That there could have been a different universe is true; that this universe could have been different is not true. — Mww
That there could have been a different universe is true; that this universe could have been different is not true — Mww
"If Nixon had lost the election, he wouldn't have been disgraced" ?
Is that a meaningless statement? — frank
would say, no. I mean....he wasn’t disgraced because he won, which implies a meaning contained by the statement. Rather than meaningless, I’d say....moot. He didn’t lose, so, in the immortal words of the great James Hetfield....nothing else matters. — Mww
If it's not meaningless, it's either true or false. — frank
The fact of his disgrace is not determinable by his win or loss; it is possible he could have been disgraced even in losing, albeit under a different set of conditions, but disgraced nonetheless. — Mww
Physicalists can shrug-off the power of information, only because it seems Idealistic to them. But, in the Enformationism thesis, Generic Information exists in a variety of forms, both Ideal and Real. That's the holistic-monistic-duality of the BothAnd Principle. From a reductionist perspective, reality is Either/Or (real or unreal). But in the holistic view, Reality & Ideality are two sides of the same coin. This unconventional notion is based on the science of Information, which has found that Mind Stuff (the original meaning of Information) is also the essence of Energy & Matter.I kind of agree on emotional grounds, but I'd like to come up with an argument that is harder forphysicalism to simply shrug off. Where all of this started, for me, was with the conviction thatideas (not information) are real in their own right, and not because they're derived from or supersede on (neuro)physical matter. — Wayfarer
So, I have a deep confusion about why philosophy sees this disconnection between logical necessity and physical causation. — Wayfarer
It seems to me computer science relies on the connection between the two - microprocessors basically comprise chains of logic gates to effect physical outputs.
Yes - but physical causation doesn't have to be all powerful, does it? I'm the last person who would argue that it is - I accept the reality of karma, for instance, which overflows the horizons of physicalism - but within its range of applicability, physical causation and logical necessity seem to coincide, don't they? — Wayfarer
I kind of agree on emotional grounds, but I'd like to come up with an argument that is harder for physicalism to simply shrug off. — Wayfarer
Is information the fifth state of matter? :
In 2019, physicist Melvin Vopson of the University of Portsmouth proposed that information is equivalent to mass and energy, existing as a separate state of matter, a conjecture known as the mass-energy-information equivalence principle. — Gnomon
However, to say that space is both flat and curved is contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Or do you know a way to distinguish between some space which is flat, and some space which is curved? — Metaphysician Undercover
Cosmic microwave background (CMB) researchers using data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) have measured the angles of the longest triangle you can imagine. One corner is on Earth, and the other two are so far away that light has traveled about 13.3 billion years to reach us. Scientists found the angles of this triangle add up to 180°, to within small measurement uncertainties.
https://www.astronomy.com/magazine/ask-astro/2006/10/what-is-meant-by-the-term-flat-universe-how-is-this-flatness-supported-by-measurements-of-the-cosmic-microwave-background
This is inconsistent with language as we know it. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the problems with Pattee's proposal are numerous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Likewise we can say the universe could have been different without insisting that it wouldn't have been our universe. — frank
I don't think so. When we look back in time, as is the case with "could have been different", it is impossible that things could have been different without altering what is now. "Our universe" refers to what is the case now, so it is impossible that things in the past could have been different without making "our universe" now, a different universe. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actualism > Determinism > “could have-ism” (possiblism). One of these is not like the others.
— Mww
You're being kind of cryptic..... — frank
I think you're suggesting that you never think about what might have been and I think you probably do, so... — frank
To be flat is simply to have zero curvature. — apokrisis
That’s where we started. Draw a triangle and see if it indeed adds up to 180 degrees. — apokrisis
Plainly language evolved to switch behaviours on an off in a social setting. That is what communication boils down to. Getting folk to act in coordinated fashion. — apokrisis
The problem is that you failed to interpret the words correctly. That shows how human language indeed creates ample scope for ambiguity, disagreement, personal freedom, along with clarity, agreement and communal wisdom. — apokrisis
If that equation of immaterial Ideas with material Matter is true, then ghostly Ideas are just as "real" as physical objects. — Gnomon
Right, and to have zero curvature is to have no curvature at all, which is a direct contradiction of having curvature, being curved. — Metaphysician Undercover
And my point was, that the numbering system, by which the degrees are measured, is completely arbitrary. — Metaphysician Undercover
the fact that I can interpret the words incorrectly, is clear evidence — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you know what he tried to establish with his gloves in empty space? — Haglund
Wasn’t intending to be; just pointing out doctrinal and logical oppositions. — Mww
I think you're suggesting that you never think about what might have been and I think you probably do, so...
— frank
Sure I do, you’re correct. I just like to separate what can be imagined, from what I know. — Mww
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