This paradox arises out of the ill-defined nature of borders and nations. Are there other things we can apply it to? It might be helpful in rigorously defining concepts. — Paralogism
This paradox arises out of the ill-defined nature of borders and nations. Are there other things we can apply it to? It might be helpful in rigorously defining concepts. — Paralogism
First, even if everyone agrees on it, borders aren't objective things, so they're not "real" in that sense. — Terrapin Station
Not really,However, when we make the claim that something exists, it seems evident that we ought to be able to point to that entity, to define it. — Paralogism
Are the boundaries (borders) of objects real, according to you? — Janus
If you say there are no real, as opposed to merely conceptual, boundaries to objects, then it would seem there are no real particulars either, — Janus
Without some criteria for favoring one over the other, we are unable to say that any real border exists at all. — Paralogism
An inability to determine the truth of a proposition x doesn't imply that x doesn't have a truth value. We just don't know the truth value. The border exists but we just don't know where it is. — TheMadFool
If only we could make war, racism, and everything bad disappear by disagreeing. — TheMadFool
Racism is a way of thinking about people. So if racist folks thought differently, racism would disappear. — Terrapin Station
When enough people agree on there existing a state, that state and it's borders do exist. Sometimes people have problems in understanding the existence of human institutions and think they wouldn't exist because they are just 'made up', 'invented' or 'agreed upon'.Borders I hope are objective and disagreeing on it wouldn't make it magically vanish. — TheMadFool
The OP made things disappear simply on the basis of disagreeing. This isn't possible I believe. If we disagreed on matters of taste, which I presume is subjective, that would be different. Borders I hope are objective and disagreeing on it wouldn't make it magically vanish. — TheMadFool
Are you using "objective" to denote agreement basically? — Terrapin Station
?As I understand it borders are physical. It would simply exist whether we agree or not. — TheMadFool
What would you say is the physical border there? — Terrapin Station
What is it about the boundaries of objects that is real according to you? I mean you say that what is real about the boundaries of objects is not at all conceptual, which I take you to mean is not mental. — Janus
Granting that a boundary is not something we merely think, it must be something we see or feel. — Janus
The boundary of a particle is in no way dependent on us perceiving it. — Terrapin Station
Ontological questions don't require epistemology, because, for example, ontology can simply present a possibility, and that possibility can be chosen while discarding other possibilities for a number of reasons including coherence, pragmatism, and so on, where we don't have to be making a knowledge claim to not only present but to also choose an ontological stance. So making sense of an ontological stance, understanding the ontological stance, and choosing an ontological stance do not require epistemology. — Terrapin Station
If it is an empirical claim it must be testable — Janus
What do you mean "partially"? — Janus
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