It's a trick children discover early, they can keep asking why and get a new response. What criteria should terminate Why? or Why not? Is it possible to create universal criteria that answers the question why?. — Cheshire
Is it possible to create universal criteria that answers the question why?. — Cheshire
I guess it can only end with "I don't know" unless we know absolutely everything? — Down The Rabbit Hole
I guess it can only end with "I don't know" unless we know absolutely everything? — Down The Rabbit Hole
What criteria should terminate Why? — Cheshire
Is it possible to create universal criteria that answers the question why?. — Cheshire
We tweak/trash the axioms (hypotheses/theories) as and when they contradict empirical truths. These axioms (hypotheses/theories) would answer the question, "why?" with, It Just Is, exactly what axioms are. — TheMadFool
Genuinely, never knew this; So, Why? is like a human halting problem. What if we complicated it to every question being; "Why and Why not otherwise?".No, they can't tell where the car's sound is coming from, for it reflects from the environment. — PoeticUniverse
"Why and Why not otherwise?" — Cheshire
Intuitively, saying something 'just is' and could not have been otherwise seems problematic. Is it a matter of perspective relative to time?Because it already happened in a particular way, as per what was going on at the time. — PoeticUniverse
To say we can give a physical account of what took place but we can't completely explain the outcome when others were possible?I like "Because I said so," although the best answer is probably "There are no answers to the question "Why." We don't or can't know that. The only question we can answer is "How." — T Clark
Hitting a law of thought does please the intuition. It is what it is; but if that is the answer to every why then meaning or reason is something we impart on things. It has no existence without the human mind or perhaps a more complex explanation is in order. Is it always true that it just is? — Cheshire
It comes down to what "completely explain the outcome" means. Does it mean "how," or does it mean "why." I think how is all we can know. — T Clark
I would be willing to suppose that it is the same outside of mathematics; that the termination of Why? is most likely an unspoken assumption like reality can't exist in contradiction or the state of affairs was possible long enough to occur and did.Mathematics, as we all know, is Axiomatic. In other words, it just is! Axioms, by definition, are assumptions - deemed true sans proof. Whatever else mathematics is, infinite regress isn't one of its problems. — TheMadFool
I would be willing to suppose that it is the same outside of mathematics; that the termination of Why? is most likely an unspoken assumption like reality can't exist in contradiction or the state of affairs was possible long enough to occur and did. — Cheshire
Child: p v ~p (always true, tautology)
Adult: p (Aagrippa's trilemma)
Child: Why? — TheMadFool
Child In Addendum: It's never true in a superposition. If a thing is in all states it can't be p v ~p
Thanks for all the commentary, I intend to make sure I cover it all in the coming days. — Cheshire
In the case of human expression it seems leaving out why would miss most of the contextual information surrounding an event like a protest isn't explained by the manner of gathering but the reasons for it. It could be impossible to generalize successfully at this level. — Cheshire
It seems like mechanical questions are better suited to 'how'. How implies a terminating point into the state of affairs or corresponding facts that are the subject. How we settled on calling it blue might be a why question that tracks the origins of words.Good point. I was thinking more of subatomic particles, billiard balls, and galaxies. Is "the sky is blue because blue light scatters more than other wavelengths," how or why? — T Clark
It is certainly an awkward phrase, but people rhetorically ask how/why something would come from nothing. Which I think is in the process of being answered by this approach to physics that concentrates on using impossibilities as axioms. Really, at this point it starts digging into the problem of change. If everything is in flux how could something not happen? I think I got lost on my own detour. Thanks for the commentary.It doesn't make sense to ask "why did nothing cause it"! — Down The Rabbit Hole
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