But such a relation would be outside of time, so we can dismiss that relation as unreal. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that the "____" is nothing, in an absolute sense? — Metaphysician Undercover
The only difference is that the ___ provides a higher degree of vagueness than the word. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here you are talking of complex negentropic objects and not the metaphysical generality of existence itself
&
But it is confusing to now talk to individuation (or particularisation, or contingent being) as "singularity" when singularity was instead some kind of claim about monism over dualism or triadicism (who knows what SX really thought he meant).
Think again about the reciprocal argument. Note the 1 that gets employed. We are saying in effect, whatever is the thing we have in mind, let's start by calling it a singular one, a pure standalone whole.
Now this singularity is ill-defined. And yet we can give it complete definition by saying whatever it is, it is the y that is the 1/x.
&
We call whatever the hell this is, this thing we call the singular X, now a mathematical 1. A unity or whole ... despite the fact that it is only the vaguest 1. It is the oneness of whatever the hell might be the case.
So that is where singularity enters the picture. And we can define X now as 1/Y ... Y being a second singular that feels most like the pure antithesis of X.
Weren't you talking, literally, about any thing at all? ... Again, I get what the whole 1/x thing for Being/Becoming etc, but I still haven't the foggiest how it's being applied to singular things. — csalisbury
So time has an outside! — apokrisis
We call whatever the hell this is, this thing we call the singular X, now a mathematical 1. A unity or whole ... despite the fact that it is only the vaguest 1. It is the oneness of whatever the hell might be the case.
So that is where singularity enters the picture. And we can define X now as 1/Y ... Y being a second singular that feels most like the pure antithesis of X.
But what prevents more general notions of relation that exist outside such contraints? — apokrisis
How can we speak of time with any counterfactal definiteness and particularity if we can offer no story on how it stands "other" to some suitable context? — apokrisis
Becoming is necessarily a relation because it involves a distinction. To become means something is in realationship to other things-- a boundary of object, change and presence-- even when it's not made explicit or sorted into specific catergory. The moment anything is, becoming is so. It's not a thing of existence, but an expression given by anything that exists. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Is the singular x everything - the totality, the cosmos, what is, the world etc. - or some particular thing? If it's everything, then what is this y which is a second singular which is the pure antithesis of everything taken as a whole? — csalisbury
You can say whatever you like, "square circle", or whatever, but unless you can support what you say, it's meaningless. So you can mention "notions of relations that exist outside such constraints" all you want, but until you give an example, or describe what you are talking about, you may as well be talking about square circles. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't know why you're obsessed with describing everything by referring to its "other". That's not how we describe things, we describe things by saying what the thing is. So we can say what time is, by describing a relation between past and future, and there is no need to say how it stands "other" to something else. — Metaphysician Undercover
Also, regarding Ollie. So yes, an intersection of the accidental and the necessary, sure. But, then (s)he isn't just the intersection of the Accidental and the Necessary. (S)he's precisely how the accidental and the necessary intersected in just this way. And, that's the singular. — csalisbury
Becoming is necessary a relation and also primary. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There's nothing intrinsically 'taller than' about Peter, but there is something intrinsically 'taller than' about the dyad <Peter, Paul>. Increasing the number of substances by one doesn't seem to change anything. — The Great Whatever
Weren't you talking, literally, about any thing at all? And wouldn't that include complex negentropic objects? & The problem with my discussion of singular objects is it that's not general enough [for what]? — csalisbury
... However, If repetition exists, it expresses at once a singularity opposed to the general, a universality opposed to the particular... — StreetlightX
It puts law into question, it denounces its nominal or general — StreetlightX
. In its essence, repetition refers to a singular power which differs in kind from generality, even when, in order to appear, it takes advantage of the artificial passage from one order of generality to another." — StreetlightX
On the contary, the OP is arguing becoming is necessarily a relation. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Peter being taller than Paul isn't, I would say, a property of the dyad <Peter, Paul>. Perhaps I would say that the dyad takes part in the relation 'taller than,'... — The Great Whatever
This is why I think relations are troublesome: either one erases their specificity by treating them as a property, or one ends up recoursing to some Platonic notion of Participation which just makes the whole thing mysterious to begin with. The upshot of treating relations as external to their terms, on the other hand, is to grant relations a kind of autonomy with respect to their terms, or rather, it reverses the relation: rather than the relation being defined by it's terms, terms themselves become defined by their relations. This is the link between relations and becoming: if understood on this model, a change in a relation would imply a change in the relata (rather than the other way around): "If relations are external to their terms, and do not depend on them, then the relations cannot change without one (or both) of the terms changing. A resembles B, Peter resembles Paul: [if] this relation is external to its terms, it is contained neither in the concept of Peter nor in the concept of Paul. If A ceases to resemble B, the relation has changed, but this means that the concept of A (or B) has changed as well. If properties belong to something solid, relations are far more fragile, and are inseparable from a perpetual becoming" (Dan Smith, The New). — StreetlightX
this 'taking part' or 'participating in' is itself a relation - and it's no good to account for a relation in terms of a relation. — StreetlightX
terms themselves become defined by their relations — StreetlightX
"If relations are external to their terms, and do not depend on them, then the relations cannot change without one (or both) of the terms changing. A resembles B, Peter resembles Paul: [if] this relation is external to its terms, it is contained neither in the concept of Peter nor in the concept of Paul. If A ceases to resemble B, the relation has changed, but this means that the concept of A (or B) has changed as well. If properties belong to something solid, relations are far more fragile, and are inseparable from a perpetual becoming — StreetlightX
Again, a property is a relation, just with an arity of 1 rather than 2, and everything said about it here could be said of properties as well. — The Great Whatever
Again, a property is a relation... — The Great Whatever
We can say as apo does, that the property is related to the object in some way, such as habituation, or we can say that the property is related to the subject by predication, depending on how you categorize "property" — Metaphysician Undercover
This is possible, but I'm not sure what it buys you. For example, one can 'Montague-lift' an individual, to turn it into what's called a 'generalized quantifier -' that is, the set of properties true of that individual (which includes its relations to other things - these being properties once you saturate the first term). In fact, the originator of the device, Richard Montague, proposed that the meaning of say a proper name is not the individual which it denotes, but rather the set of properties that individual bears.
You could also create a logic in which properties are primary and individuals are secondary, reversing the role of function and object we've had since Frege. But I think ultimately this is a terminological quibble and it's unclear to me how it genuinely rephrases the problem. The point is that properties and individuals interact in a certain functional way: whether one takes individuals or properties/relations as fundamental probably won't change that. — The Great Whatever
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