Mathematics is one of those things social scientists came up with to keep people from getting bored with life in a modern society. So are science, and other branches of story telling. Things to aim for. Go to school, Get a degree. Get a Job. Don't get bored so soon. — Per Chance
What is the relation between the practicality of Base 10 and the necessity of The Law of Identity? — Monist
Can you explain why you gave the example of our counting system? I completely miss the point. — Monist
Instead of 'apple' try 'thing'. Saying "a thing" while pointing at the thing does not explain why the thing identical to the thing. It does not explain the relation between the thing and the thing. x=x does, it simply tells that the thing, is itself. The point is, why? — Monist
There is no such thing as a thing that has a relationship with itself. Things establish relationships with different things.Instead of 'apple' try 'thing'. Saying "a thing" while pointing at the thing does not explain why the thing identical to the thing. It does not explain the relation between the thing and the thing. x=x does, it simply tells that the thing, is itself. The point is, why? :-) — Monist
There is no such thing as a thing that has a relationship with itself. Things establish relationships with different things. — Harry Hindu
Identity is the relationship one thing bears only to itself.: — The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, 2nd Edition, CUP: 1995
Again I don't even understand the point of your question — Harry Hindu
I don't understand the difference between x and x=x. — Harry Hindu
In saying x, you are saying what it is. x=x is just redendant information and therefore useless. — Harry Hindu
Does identity exhaust what it is for the thing to be itself? Isn't an identity a label? A label is not the thing. Words are not the thing itself. Are you talking about the thing, or what we call it? Both are different things that have a relationship with each other.Why is identity necessary — Monist
If the value is unknown, how can you say they are equal? It seems that you need to know what x entails for the = to be useful. x does not equal x because both x's are on opposite sides (they occupy different space and are typed at different times on the screen (one is after the other) of the =, so I don't know what you mean for two different x's to be equal.Simple, x is an unknown value, x=x is the principle that it is a value. — Monist
Does identity exhaust what it is for the thing to be itself? Isn't an identity a label? A label is not the thing. Words are not the thing itself. Are you talking about the thing, or what we call it? Both are different things that have a relationship with each other. — Harry Hindu
Because if such an alternative existed, it wouldn't exist. — litewave
I see a conclusion, but no premises. How and why? — Monist
The Law of Identity states that a certain thing is identical to itself, and I ask why. — Monist
Why is identity necessary? — Monist
If I start counting the properties of Apple now.......yes, they do meet the properties of Apple. As far I could observe the properties of x, they are identical to the properties of x, therefore x=x is true. This is inductive reasoning which does not guarantee anything. — Monist
Apple=Banana is true, if the properties of apple and banana are completely identical. Certainly, they are not. So Apple≠Banana. It would explain why an apple couldn't be not an apple. But this logic is only true, if the properties of apple are identical to themselves. — Monist
"an apple is an apple", but why? I do not get why any certain thing called 'x', should be 'x'.
I know that, proving 1+1=2 is hard, whilst it is so simple(logically and practically), but I do not see anyone trying to prove x=x, because it may seem so simple and obvious, as it may look pure stupidity to question it, but that is absolutely my point. The simpler it gets, the complexer explaining it.
Can someone help me out please? — Monist
"an apple is an apple", but why? I do not get why any certain thing called 'x', should be 'x'.
I know that, proving 1+1=2 is hard, whilst it is so simple(logically and practically), but I do not see anyone trying to prove x=x, because it may seem so simple and obvious, as it may look pure stupidity to question it, but that is absolutely my point. The simpler it gets, the complexer explaining it.
Can someone help me out please? — Monist
An argument:
Px = x has all properties that x has
Ox = x doesn't have at least one of the properties x has
x = x the law of identity
~(x = x) the law of identity is false
1. Px
2. ~(x = x) > Ox
3. Ox > ~Px
4. ~(x = x).....assume for reductio ad absurdum
5. Ox.....2, 4 MP
6. ~Px.....3, 5 MP
7. Px & ~Px....1, 6 conj (contradiction)
8. x = x 4 to 7 reductio ad absurdum — TheMadFool
Awesome, but excuse me please, can you explain why Ox > ~Px ? — Monist
Why? Words are things. If x is a variable, then x can be anything, including a word.Any word can be counted as a label then, that perspective does not help much. — Monist
I doesn't make a difference. If you don't know what x is, then how can you say it is equal?And again, we are not talking about the x`s on your screen, which have different locations :-)
We are talking about a thing, being itself.
I should have used the word variable instead of unknown, in my language, we call that variable idea unknown. Semantic problems... — Monist
And absurd is okay — Monist
x=x being true, can be put in words as 'the necessity of identity.'Any word can be counted as a label then, that perspective does not help much.
— Monist
Why? Words are things. If x is a variable, then x can be anything, including a word. — Harry Hindu
G. It reminds me of a Greek tossing Socrates on the street :-) I wish I could have that certain statements, without knowing the answers :-)Some questions just aren't worth asking. — Harry Hindu
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