The implication is then that X does not equate to any value but its own. X=X. — Mac
However, when we formally define equality, we do have to explicitly postulate self-identity - it doesn't fall out of other postulates. — SophistiCat
Epistemology
...Spir referred to his philosophy as "critical philosophy". He sought to establish philosophy as the science of first principles, he held that the task of philosophy was to investigate immediate knowledge, show the delusion of empiricism, and present the true nature of things by strict statements of facts and logically controlled inference. This method led Spir to proclaim the principle of identity (or law of identity, A ≡ A) as the fundamental law of knowledge, which is opposed to the changing appearance of the empirical reality.
Ontology
For Spir the principle of identity is not only the fundamental law of knowledge, it is also an ontological principle, expression of the unconditioned essence of reality (Realität=Identität mit sich), which is opposed to the empirical reality (Wirklichkeit), which in turn is evolution (Geschehen). The principle of identity displays the essence of reality: only that which is identical to itself is real, the empirical world is ever-changing, therefore it is not real. Thus the empirical world has an illusory character, because phenomena are ever-changing, and empirical reality is unknowable.
Religion and morality
Religion, morality and philosophy, have for Spir the same theoretical foundation: the principle of identity, which is the characteristic of the supreme being, of the absolute, of God. God is not the creator deity of the universe and mankind, but man's true nature and the norm of all things, in general *. The moral and religious conscience live in the consciousness of the contrast between this norm (Realität) and empirical reality (Wirklichkeit). "There is a radical dualism between the empirical nature of man and his moral nature" and the awareness of this dualism is the sole true foundation of moral judgment.
The principle of identity displays the essence of reality: only that which is identical to itself is real, the empirical world is ever-changing, therefore it is not real. Thus the empirical world has an illusory character, because phenomena are ever-changing, and empirical reality is unknowable.
God is not the creator deity of the universe and mankind, but man's true nature and the norm of all things, in general
Only when we freeze time does the law really hold up. — ChatteringMonkey
He clearly wants to replace religion by a simplistic and childish exercise in infinite regress — alcontali
That is not the same as the simple equality/identity used in logic and math. — SophistiCat
__eq - Check for equality. This method is invoked when "myTable1 == myTable2" is evaluated, but only if both tables have the exact same metamethod for __eq. If the function returns nil or false, the result of the comparison is false; otherwise, the result is true. — Metatable Events, __eq section
Necessary truths are not ‘in time’. I think you're making the mistake of believing they're real in an objective sense, when they're actually transcendental or necessary truths - ‘true in all possible worlds’.
In matter-form dualism, the form is what makes particulars intelligible. It is also what brings order out of chaos, as matter in itself is unintelligible until it takes form. That is why, for classical dualism, the form or principle of a particular is what is real, as it is grasped intuitively by the intellect rather than mediated by sense. The form is also what a particular truly is, whereas this or that instance is accidental and temporal.
Don’t overlook the original impetus of philosophy was to identify an unchanging reality in the flux of experience. — Wayfarer
This all seems completely backwards to me. — ChatteringMonkey
Of course. You're modern. — Wayfarer
There is no unchanging reality is what our senses tell us. — ChatteringMonkey
I don't see how X=X represents how we identify things. This is essentially saying Mac=Mac. What does this tell me that I don't already know? If I were to ask, "What is Mac?" and you reply Mac=Mac, then is that all there is to Mac? Or does Mac=Human being + English speaker + X + Y, etc.? Identity, in the way you are using the term (that has nothing to do with the mathematical property of identity so I don't understand why you're using a different mathematical property to argue your point) is a way of taking all of your Xs, Ys and Zs and putting it under another symbol, "Mac", to make communicating all of your Xs, Ys and Zs more efficient.I don't think you're on the same page. The tautology: X=X comes from our biological capacity to grasp identity. It is a representation/model of one way in which humans understand and navigate the world. THE way really. — Mac
"an apple is an apple", but why?
I do not see anyone trying to prove x=x
Aren't axioms, self-evident assumptions? If so, when can we accept self-evident beliefs, just when they are practical? Do we have to analyse the relation between truth and practicality then?
The proposition is simply: A thing resembles itself. The question is, "what is the proof?"
The Law of Identity states that a certain thing is identical to itself...
...and I ask why
Yes, axioms are self-evident assumptions — Zelebg
Ideas are not real, precisely because they don't exist in time. That's what it means to be real, to exist in space and time. Only particulars exist, and universals are abstractions of those. They enables us to 'abstract away from reality' to gain more general applicable knowledge. But that knowledge is not reality itself. I mean, that's like saying the map is more real that the world it is based on. — ChatteringMonkey
Many axioms aren't self-evident in any fashion.
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