numerically identical in some regard. — Terrapin Station
"Numerically identical": if you define that as meaning that an entity is absolutely unchanging from one moment to the next then you have defined away the possibility that any entity could be the same entity throughout its life, and that is pretty much trivially obvious. — Janus
Yes, but this is in response to your passage quoted above where you say that people claim that a thing's identity is dependent on it being numerically identical in the way you have defined it. — Janus
Who knows why you're arguing with me? :wink: — Terrapin Station
Saying that nominalism is about identicality just is saying that identity is, for nominalists, about identicality, — Janus
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