The logical meaning of something is "at least one". This definition of something is incomplete because if something means just "at least one" then all/everything, because it is indubitable at least one, is also something. Since logicians aren't prone to silly mistakes like this it's probably the case that the definition of something is at least one but not ALL and it's so obvious that it's left undeclared. — TheMadFool
What is the correct antonym for nothing? — TheMadFool
2. Not anything which I take to mean not everything — TheMadFool
The logical meaning of something is "at least one". This definition of something is incomplete because if something means just "at least one" then all/everything, because it is indubitable at least one, is also something — TheMadFool
2. Not anything which I take to mean not everything — TheMadFool
The logical meaning of everything/all is the entire collection of things which in our case is the universe itself — TheMadFool
This definition of something is incomplete because if something means just "at least one" then all/everything, because it is indubitable at least one, is also something. — TheMadFool
John: Can I eat the cake?
Jane: Yes, but not everything.
The fictitious conversation above makes something an antonym of everything. — TheMadFool
In systems analysis and design there is a concept where A might be said to be of type B but B is not in every case the same as A.
Logicians very often embrace a systems analysis and design approach. Its like when the wizard answers the question with "yes and no".
You can quantify analog systems (like a compact disc high sampling rate) with 1000s of data points to simulate a analog system within a digital system. — christian2017
None = not some = all not = not nall not
Some = not none = not all not = nall not
All = none not = not some not = not nall
Nall = not all = some not = not none not
Also look up DeMorgan duality for more on these kinds of relationships. — Pfhorrest
In what context? The usual construction for the antonym - hmm, def.: A word that has the exact opposite meaning of another word is its antonym.
That means you have to first know the meaning. The construction I had in mind is appending "not," as in, "not-nothing." But this is logic, not meaning itself. So, give a definition of "nothing" and I suspect it won't be too hard to find an antonym. The mistake, should there be one, might well lie in supposing that language is essentially univocal when in fact and in usage and in application it is not. That is, that the antonym that you select as appropriate for your context should apply to all contexts and usages, and that just ain't language. — tim wood
Furthermore, "at least one" is not something; "at least one" is a definition of "some" in syllogisms, and in syllogisms only. In syllogisms you don't use "something". — god must be atheist
Modern quantificational logic has chosen to focus instead on formal counterparts of the unary quantifiers “everything” and “something”, which may be written ∀x and ∃x, respectively. — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Why would that be a problem? I don't see anything "incomplete" here. — khaled
First, do such terms refer to anything actual.
I think that everything exists except thinghood itself.
Or else explain what is it about anything that makes it a thing rather than not. — Yohan
These are not the same.
If you asked me to hand you anything, you are not asking me to hand you everything. — Banno
The antonym for right doesn't change with context from wrong to something else and as far as I know this is true for all antonymical relationships. — TheMadFool
Really? How about left? Strong:weak, but how about mild? And so on. — tim wood
The antonym for right doesn't change with context from wrong to something else and as far as I know this is true for all antonymical relationships. — TheMadFool
“Something” just means “not nothing”; “everything” just means “nothing not”. — Pfhorrest
“Something” just means “not nothing”; “everything” just means “nothing not” — Pfhorrest
But then again, arguing about something that is nonsensical and horribly wrong, beats staring out the window at the great beyond on a Christmas day when you got no family, no friends, no nuffin', and you are too old to play with yourself, and too poor to afford any kind of recreational drugs. — god must be atheist
Point to you, well argued (imo). Which point I understand to be that an antonym is not a logical negation, but is instead a very particular form that takes in the meaning of the original term and opposes that meaning. That is, the original term must be meaningful in some particular and usually contextual sense.
But for present purpose you'd like to penetrate the surface of contextuality and look at the word itself - almost always an interesting exercise. And it would seem that something, nothing, everything are already implicitly negations. And we can all work through at leisure how that works with these words, noting here only that something and everything are joined in the sense of both "opposing" nothing.
But having completed the exercise, the words return to being "always already" in a context in use that determines their meaning, even as that meaning in usage is informed by the prior meaning of the word itself.
In sum, you've lassoed language, got your rope on it, made your point. But language itself won't be wrestled to ground and tied either up or down. Nature and strength of the beast. — tim wood
You’re arguing against something I didn’t say. Think of a Venn diagram. The left circle is “something”. The right circle is “not everything”. The slice of the left circle that’s not in the right is “everything” (not not everything). The slice of the right circle that’s not in the left is “nothing” (not something). The intersection in the middle is something but not everything, for which we don’t have a special word. — Pfhorrest
Only the fourth category you asked about involves empty sets. The rest involves any sets. — Pfhorrest
If I say "everything" then it doesn't contradict "at least one" right? Since something is defined as "at least one" then that means there's no difference between everything and something unless we qualify the defintion of something as "at least one but NOT all". — TheMadFool
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