My question to you, is do you respect that there is such a thing as categorical boundaries? — Metaphysician Undercover
Categories 4a10
It seems most distinctive of substance that what is numerically one and the same is able to receive contraries. In no other case could one bring forward anything, numerically one, which is able to receive contraries.
For example, a colour which is numerically one and the same will not be black and white, nor will numerically one and the same action be bad and good; and similarly with everything else that is not substance.
A substance, however, numerically one and the same, is able to receive contraries. For example, an individual man—one and the same—becomes pale at one time and dark at another, and hot and cold, and bad and good.
What I say is that (metaphysical strength) categories are in fact boundaries. They are limit states. And they come in dialectical pairs. They are the opposing extremes of what could definitely be the case. — apokrisis
So if a metaphysical separation is possible - such as the discrete and the continuous - then the separation "exists" to the degree it is crisp ... or not-vague. — apokrisis
As an Aristotelean you should see how this is the same as Aristotle's own argument for substance as the ur-category - the argument from contrariety. — apokrisis
So I think you are fixed on thinking about categories in terms of contradiction where to get down to primal being, you have to apply contrariety as the deeper principle. — apokrisis
What would it mean to assign to a thing as a property, that it is in between discrete and continuous? — Metaphysician Undercover
When we assign to a substance, a property according to a category, we cannot say that the substance has contrary properties of that category, though it can at different times. The same substance can be at one time hot and at another time cold, but it cannot be both hot and cold at the same time. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems quite clear to me that you have this backwards. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now my point, Andrew M. Appeals to identity do not support the real existence of the apple. "Identity" claims, asserts, or presupposes existence, but what we need here is the principles by which such a claim of existence is justified. Then we can apply these principles in an attempt to justify the existence of the particle, as an identified existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
So here's the problem. The logical system at work here is set up with the premise that the existence of the object is justified if, or, "the object exists if", it has contextual relations with other objects (relativity). So any mathematics used will produce conclusions from this premise. If we desire to assume a "Cosmos", "universe", or "world", to objectify such relationships, and validate the existence of any particular object, that very premise, will not allow that the assumed "world" has existence except in relation to other worlds. — Metaphysician Undercover
Asking for justification for the existence of the apple is misplaced here. The thing on the table that we can publicly point to is what we mean when we talk about apples. And part of what we mean is that they exist. (As opposed, say, to our talk about unicorns - we can only point to pictures of unicorns.) — Andrew M
I agree that is the problem. A scientific theory such as QM is a description of the world, not a mere formalism. And it is testable on that basis. We can plug in particles (or, in principle, apples) and compare what the theory predicts with our subsequent observations. — Andrew M
Not sure why you think that significant. — tom
This is an issue because given any sufficiently sophisticated universal computing device there will be "truths" or what can be called manifest physical laws (through mathematics, e.g in Hilbert Space) that can't be proven to be true. — Question
This is essentially putting a thorn via Godel's Incompleteness Theorems into the validity of the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle. I don't know if you see the link there yet or if I haven't made the causal link sufficiently clear. — Question
If you want to take this line of reasoning as far as possible, then this conundrum extends all the way to ANY physical law, in that we can never be certain of it being true in all circumstances. — Question
So, the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle can never be known to be true. Thus, we don't know if we can simulate Everittian QM and know it is deterministic at the same time. — Question
But don't you agree that if you eat the apple, at some point it will no longer exist? And, don't you think that the apple came into existence at some time? Unless you can describe what marks the difference between the existence and the non-existence of the apple, why do you feel so confident that the apple exists? I mean, to me, it appears like you just take it for granted that the apple exists, without even knowing what it means to exist. If you knew what it means to exist you could probably tell me what constituted the apple coming into existence, and what constitutes the apple going out of existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, if we agree here, then let's go back and take a look at the Aristotelian principle, to see the difference. Instead of defining the existence of the object through its relations with other objects (relativity theory), or as I discussed with apokrisis, defining the object as being in a context, Aristotle defined a principle of existence (matter) which is inherent within the object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that these are two very distinct ways of defining existence? The way of modern physics is to define the object's existence through its relations to other objects. The way of Aristotelian physics is to assume that there is existence inherent within any object, regardless of its relationships with other objects, it has substance. Now let's consider the apple on the table. Which do you think is the truth concerning the existence of the apple? Do you think that the apple only has existence because it has relationships with other objects, the table etc., or do you think that there is something inherent within the apple itself, which constitutes its existence? — Metaphysician Undercover
Or am I running in circles in trying to state that all physical laws can be proven to be true — Question
I'm going to try and simplify my question to a more simple one pertaining as to whether Godel's Incompleteness Theorems negates the possibility of constructing a universal Turing machine that would be capable of computing all known physical laws. — Question
Or am I running in circles in trying to state that all physical laws can be proven to be true (computable or replicable?). — Question
So, then how can we know for certain that the MWI is actual/real/valid/.../true if the only practical means of verifying it is via trying to simulate the universe via the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle? — Question
I made a post about this issue over at physics forum. — Question
No, if something is computable (doesn't encounter the Halting problem), then it is real in some sense. If something can't be computed then that is indicative of a gap in understanding or that there are some things that are unintelligible. — Question
If all the laws of physics can be computed, then doesn't that presuppose that logic is at least synonymous or at least as important as physics is. Or rather that physics relies on the laws of logic? — Question
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