If that's the case, then as I explained above, premises 3 and 4 are false. Because they both assert that the state of nonexistence has a length which can be compared to a given measure. Therefore, your argument cannot even get off the ground.
By the way, do you think that when people say things like "Nothing tastes better than fettuccine alfredo", they are really saying something like "The state of nonexistence tastes better than fettuccine alfredo?" Because it seems quite clear to me that what we actually mean when we say this is something like "There exists no object which tastes better than fettuccine alfredo." — Alvin Capello
Nothing tastes better than fettuccine alfredo doesn't imply that nothing has a taste but the issue is not that nothing has a taste or not but if taste could be extended in terms of a measured value beyond that of fettuccine alfredo, what would lie in that region? Nothing, of course.
This makes it amply clear that you are indeed conflating the two senses of the term. As before, no object lies in the region, but it is not the case that the state of nonexistence lies in the region.
I’m not exactly sure if there is much more I can say on this issue, but I guess I can ask your opinion of the ham-sandwich argument from earlier. Do you not see how that argument equivocates the two senses of nothing, and how you are doing the exact same thing? — Alvin Capello
As I have said numerous times, nothing is tastier in the quantificational sense, but not the ontological sense.
Since we keep going in circles and you won’t answer my questions, it would not be productive to continue down this line of discussion — Alvin Capello
What do you mean? Take this universe (matter, energy in space-time) and begin with your idea of "relative" absence and suppose you have an anti-matter gun that annihilates matter. You shoot objects into oblivion one by one i.e. you cause relative absence of things. Ultimately, you would've destroyed everything after shooting yourself and programming the gun to take itself out. That which is left, after the gun self-destructs, is absolute nothing. — TheMadFool
You'd be left with a lot of energy, which isn't nothing. — Echarmion
I am not implying that we cannot necessarily define the concept of nothing but rather its contents. — Key
You're erroneously treating "nothing" as a rigid referrent.
Consider Propositions 3 and 4:
3. Nothing is longer than A
This means: For all x: x<=A
4. Nothing is shorter than C
This means: For all y: y>=C
y and x are two different variables, having no mathematical or logical relation between them. In your proof, you conflate them (in effect).
— Relativist
I'm examining a property, here length, which x and y can share. — TheMadFool
In this statement, "nothing" means there is no x > A. i.e. such a thing doesn't exist. Properties are associated with existents, but you're claiming a non-existing thing has properties.Ergo, we can combine statements 3 and 4 as:
5. Nothing is longer than A which is longer than C which in turn is longer than nothing.
Properties are associated with existents, but you're claiming a non-existing thing has properties. — Relativist
:clap:THE WHY MAY SIMPLY BE AN EXPRESSION OF THE ULTIMATE IN ANTHROPOMORPHISM — charles ferraro
THE WHY MAY SIMPLY BE AN EXPRESSION OF THE ULTIMATE IN ANTHROPOMORPHISM — charles ferraro
The question: "Why is there something rather than nothing?" presupposes, uncritically, that the principle of sufficient reason, according to which my intellect operates, must also necessarily be applicable, without exception, to everything that exists, including, myself. In other words, my intellect is compelled to assume that there must be a reason that explains why anything, including myself, exists.
WHICH MAY NOT BE SO. THE WHY MAY SIMPLY BE AN EXPRESSION OF THE ULTIMATE IN ANTHROPOMORPHISM — charles ferraro
Why is there something rather than nothing? was labeled as the fundamental question of metaphysics by Martin Heidegger. — TheMadFool
Nothing is eminently real to the dying! Do we really want to insist that what they are dreading is impossible? — charles ferraro
Be courteous! — charles ferraro
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