That would be the ship with all its "accidents"... — apokrisis
Wayfarer also would be identical with John, presumably, since both are instanciations of the type "human being". — Pierre-Normand
But which one does ''the ship of Theseus'' refer to? A or B
Imagine a person A. Over the course of time his entire being is replaced at the atomic level. — TheMadFool
Also, numerical identity is not a relation that holds between species (as opposed to genera) but rather between particulars (as opposed to universals). — Pierre-Normand
the venerable Nâgasena said to Milinda the king: 'You, Sire, have been brought up in great luxury, as beseems your noble birth. If you were to walk this dry weather on the hot and sandy ground, trampling under foot the gritty, gravelly grains of the hard sand, your feet would hurt you. And as your body would be in pain, your mind would be disturbed, and you would experience a sense of bodily suffering. How then did you come, on foot, or in a chariot?'
'I did not come, Sir, on foot. I came in a carriage.'
'Then if you came, Sire, in a carriage, explain to me what that is. Is it the pole that is the chariot?'
'I did not say that.'
'Is it the axle that is the chariot?'
'Certainly not.'
'Is it the wheels, or the framework, or the ropes, or the yoke, or the spokes of the wheels, or the goad, that are the chariot?'
And to all these he still answered no.
'Then is it all these parts of it that are the chariot?'
'No, Sir.'
'But is there anything outside them that is the chariot?'
And still he answered no.
'Then thus, ask as I may, I can discover no chariot. Chariot is a mere empty sound. What then is the chariot you say you came in? It is a falsehood that your Majesty has spoken, an untruth! There is no such thing as a chariot! You are king over all India, a mighty monarch. Of whom then are you afraid that you speak untruth? And he called upon the Yonakas and the brethren to witness, saying: 'Milinda the king here has said that he came by carriage. But when asked in that case to explain what the carriage was, he is unable to establish what he averred. Is it, forsooth, possible to approve him in that?'
When he had thus spoken the five hundred Yonakas shouted their applause, and said to the king: 'Now let your Majesty get out of that if you can!'
And Milinda the king replied to Nâgasena, and said: 'I have spoken no untruth, reverend Sir. It is on account of its having all these things--the pole, and the axle, the wheels, and the framework, the ropes, the yoke, the spokes, and the goad--that it comes under the generally understood term, the designation in common use, of "chariot."'
'Very good! Your Majesty has rightly grasped the meaning of "chariot." And just even so it is on account of all those things you questioned me about-- the thirty-two kinds of organic matter in a human body, and the five constituent elements of being--that I come under the generally understood term, the designation in common use, of "Nâgasena."
That is why, pragmatically, I am able to agree with Aletheist's point about identity, in the case of an artefact, being a matter of designation - because a ship is not a being, but a collection of parts, and as such, has no intrinsic identity. It is what it is, purely as a matter of designation. — Wayfarer
That is why, pragmatically, I am able to agree with Aletheist's point about identity, in the case of an artefact, being a matter of designation - because a ship is not a being, but a collection of parts, and as such, has no intrinsic identity. It is what it is, purely as a matter of designation. — Wayfarer
No, it is not tied to that. The requirement is that only one plank be replaced at a time. Those replacements could happen at the rate of one per nanosecond, or one per century. The speed is irrelevant. Just think about playing a video of that process in fast or slow motion. No matter what speed you play it at, it will never look the same as one in which the ship is exploded by a bomb and rebuilt from scratch.You seem to be saying that the ratio of old planks to new planks is relevant (
not missing say more than 1% of its components...
). But this relevance is tied to the notion of speed (time) of construction/destruction which you agreed is irrelevant. — The Mad Fool
We have some inescapable freedom (however constrained) and responsibility to make ourselves the sort of thing that we essentially are, and not just to build artifacts, or cognitively carve nature, in accordance with our given needs and interests. — Pierre-Normand
That would be to say that artifacts and inanimate objects (such as rocks, planets, storms and rivers) have merely nominal essences while only human beings (and possibly plants and non-rational animals) have real essences. — Pierre-Normand
Logically speaking, the identity of anything at all is constituted by its difference from everything else — John
So you could theoretically produce a blueprint for the ship which dicates its exact attributes and measurements, which can then be made by any builder. So in that sense, the 'real ship' is an idea that the built ship conforms to. — Wayfarer
I think the problem that this doesn't address is that every actual ship (or anything else, man-made or not) has a logical identity in the way which is expressed by the law of identity, as you actually noted. — John
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. — Cavacava
No, it is not tied to that. The requirement is that only one plank be replaced at a time. Those replacements could happen at the rate of one per nanosecond, or one per century. The speed is irrelevant. Just think about playing a video of that process in fast or slow motion. No matter what speed you play it at, it will never look the same as one in which the ship is exploded by a bomb and rebuilt from scratch. — andrewk
What is this 'logical identity' you keep referring to? — Wayfarer
The 'laws of thought' (of which the law of identity is one) are abstractions par excellence, basic to the structure of rational thought and language. — Wayfarer
As I said above, you need to think about this in the context of a process-based metaphysics. Your question is rooted in an object-based metaphysics, which is incompatible with it.If I were to follow your line of reasoning then I'd have to say both ships A and B are referents of "the ship of Theseus? Do you accept this conclusion? If you do then you need two different sets of criteria. One leading to the conclusion that the ship of Theseus is A and another leading to the conclusion the ship of Theseus is B. Wouldn't this be fallacious - specifically the fallacy of equivocation - because we're defining the term ''the ship of Theseus'' in two different ways? — TheMadFool
Is the structure of rational thought and language an abstraction? — John
it means that the identity of anything consists in its existential difference from everything else, and in its existence as a unique entity. — John
That still says nothing more than A = A, and that everything A is A because it is not not A. — Wayfarer
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
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