Everything and nothing is happening and not happening, everywhere and nowhere, all at once, now, never and forever.
When I hear "logic" assert the Principle of Identity, I say "prove it." Logic's response seems to be, it's "self-evident". That response reminds me of a frustrated parent saying "because I said so." — James Riley
Nevertheless, it leaves me feeling somewhat an imposter to continue without a proof. — James Riley
In response to a demand for proof, I've also heard that a negative cannot be proven. — James Riley
All the forgoing is a digression I'm trying to address in aid of another argument. I'm convinced that infinity must account for the absence of itself in order for it to be infinite. — James Riley
I think the failure of physicists to marry General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics is due to their stipulation to the Principles of Logic which they think are required to allow them to converse. — James Riley
Any help on the Principle of Identity or the Law of Contradiction would be appreciated. — James Riley
you might have made fun of me — James Riley
I assume that physicists abide the advice of tim wood, above, regarding tools and the proper use thereof. And I assume that abidance is the cause of their failure. — James Riley
more than a simple "gentleman's agreement" — James Riley
meet its burden of proof with more than a "because I said so." — James Riley
I see no harm in assigning a small cadre of physicists to look into it. After all, it seems to be their camp which is frustrated. While they are skipping along their investigative way forward, they might send a party back to make sure they didn’t get off the trail at the beginning. — James Riley
All the foregoing, and my tossing out the rules, had me generating what I thought were interesting opinions on particle physics, singularities, matter, dark matter, energy, dark energy, and time. But I’d sure like to nail down why I’m wrong about my foundation before I continue building on it. — James Riley
I've been beating my head against the wall reading Hegel for quite some time now... — James Riley
You've lost me a bit. Is this cadre going back to reevaluate the underlying assumptions in order to find why we can't reconcile relativity with quantum mechanics? — T Clark
Maybe I'm lost again. Those entities - matter, time, particles, etc. - are physical phenomena we have observed or at least are trying to observe. They are not logical entities. What rules are you throwing out again? — T Clark
If there is a group of smart people going backwards, instead forwards, to the very beginning, with the goal of launching an all out assault on the fundamental principles they thought were in stone, re-testing to make sure they are indeed in stone, and infallible, and that their comrades at the front, pushing forward with physics, are still on the right track, then I would sleep better at night. — James Riley
In conclusion, I just came here looking for a sock. — James Riley
Do you know enough about physics to know whether the evaluation you are discussing is already being done? Do you know what the fundamental principles underlying current physics are? I guess what it comes down to is, do you know enough about modern physics to be able to ask the question "What's the matter with modern physics?" — T Clark
Would you recognize a sock if they showed you one? — T Clark
It is the principles of logic that I question. If I am wrong on that, and physicists have found a sock, then yes, since it is a logic sock they would have found, I would recognize it. — James Riley
On the other hand, if physics or any other study for that matter, had disproved a fundamental principle of logic in pursuit of their own inquiries, I think it would have been Earth-shaking news that rocked the world. Again, I've not heard of it. I suspect I would not have to come here looking if it existed. — James Riley
I chose physics because their inability, but desire to marry two theories is, I think fundamentally important to philosophy. — James Riley
I don't see the fundamental issues in physics as logical errors. Somebody tell me I'm wrong. — T Clark
Physics doesn't prove or disprove logical principles. I don't think it can, by definition. It uses them as tools. — T Clark
I *think* that a principle of logical argument is that the burden of proof is upon the proponent. — James Riley
When I hear "logic" assert the Principle of Identity, I say "prove it." Logic's response seems to be, it's "self-evident". That response reminds me of a frustrated parent saying "because I said so." — James Riley
That is false. It is self-refuting. Note, that claim - that the burden of proof is upon the proponent - is itself something you (or someone) is proposing. And thus they have the burden of proof. — Bartricks
The basic principle of intellectual inquiry is that the burden of proof is on the one whose claim conflicts with appearances. It's known as the principle of phenomenal conservatism or sometimes the principle of credulity.
Note, it is not self-refuting, for it itself appears to be true. And thus we have reason to believe it is true and the burden of proof is on the person who thinks that principle is false. — Bartricks
It would seem the "principle of phenomenal conservatism" or the "principle of credulity, or what "appears to be true", while not self-refuting, are certainly no more authoritative than the even more fundamental and credible principles of identity or non-contradiction. — James Riley
If I sincerely say "it is raining, but nobody believes it is" then my statement is self-refuting, but it is not inconsistent. — Bartricks
How would the principle of non-contradiction possibly have more rational authority than the principle of phenomenal conservatism? — Bartricks
The law of noncontradiction applies to logic, not to reality. There is no restrictions in reality, but restrictions in logic. Logic is all about restrictions. — Yohan
a principle of logical argument is that the burden of proof is upon the proponent.
— James Riley
That is false. It is self-refuting. — Bartricks
The law of noncontradiction applies to logic, not to reality. There is no restrictions in reality, but restrictions in logic. Logic is all about restrictions. — Yohan
No, the proposition 'it is raining and no one believes it is raining' is self-refuting, but not inconsistent with truth. — Bartricks
to defend a view is to attempt to show that there is reason to believe it. — Bartricks
What reason do we have to think the law of non-contradiction is true save it appearing to be?
And if that is true, howdoes that not demonstrate that its truth is even more basic? — Bartricks
Well likewise the principle of phenomenal conservatism is more basic than the law of non-contradiction for we are not justified in believing the latter unless the former is true. — Bartricks
The basic principle of intellectual inquiry is that the burden of proof is on the one whose claim conflicts with appearances — Bartricks
is the failure to recognize the difference between reality and a representation of reality, i.e. logic, one of the logical errors you are talking about? — T Clark
Our evidence they are true is that they appear to be. That isn't a problem. — Bartricks
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.