Logically in the classical sense (categorical, sentential, predicate logic), the key premise being the law of noncontradiction (LNC) can't be violated!
I'm concerned because there seems to be no deductive proof for The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology. — Agent Smith
This "law of noncontradiction" has essentially been disproven by the principle of quantum superposition. — Hermeticus
I'm concerned because there seems to be no deductive proof for The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology. — Agent Smith
I think there must be lots of propositions we don't have deductive proof for. The sun rose earlier today, for example. — Cuthbert
We are natural outcomes of the universe and its properties that we find ourselves. It's like asking how does anything exist in the way it does? Because that is how this universe works. Natural selection has selected organisms with opposable thumbs and large brains because this form of ours is more compatible with survival in this universe, or at least on this planet. What species has been able spread out like we have all over the globe and into space?Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
Then the LNC has both been proven and not proven. Remember that by dismissing the LNC you accept ALL contradictory ideas as both being true, not just one.This "law of noncontradiction" has essentially been disproven by the principle of quantum superposition. — Hermeticus
Remember that by dismissing the LNC you accept ALL contradictory ideas as both being true, not just one. — Harry Hindu
Now you're going to have to explain in what instances it doesn't apply and why. Examples would be nice.Disproving such a law does not mean that the opposite applies - merely that the law doesn't always apply.
By dismissing the LNC I accept that:
Some contradictory ideas can be both true.
Some contradictory ideas can be both false.
Some contradictory ideas cannot be true in the same sense at the same time. — Hermeticus
Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
Logically in the classical sense (categorical, sentential, predicate logic), the key premise being the law of noncontradiction (LNC) can't be violated! — Agent Smith
Can 1 equal, and not equal 1 at the same time? — Philosophim
According to one view in this thread, no, 1 cannot both equal and not equal 1. But one particle can both be and not be in the same place at the same time. That's because LNC applies to arithmetic but (as it happens) not to superposition. So the theory goes. — Cuthbert
quantum mechanics does not prove that a particle can exist in two places simultaneously, beyond the mathematical limitations it works with. In practice, testing, and application, a particle cannot exist in two places at once — Philosophim
I'm concerned because there seems to be no deductive proof for The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology. — Agent Smith
Because there isn't one. — tim wood
The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible — Good ol' Albert
There is no reason why the universe should, or should not make sense. — Philosophim
Remember that by dismissing the LNC you accept ALL contradictory ideas as both being true, not just one. — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that the more you try to prove - or anything else - the more energy and effort and care you have to take with definitions and understandings, as to what exactly they define and understand. That is, "local" to any problem you can have all the proof and understanding you want. Example: Because I have a book on my table, there is no hippopotamus in my den. Proof: the book is on my table and there are no hippopotami near. You don't like the proof? It works for me! So the philosopher, or the scientist, says, "It works for me." And that's it, until it doesn't. In short, we can be certain that it can be done and is done, depending on what we call certainty, or what exactly our ground is. And of course that subject to the same question.So, would I be right in saying that our, especially a philosopher's, attempt to make sense of it all is, in a sense, misguided as it is not at all certain that this can be done. — Agent Smith
The universe makes sense (logically).
Logically in the classical sense (categorical, sentential, predicate logic), the key premise being the law of noncontradiction (LNC) can't be violated!Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
That's a very good question! :smile:Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology: The universe makes sense (logically). — Agent Smith
It doesn't need to be mentioned but for the sake of clarity and arguendo,
The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology: The universe makes sense (logically).
Logically in the classical sense (categorical, sentential, predicate logic), the key premise being the law of noncontradiction (LNC) can't be violated!
I'm concerned because there seems to be no deductive proof for The Fundamental Principle of Epistemology.
Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
But one particle can both be and not be in the same place at the same time. That's because LNC applies to arithmetic but (as it happens) not to superposition. So the theory goes. — Cuthbert
A particle cannot be and not be at the same place at the same time. — AgentTangarine
So, would I be right in saying that our, especially a philosopher's, attempt to make sense of it all is, in a sense, misguided as it is not at all certain that this can be done. — Agent Smith
Why should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
:100:This "law of noncontradiction" has essentially been disproven by the principle of quantum superposition.
— Hermeticus
Then the LNC has both been proven and not proven. Remember that by dismissing the LNC you accept ALL contradictory ideas as both being true, not just one. — Harry Hindu
:fire:A more modest approach would be - "We haven't found a way to describe superposition without apparent contradiction. Therefore we haven't yet found a good way to describe superposition. But we're working on it." — Cuthbert
(1) The universe "makes sense" becauseWhy should the universe (1) make sense (2) to us? — Agent Smith
The universe does make sense to us. I'm not sure the question as to why it should make sense to us makes sense. If the universe didn't make sense to us we would not be able to live. which of course means we would not be able to ask the question as to why the universe should makes sense. — Janus
As to the LNC, if something was both black and white all over, that would be a contradiction. But we never see anything like that. Such things seem ontically impossible, and if that's true then the phenomenal world is a world of [...] — Janus
We must create one for ourselves. — Alkis Piskas
I don't think the universe should or should not make sense. — Tom Storm
@Harry Hindu aptly corrected @Hermeticus' self-refuting claim and thereby defended the OP.↪180 ProofWhat's the :100: for? Any relevance to the OP?
False. The universe doesn't "make sense" to bacterium and they survive ("exist") in exponentially greater magnitudes than all humans ever born.1. If the universe didn't make sense (to us), we wouldn't exist. — Agent Smith
False. The universe doesn't "make sense" to bacterium and they survive ("exist") in exponentially greater magnitudes than all humans ever born.
↪Agent Smith I more or less said as much in my previous post in reply to your two-part question from the OP. Not an "Anthropic Principle" in the least. — 180 Proof
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