Methinks it is axiomatic that everything is self-identical. No proof is required or possible -- hence all of the so-called proofs above simply assume the principle of identity holds for each of their premises. — Methinks
No proof is required or possible -- hence all of the so-called proofs above simply assume the principle of identity holds for each of their premises. — Methinks
To know that you are yourself — Mac
x=x being true, can be put in words as 'the necessity of identity.'
If that is understood, now; — Monist
I did not understand the underlying reason of your statement:''words are not the thing itself'', how did you come to the conclusion that I am talking about the words. And how did you relate that conclusion with the word 'identity', without considering the concept of identity. — Monist
Then, you tell me because I still don't understand the point of your question, "Why x=x?" It doesn't have to be a word we are talking about. What does anything have to do with the context here?Words are things. Agreed. x can be anything, including a word. Agreed. What has this to do with the context here? — Monist
How about in the very same post you replied to me?Where did you see that I am defending that x=x is true, I do not know. — Monist
x=x being true, can be put in words as 'the necessity of identity.'
If that is understood, now; — Monist
How is talking about a thing being itself different than just talking about the thing to understand what constitutes the thing. You seem to be hooked on this word, "being". What do you mean by, "being". How is it different than saying a thing has these particular attributes that we group under one word, - it's identity. Being Monist entails being conceived by their parents and being raised in the very place they were raised. What new knowledge have I acquired about Monist that I already didn't know? To say that Monist is being Monist doesn't give anyone anything useful to explore. x=x is simply redundancy and redundancies are not useful. It seems that identities are useful when talking about some thing without having to talk about all of its attributes. We talk about its attributes when we use the word that we have agreed upon that refers to all of those attributes.It is important to talk about a thing being itself, to understand what constitutes the being of a thing. For example; if identity is false for things, nothing may even exist. I try to catch what is going on, and why I do that is explained in my other reply. — Monist
Is it? Is the label that others put on you, part of what makes you you, or are you you prior to being labeled by others? It seems to me that identities are what one places on another. You are you prior to being identified and identification is useful when you don't want to spend time talking about attributes. Others can describe you. Their description is your attributes. Your identity is a word that refers to all of those attributes.You can talk about many things about the thing, one of them is their identity. — Monist
Rational thought can't be absurd, or else it's not rational.The absurdity of rational thought constituted on axioms is okay, but me questioning it is not... I prefer being free. — Monist
It appears that you are confusing biology with mathematics.Your are just saying it's bad philosophy, and yet it's the reason we can do math. If there were no property of identity, the human could exist as it does. This notion is so obvious in us but that's only because it was one of our earliest evolutionary adaptations. — Mac
Really, show me a excerpt from a book on evolution by natural selection that refers to the reflexive property of x=x.They are very related. And dependent in this case. — Mac
Babies take a long time to develop the awareness that they are themselves. — Mac
Distinction works. x=x is just a representation of that fact. — Mac
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