...(if there are zero things to be had and you have all zero of them), — Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest, at some stage one has to suppose that the unwillingness to learn displayed here is wilful. When one reads:
Years of indoctrination in the wrong logic hasn't touched me. I hope it never will.
— god must be atheist
the only sensible thing to do is to walk away. — Banno
It’s weird, yeah, but that’s because we don’t usually talk about empty sets, because there’s almost no practical need to. — Pfhorrest
PfHorrest showed me a Venn diagram that was self-contradictory or nonsensical. When I told him that, he said, "forget the Venn diagram". — god must be atheist
My issue involves...
...(if there are zero things to be had and you have all zero of them),
— Pfhorrest
Saying "you have all zero of them" neglects the fact that in order to have all of anything requires that there first be something to have. Having all of something requires at least one thing. Zero things is not at least one thing. Zero things is nothing, and not in the same sense as when the term "nothing" is used as a means to pick out everything. — creativesoul
This just goes back to how having all of something just means there are none you don’t have. If there are zero things, and you have zero of them, then there are no things (out of those zero things in question) that you don’t have. You have zero out of zero, which is the most out of zero you could possibly have, i.e. all of it. — Pfhorrest
You have zero out of zero, which is the most out of zero you could possibly have, i.e. all of it.
It’s weird, yeah, but that’s because we don’t usually talk about empty sets, because there’s almost no practical need to.
You've talked of "the most" of both nothing and zero, as if there is a meaningful quantitative difference to be drawn between the most of nothing and the least of nothing; as if there is a meaningful quantitative difference to be drawn between the most of zero and the least of zero.
The most of zero is exactly the same as the least of zero. The most of nothing is exactly the same as the least of nothing. There is no distinction to be drawn here between the most of nothing(zero) and the least of nothing(zero) because they both have precisely the same numerical and/or quantitative value. — creativesoul
That's exactly the point. Out of a set of nothing, of zero things, there is no difference between the most of it and the least of it. — Pfhorrest
I said "grounded in". — Pfhorrest
We often use higher-level things without knowing what lower-level things they're grounded in: we were breeding animals long before we know what genes were, for example. — Pfhorrest
You miss the point of the analogy. — Pfhorrest
1. Zero (the mathematical 0) — TheMadFool
You'll have to explain this supposed equivocation between "zero" and "nothing", because I'm not seeing what you're talking about. — Pfhorrest
You're still neglecting the facts here.
In order to have all of anything, there must be something to have. Something is not equivalent to nothing. Nothing is not all of something. Nothing is not all of anything.
You say:
You have zero out of zero, which is the most out of zero you could possibly have, i.e. all of it.
"All of it"???
"The most out of zero"???
:brow:
All of IT is all of something, because "it" always refers to something. Something is not equivalent to nothing. Yet, that is precisely how you've been employing the term "nothing". I said much earlier that it looked like an equivocation fallacy to me. Now, it's certain. It's not just weird. It's incoherent at best, and utter nonsense at worst. Either way, it's an equivocation of the terms "zero" and "nothing". That much is certain.
All meaningful use of "the most" presupposes "the least". "The most" makes no sense whatsoever unless there is also "the least". These two notions are both existentially and semantically dependent upon one another.
This is just plain old common sense.
"The most" and "the least" are always in direct inverse proportion to one another when dividing a whole into two unequal portions. That comparison gains complexity when dividing something into more than two unequal proportions, but the meaning of both "the most" and "the least" are still - and always are - established by comparison between a plurality of shares/portions/etc.
We talk about "the most" and "the least" after, and only after, we have something being dividing into a plurality of unequal (pro)portions. Otherwise, both notions are rendered utterly meaningless. There is no possible referent for either, unless there are referents for both.
And yet...
You've talked of "the most" of both nothing and zero, as if there is a meaningful quantitative difference to be drawn between the most of nothing and the least of nothing; as if there is a meaningful quantitative difference to be drawn between the most of zero and the least of zero.
There is not, and such talk is meaningless nonsense.
The most of zero is exactly the same as the least of zero. The most of nothing is exactly the same as the least of nothing. There is no distinction to be drawn here between the most of nothing(zero) and the least of nothing(zero) because they both have precisely the same numerical and/or quantitative value. — creativesoul
Saying "you have all zero of them" neglects the fact that in order to have all of anything requires that there first be something to have. Having all of something requires at least one thing. Zero things is not at least one thing. Zero things is nothing, and not in the same sense as when the term "nothing" is used as a means to pick out everything. — creativesoul
The problem with "zero-nothing" is that, it always contains information in the sense that it is a limited possibility within all possibilities. If one considers limitations of what something can be information and considers that an existing thing then "zero-nothing" just means zero amount and not true nothingness. — Qmeri
What is the correct antonym for nothing?
Something OR Everything OR <insert other alternatives>? — TheMadFool
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