You have held up quantitative as equal to or better than qualitative. I don't think it can be. — Joe Mello
I didn't "bring up" anything, Smith. I recommended a book which expounds in great depth on my answer to the OP: knowledge. Clearly, as his subsequent posts exhibit, he incorrigibly lacks that "something greater". Once again, I've cast pearls before swine (re: this thread). :zip: — 180 Proof
Honestly, I may take you up on that sometime, because I've had a recent resurgence of oppositional emotion toward religion, to the point of hostility even. — Garrett Travers
I don't get why you think I've claimed "the OP is about knowledge" — 180 Proof
:up:Must reality fit our intuitions? — Janus
You're doing that Internet trolling thing. — Joe Mello
Why is that? Who else than God could have made the heavens and life in it. Or at least the stuff giving rise to it? There is no physical explanation for the universe. — EugeneW
I have no idea what the OP wants to discuss. It contains a variable ("something greater") and I proposed a value (knowledge). Joe rejected it. Okay; so I moved on when I read further as the variable became more and more vague woo-of-the-gaps. You believe he knows what he is talking about based on his vague logorrhea, good luck with that —> fly meet flypaper. :sweat: — 180 Proof
A gap in knowledge regarding material reality, does not imply knowledge of something else. That too requires evidence as an assertion. — Garrett Travers
I already posted that a greater thing has an extra element, a qualitatively extra element. — Joe Mello
You posted an example of more of the same element, which is simply quantitative. — Joe Mello
So your example failed to see the importance of quality, and replaced quality with quantity, making quantity equal to or better than quality. — Joe Mello
Look at your example and mine for what I’m saying, not a word I chose to use. — Joe Mello
Get your own logical metaphysical principle.
The one I gave to you is elegant, logical, and real, not some intellectual rambling that may or may not provide the answer to how life and thought came to be on a pile of rocks. — Joe Mello
There are a couple of posters here who readily appreciated the principle and welcomed it into their thinking like they were waiting for it.
These posters have not destroyed their imaginations from a bombardment of superficial opinionated thoughts shot out of ego and the worship of mathematics.
It doesn’t seem you’re ever going to appreciate anything other than what you have thought up yourself, even if another Einstein showed up. — Joe Mello
How can that be? How can it be both at the same time? — EugeneW
Yes. A particle is a particle. A wave is a wave. You can have waves of particles. All being one. But that's still a wave in which particles move. Or one particle. — EugeneW
What is the greater ingredient then? — javi2541997
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