So maybe I'm agreeing with you that time is not the important element. It seems to me that what is important is that only one component at a time is replaced - so that the ship is not missing say more than 1% of its components at any instant. — andrewk
Which of the two ships (A or B or both) is the ship of Theseus? — TheMadFool
When I say that 'time is not the important element', I mean the time it takes for the change process to be completed. We can't disregard the time dimension competely, because that would make it impossible to even refer to 'the ship afterwards' and 'the ship before' — andrewk
So maybe I'm agreeing with you that time is not the important element. It seems to me that what is important is that only one component at a time is replaced - so that the ship is not missing say more than 1% of its components at any instant. — andrewk
). But this relevance is tied to the notion of speed (time) of construction/destruction which you agreed is irrelevant.not missing say more than 1% of its components...
No one doubts that A is a referent of ''the ship of Theseus. — TheMadFool
To explain, imagine if ship A was torn down at one go while simultaneously replacing the parts to build ship B. Permit me to use the word ''instantaneous'' here. So, if the whole exercise was done instantaneously there would be no doubt that A is the ship of Theseus. Ship B is just a copy of A.
Therefore, the gradual replacement of ship A's parts counts as a relevant factor in the paradox. But is it truly relevant? — TheMadFool
'A is going to Thessalonika, B is going to Crete.'
I don't see any paradox here. — Wayfarer
The answer of course is that the ship
doesn’t exist, that “ship”
is an abstraction, a conception,
an imaginary tarp thrown
across the garden of the real.
The answer is that the cheap
peasantry of things toils all day
in the kingdom of language,
every ship like a casket
of words: bulkhead, transom,
mast steps. The answer
is to wake again to the banality
of things, to wade toward
the light inside the plasma
of ideas. But each plank
is woven from your mother’s
hair. The blade of each oar
contains the shadow of
a horse. The answer
is that the self is the glue between
the boards, the cartilage
that holds a world together,
that self is the wax in
the stenographer’s ears,
that there is nothing the mind
won’t sacrifice, each item
another goat tossed into
the lava of our needs.
The answer is that this is just
another poem about divorce,
about untombing the mattress
from the sofa, your body
laid out on the bones of the
double-jointed frame, about
separation, rebuilding, about
your daughter’s missing
teeth. Each time you visit
now you find her partially
replaced, more sturdily
jointed, the weathered joists
of her childhood being stripped
away. New voice. New hair.
The answer is to stand there
redrawing the constellation
of the word daughter in
your brain while she tries
to understand exactly who
you are, and breathes out
girl after girl into the entry-
way, a fog of strangers that
almost evaporates when
you say each other’s
names. Almost, but not quite.
Let it be enough. Already,
a third ship moves
quietly toward you in the night.
Continuing from there, we collect ALL the atoms that were replaced in person A and reconstitute it as another body in its original configuration. Wouldn't you say this is person A? Isn't ship A the ship of Theseus? — TheMadFool
No, as I explained, I don't agree. Why would you think that completely annihilating an object, and then completely rebuilding a copy of the original object, with the same parts, constitutes having the same object? — Metaphysician Undercover
So ship A becomes ship B, but remains "the ship of Theseus" because people continue to call it that, despite the replacement of all its planks. As apokrisis would say, echoing Bateson, for most people having one new plank - or a lot of new planks, or even all new planks if they are replaced gradually - is not a difference that makes a difference for the purpose of referring to the ship. — aletheist
What something is is not simply a question of its material constitution but of its relationship to other things as well. — darthbarracuda
This "paradox" simply illustrates how identity is not an intrinsic aspect of macro-scale objects; it is something that we assign to them in accordance with our purposes. — aletheist
Imagine a person A. Over the course of time his entire being is replaced at the atomic level. Would you not say that person A is, despite the dramatic change in his constitution, still the same person A we began with? Isn't ship B the ship of Theseus? — TheMadFool
What something is is not simply a question of its material constitution but of its relationship to other things as well. — darthbarracuda
This is a very important point. — aletheist
If they had been individually defective, then what kind of a ship could be built out putting them all back together? The fucking useless Ship of Theseus, perhaps? — John
I don't see a paradox, even in that case. In that case the unused ship rebuilt out of unattractive parts would be the fucking ugly Ship of Theseus. Even if it were used by a different crew it still wold not be called 'the Ship of Theseus'. If it replaced the Ship of Theseus then it would be the replica built out of old ugly parts that became the new Ship of Theseus for some stupid reason. — John
Let us imagine a scenario which hopefully will make you see my POV.
Ship A needs to be transported from city x to city y. However, it has to be done by land and also it becomes necessary to disassemble it for easier transport. These kind of situations are quite common. So nothing difficult in imagining it.
After the parts of ship A reach city y they are reassembled in the original exact configuration. In this case annihilation is present but the ship A hasn't lost its identity. There is nothing grossly wrong in holding such a belief. — TheMadFool
What other reason can you think of for the parts of a ship being replaced over time other than their dysfunctionality or lack of aesthetic appeal? — John
No, a ship reconstructed from discarded parts could never qualify as the original for two reasons; firstly because it would not replicate the physical condition the ship had been in at any point in its history, and secondly because those discarded parts had ceased to be part of the ship, and had remained so for varying periods, and had thus not participated in its entire history. — John
It's true that replacement parts did not participate in the entire history of the ship either but current parts had become part of the ship and remained so until the time when any substitution might be proposed.
The identity of the ship does not reside in any part, but in the whole structure, with its entire historical trajectory and facticity.
There is first the historical artifact -- some sort of a relic -- that we may think of as "the ship of Theseus" and which is such that we do care very much about its retaining at least some -- and maybe most -- of its original constituents. — Pierre-Normand
And then, secondly, there is the functional artifact -- the seafaring vessel -- that retains its identity through carrying forward its function (through maintenance and repair, etc.) — Pierre-Normand
This accounts rests on David Wiggins's thesis of the sortal dependence of identity, whereas the account earlier suggested by Wayfarer relies on the thesis of relative identity, defended by Peter Geach. — Pierre-Normand
It could come much closer to replicating the physical condition the ship originally been in than the continuously maintained ship does. — Pierre-Normand
Disassembling a piece of furniture for purpose of shipping, for instance, would amount to irreversibly destroying it, on your view. — Pierre-Normand
I would potentially include the ship's external relationship to *other* things (including ourselves, our pragmatic interests, and our conceptual skills) as part of the determination of the objects identity though time (or as part of the transcendental constitution of the object's form, to put it in a Kantian/Aristotelian way). — Pierre-Normand
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