Nishitani's 'nothingness' is śūnyatā, 'luminous emptiness'. Not like Sartre's 'god-shaped hole'. — Wayfarer
Curious to know if you can recommend a book or philosopher who has assimilated the one void to the other. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Constructing fundamental mathematical objects out of sets is like constructing bricks out of houses. — A Seagull
Nothing can't exist. — Pfhorrest
Nothing can't exist. — Pfhorrest
[...]
So, what would the mandatory existent be like that just is, but has no direction put into it? — PoeticUniverse
a logical error — Pfhorrest
possible world — Pfhorrest
I like your thinking.
Nothing, for me, can be understood in terms of actuality, potentiality or possibility (but then, I do tend towards ‘glass half full’). When there is actually nothing, there is still the potential for something. Likewise, even when there evidently can be nothing, we could nevertheless imagine the possibility of something.
‘Absolute nothing’ is a concept that refers to an absence even of the possibility of anything. We can approach an understanding of this ‘absolute nothing’, but ultimately there is no way of fully understanding it as such.
Any concept of ‘nothing’ is relative at least to some possibility: being whatever is striving to understand it...a possible ‘something’ to which this ‘nothingness’ matters...for whom ‘nothing’ has meaning... — Possibility
Why is there something rather than nothing? Well, on a modal realist account, it's trivially because there exists no possible world at which there is no world, ... — Pfhorrest
... which translates back to normal modal language as saying that it is not possible for there to be nothing. Nothing can't exist. — Pfhorrest
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.