What sort of answer is this? — maplestreet
Of course a planet so hot that it rains gemstones is conceivable, I have a mental image of it right now. — maplestreet
And I could easily have a mental image/conception of a planet so hot that is rains gemstones any time before it was every noted by scientists. — maplestreet
It would seem hard to affirm this, since it seems hard to know the limits of conceivability. — maplestreet
Definitely not in agreement with the notion of physics determining what is possible or with the notion of self-consistency determining what exists either — maplestreet
o give you a better idea of what I take conceivability to mean, I interpret 'x is conceivable' to be more or less equivalent to 'x can be thought of' (even if for reasons of practicality, no one ever actually DOES think of it) — maplestreet
For the record, I don't think it's necessarily true, much less trivial at that, that all the typewriter-monkey-brains would eventually think up anything possible. — maplestreet
I guess I'm unclear on a lot of things you find important or relevant here. — maplestreet
Or equivalently, just because we can mash together all the words in the world in any sort of combination doesn't mean that there is something possible out there that is unexpressable in any sort of string of words... — maplestreet
Physics is either inaccurate, or is just a few specific types of perceptions. I dislike it on a whole as an enterprise, because it is often used to conclude far more than the actual perceptions it is based off could conclude themselves. — maplestreet
-J. B. S. HaldaneI have no doubt that in reality the future will be vastly more surprising than anything I can imagine. Now my own suspicion is that the Universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose.
More importantly, how can you prove that one cannot have a conception of a square circle? — maplestreet
1. Your definition of 'possibility' begs the question to say it is independent of persons. I see no reason to believe why the 'possibility' should be concerned with anything more than simply ways in which the world might exist. It also assumes a very objective sense of the term 'world'. But all I can assume is that the world is simply all of my perceptions. I have no evidence of anything independent of my perceptions. So it is possible to say that the ways in which the world might exist are simply which ways my perceptions are limited. — maplestreet
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