Why would you be pretending that you don't know what murder refers to as a behavior and be pretending that we're just saying something about a name per se? — Terrapin Station
Have you not seen the science fiction movie out in the theaters right now called Arrival, or read the novella it's based on?
Anyway, the future having not occurred is just an epistemic situation for us. It's not because the future is radically different. It's because we haven't perceived it yet. Today isn't radically different than yesterday or five years ago. Those were all future days at one point. — Marchesk
If the frozen block interpretation of relativity is correct, then the future, past and present all exist the same, ontologically speaking. We just experience the illusion of time flowing. — Marchesk
I'm not pretending. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the whole disagreement I had with Sapientia revolved around the fact that I said "murder" is defined as being wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
If science fiction is believed as correct, then a lot of absurd consequences follow — Metaphysician Undercover
Frozen block-time comes from the physicist Brian Greene. I don't know whether he came up with the interpretation, or just wrote about it in one of his books. — Marchesk
I don't recall that you defined "objective", care to restate your definition? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not I who established the Celsius scale, and the convention which holds that necessity, so it's not I who "defined it that way". You advise me to reject that convention, but you haven't justified your advice. — Metaphysician Undercover
If your desire is to counter that convention, with a new proposal, that it's possible for the temperature of boiling water to be other than those covered by the Celsius convention, then go ahead put forth your proposal. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the way logic works though, through restrictions. You throw away all restrictions, leaving yourself with no logic. This leaves your claims completely illogical. Then you offer me advice? — Metaphysician Undercover
If we believe that nature is governed by laws then I would say we have very good reason to think it is actually impossible for those laws to suddenly change.
If we think that nature is not governed by laws but merely gratuitously happens to currently appear as though it is due to pure chance then I would say that we have no good reason to think that anything is either likely or unlikely. — John
That's a category error. Possibility is not an empirical state. One does not observe it to confirm or falsify it's presence. It's not a state. In this sense, it has no presence. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If nature is bound by laws, what imaginable (and obviously outside those laws) force could cause them to suddenly change? — John
It's possible that if I jump off a cliff, I will float to safety rather than fall to my death, but no, I'm not going to attempt it — Sapientia
At that, "'murder' is defined as being wrong" is actually incorrect. Use a dictionary for once. — Terrapin Station
If you have some idea of how murder is defined, then you're pretending if you say that you have no idea how to define it. — Terrapin Station
Frozen block-time comes from the physicist Brian Greene. I don't know whether he came up with the interpretation, or just wrote about it in one of his books. — Marchesk
I have further looked into it, and my current understanding is that the scale was originally based, in part, on the boiling point of water, but that this wasn't even represented on the scale as 100 degrees Celsius by the man himself, Anders Celsius. 100 degrees Celsius represented the freezing point of water. It wasn't until a year later that someone else, Jean-Pierre Christin, decided that 100 degrees Celsius would represent the boiling point of water. — Sapientia
And nowadays, by international agreement, the Celsius scale is defined by two different temperatures: absolute zero, and the triple point of Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW). Meaning that neither the melting nor boiling point of water under one standard atmosphere remains a defining point for the Celsius scale. — Sapientia
Your second sentence in the quote above is false, and so it cannot form part of a sound logical argument. Even if your third sentence logically follows from the second, this is trivial in light of the fact that your second sentence is false. — Sapientia
No, it may be possible that you would not fall or it may not be possible; the thing is, you don't know which, and it is the context of that lack of knowledge that makes it logically possible. So logical possibility is really vacuous in the sense that it lacks any contextuality other than that of ignorance. — John
You need to explain the differences and what relevance you think they might have to what I said if you want me to respond to this. — John
Newton's theory of gravity is wrong in the sense that it makes predictions that are demonstrably incorrect - for instance about the precession of the perihelion of Mercury. Under certain circumstances, Newton's theory is a good approximation.Wrong or incomplete? Newtonian gravity is incomplete, not wrong — Marchesk
No, it may be possible that you would not fall or it may not be possible — John
But one thing we mostly believe is that all of our current theories are wrong, and will be replaced by newer, better theories over time. — andrewk
You appear to have been thinking along the same lines as I was when I wrote that sentence. It started out as saying 'All of our current theories are wrong...', which would indeed have been an inference. But I had the same concern as you expressed: for all we know, there may be one or more of our theories that is exactly correct. So I changed it to 'we mostly believe', so that it became an observation about a belief rather than a claim about our theories.Is that inference an inductive one based on what has been observed to happen with some past scientific theories? — John
Newton's theory of gravity is wrong in the sense that it makes predictions that are demonstrably incorrect - for instance about the precession of the perihelion of Mercury. Under certain circumstances, Newton's theory is a good approximation. — andrewk
Did you verify what the triple point of VSMOW refers to? — Metaphysician Undercover
These measures were introduced to increase accuracy, the scale is still the same old centigrade scale, meaning one hundred degrees between the melting and boiling point of water. — Metaphysician Undercover
Judging from what you've said, you do throw away all restrictions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nothing can be impossible, not even contradiction represents impossibility for you. — Metaphysician Undercover
You claim to respect that contradiction represents impossibility, but in practise you change definitions at will, so contradiction may be avoided. — Metaphysician Undercover
You have no respect for contradiction in practise... — Metaphysician Undercover
Your claim is hollow... — Metaphysician Undercover
...which generally indicates dishonesty... — Metaphysician Undercover
So where are your restrictions if nothing is impossible? — Metaphysician Undercover
My second sentence is true. — Metaphysician Undercover
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