In other words there is nothing necessary in the universe necessarily because necessity is meaningless. Is that an accurate summary or am I missing something crucial? Also if you replace the word necessary with the word probability it doesn’t seem like a radical transformation. To use your example if you don’t eat you will die could also be replaced with the statement if you don’t eat you will probably die and the meaning is still basically similar. — Average
I don’t know how empiricism is connected to these concepts but I’m glad that I understood your intended meaning. — Average
I know nothing about computation but I think I get the idea. You need to perform an experiment to test a hypothesis. That’s basically what you’re saying unless I’ve misunderstood you. — Average
From Seth Lloyd, a few years ago: "the only way to figure out what's going to happen in a computing system is to go through the computation." — Jackson
According to Wiki,
— Joshs
don't care about wiki — Jackson
I ignore posts with wiki. — Jackson
The human eye has many fallible parts unfortunately. — TiredThinker
1. A practical "difficulty" arises when a holistic (general) Philosophical question is expected to be answered in terms of reductive Scientific mechanisms.Why is it so difficult to provide just one reasonable account or mechanism by which freewill can be realized, even if just a hypothetical one? Anyone?? — punos
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.