A Realist         
         
James Riley         
         
James Riley         
         Why so? — Varde
There's a lot of what but no why, in your post. — Varde
180 Proof         
         We can know all impossible worlds a priori – (as a rule) they are worlds constituted by contradictions and/or which consist of objects with inconsistent predicates (re: members of the empty set).But can we know all the possible worlds a priori?
This actually seems impossible... — A Realist
Manuel         
         
A Realist         
         
180 Proof         
         Can a coin land on both heads or tails before I flip it?Can Schrodinger's cat be both dead and alive before I measure? — A Realist
No. "Schrödinger's Cat" is a thought-experiment, not a prediction (or retrodiction).Doesn't it constitute as a true contradiction?
:chin:... we are here because, given enough time, circumstances arise in which intelligent life will arise. — Manuel
A Realist         
         
180 Proof         
         
litewave         
         But can we know all the possible worlds a priori? — A Realist
James Riley         
         Can a coin land on both heads or tails before I flip it? — 180 Proof
180 Proof         
         
James Riley         
         I get it, JR, but as I haven't mentioned anything about a "breakdown" of the laws of physics or principles of logic I don't see how your satirical reply to that quote follows. — 180 Proof
Outlander         
         
hypericin         
         
hypericin         
         
hypericin         
         nullum sensum facit — jgill
180 Proof         
         That's not a description, just a label. "Omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent" are predicates you must define and describe what each entails in order to discern whether or not they are self-contradictory or inconsistent with one another and therefore whether or not an entity so predicated belongs to any 'possible world'. Btw, as Pascal suggests, no religion is founded on worshipping the tri-Omni "God of the philosophers".The OOO God! — Agent Smith
jgill         
         Either the state of the universe can be represented by a real or it cannot. — hypericin
Agent Smith         
         That's not a description, just a label. "Omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent" are predicates you must define and describe what each entails in order to discern whether or not they are self-contradictory or inconsistent with one another and therefore is an entity so predicated belongs to any 'possible world'. Btw, as Pascal suggests, no religion is founded on worshipping the tri-Omni "God of the philosophers". — 180 Proof
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