We philosophers are free to speculate from ignorance, because we practice Nescience (why?) instead of Science (what). :joke:We have no idea what's going on, do we? — TheMadFool
From behind the speculating spectacles of Nescience, it's clear to me. It's all EnFormAction all the time. :nerd:Then the question is what exactly is it that flows through the posited feedback loops? Unclear! — TheMadFool
Aquinas called the Omnipotence of God the "Primary Cause", — Gnomon
Is the mind in what is understood, or in the way in which it understands? — Pantagruel
I highly doubt that if you take even the most prestigious physicist today and sent him back in time, would be able to make such contributions as Aristotle or Descartes or Hume. — Manuel
Yes. That equation works, if you define "nothing" as "no-real-thing but all-ideal-possibilities". Of course, empirical scientists don't believe in Ideals, such as Plato's Forms. For example, pragmatic skeptics find "something-from-something" to be logical, and "nothing-comes-from-nothing" as a fact. And that's true in our imperfect real world. But philosophers are theorists, who are not bound by pragmatic reality. For example, Einstein could envision riding on a photon at light speed. So, just as we can imagine the concepts of Zero & Infinity --- which are never found in Reality, but are useful in the Ideal Realm of Mathematics --- the notions of unlimited Possibility and infinite Potential are serviceable only for hypothetical purposes. That's why we eventually have to make our liberal hypotheses conform to conservative reality.Nothing has infinite potentiality.
[Infinite potentiality = (God's) omnipotence!] — TheMadFool
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