It seems nonsensical to me because I'm unable to make sense of it. What does it mean to say that no-thing is longer than no-thing (or that no philosopher is smarter than no philosopher)? — Luke
If nothing were possible then it leads to contradictions which in themselves are impossibilities. Ergo, nothing is impossible. — TheMadFool
charles ferraro
110
↪TheMadFool
I assure you, in the most personal way, ultimately, there will be nothing rather than something for each one of us. — charles ferraro
charles ferraro
111
↪Frank Apisa
I'm not doing anything, nature does it. I think it's pretty well empirically settled that we will all die at some point, isn't it? — charles ferraro
But we're talking about existence. A "set" of things is normally distinguished, and distinguishable, from a set of other things, or another thing. There is no set of things which lack existence, i.e. which don't have existence as a common quality. We don't, and can't, distinguish things which exist from "things" that don't exist. — Ciceronianus the White
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.