1. Something exists; which leads us to also be certain that
2. Something is aware of existence. — Possibility
The way I see it, the first two absolute, fundamental truths are:
1. Something exists; which leads us to also be certain that
2. Something is aware of existence. — Possibility
If fallibility is accepted as a possibility, then even "something exists" is not absolutely necessarily true, since one could just be failing to understand what those words even mean. You can never prove that you have evaluated your proofs correctly. — Qmeri
Or one can simply be mistaken in that evaluation. — Qmeri
it is incorrect that it is an evaluation it is still something, ... — leo
Something has to exist to be mistaken. — ovdtogt
If one is mistaken then one exists, if an evaluation is made then that evaluation exists, if that evaluation is incorrect it is still an evaluation, if the evaluation of the evaluation is incorrect it is still an evaluation, if it is incorrect that it is an evaluation it is still something, ... — leo
If fallibility is accepted as a possibility, then even "something exists" is not absolutely necessarily true, since one could just be failing to understand what those words even mean. You can never prove that you have evaluated your proofs correctly. — Qmeri
btw I don't think you are thinking about nothing since I do trust in logic, but I just don't think we can absolutely prove anything. — Qmeri
Yes it is very difficult to deny we exist.
— ovdtogt
Well, this is starting to repeat itself since I would counterargue
— Qmeri
You find it very difficult to accept philosophically that you exist? — ovdtogt
You find it very difficult to accept philosophically that you exist? — ovdtogt
1 and -1 together are zero. Zero is nothing but 1 and -1 are something. — ovdtogt
That is a misconception. It does not fluctuate between positive and negative Two particles (positive and negative) briefly come into being and disappear again.
"This allows the creation of particle-antiparticle pairs of virtual particles."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_fluctuation — ovdtogt
So it is impossible that you have just evaluated all of your experiences, thoughts, definitions of certainty and existence and proofs and everything else incorrectly and that you are just thinking things that don't represent anything? — Qmeri
Again, even if you evaluate everything incorrectly, there is still an evaluation occurring. If you think things that don’t represent anything, there are still things that are thought. However you twist it, there is something occurring. — leo
The way I see it, the first two absolute, fundamental truths are:
1. Something exists; which leads us to also be certain that
2. Something is aware of existence.
They could potentially be the same thing - depending on what it means to ‘exist’. — Possibility
Think of it this way: you are using logic against an argument where the whole point is that we can always fail at logic. Logical necessity of existence is a good logical necessity. But like with all logical conclusions - whether they are about a logical necessity or anything else - we could always just be mistaken. People make mistakes about logical necessities quite often. — Qmeri
But the particularity of “something exists” is that even if you believe you are mistaken about it, it still implies that “something exists” is true because in order for something to be mistaken something has to exist — leo
Note that when I say that “something exists” I’m not saying that “only one thing exists” but that “at least one thing exists”. So “at least two things exist” does not negate “at least one thing exists”, it is simply more precise, they are both true as long as we prove that at least two things exist. — leo
There could be several things existing completely in isolation from one another, in which case there would be no relation between them. However I would agree that we couldn’t know of these things if they were completely isolated away, so regarding this existence I agree to think of existing things as being related in some way. — leo
I wouldn’t appeal to the theory of relativity in the argument since it is based on several unproven assumptions, and here we are trying to find what we can be certain of regardless of what we assume. We can’t appeal to scientific theories which are based on induction which is unproven itself, so we’re left considering existence in the now.
…
It could be that a thing composed of parts remains unchanging as long as it is not influenced by another thing, and that when it is influenced only parts of the thing changes. So I don’t agree that a thing composed of parts necessarily always changes. — leo
It can be doubted, maybe existence came from nothing or maybe it was always there. From a limited point of view within existence we can’t say, and there is no point of view outside existence by definition. There is already something so we don’t see anything coming from nothing, even if something seems to come from nothing we can say that it came from something that exists but that we don’t see. But without seeing the whole of existence we don’t know, so it can’t be said to be a fundamental truth, it’s rather a working assumption. — leo
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