If a being does not exist then it cannot be necessary, because since its being depends on nothing outside itself it must exist or fail the criteria. — Janus
This confuses the necessary being with the necessity of the being. Two different animals. Which? (Or both?) — tim wood
This confuses the necessary being with the necessity of the being. Two different animals. Which? (Or both?)
— tim wood
My understanding is that the idea of necessary being as variously understood by Aristotle, the Scholastics and Spinoza is that a necessary being necessarily exists. — Janus
If the necessary being exists, then he must exist somewhere, somehow, in some way or capacity. To say that a being exists but not in any way, calls out at the least for a definition of existence such that a being could exist but not in any way. And were such a definition possible, then how could it connect to our ordinary existence? Existence, then, would appear to be about ways. — tim wood
Take your position: a numerical expression actually refers to a constituent of thought. This is problematic, since it cannot mean the constituent of my thought or your thought. — Kornelius
object
noun
/ˈɒbdʒɛkt,ˈɒbdʒɪkt/
1. a material thing that can be seen and touched.
"he was dragging a large object"
synonyms: thing, article, item, piece, device, gadget, entity, body; More
2. a person or thing to which a specified action or feeling is directed.
"disease became the object of investigation"
synonyms: target, butt, focus, recipient, victim
"he became the object of fierce criticism"
I think you are trying to redefine objectivity to suit a particular position, i.e., it must "pertain to objects" and you are refusing to admit that mathematical propositions involve objects. Even if they don't involve objects, there is no way mathematical propositions are not objective. They are paramount objectively true propositions. — Kornelius
:up: Great book. And that quotation you provide is directly on point.From a very interesting book, The Theological Origins of Modernity, Michael Allen Gillespie. — tim wood
It has little or nothing to do with "identification" as ↪Terrapin Station erroneously asserts (but as usual does not explain). — Janus
I'm saying that logical and arithmetical truths are not reliant on objective validation, that they're true a priori - something which still has a connection to the thread, even if tenuous! — Wayfarer
The definition of 'object' is: — Wayfarer
IF there is a necessary being. The whole point is that IF there is a necessary being then the attributes of that being must also be necessary. — Janus
Or we could put it this way: mathematical propositions are deductively proven, therefore objectively validated. — Kornelius
That is not a suitable definition for 'object' in philosophy at all. An object is whatever can be the semantic reference of a term. — Kornelius
And I'm saying that this usage amounts to a dead metaphor, that it's a consequence of the absorption of an empiricist or naturalistic point of view which then has un-acknowledged semantic and even metaphysical consequences. — Wayfarer
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