Very interesting. I will stay away from it because its complexity makes it hard to convince.I think someone, maybe Alvin Plantinga, has argued that if God is possible then he must exist--that his existence in some possible world would be necessary in that world, and that if he's necessary in that possible world then he's necessary in all of them, and therefore he exists. It was something like that. — Srap Tasmaner
I think this is logically provable: Once again, let's start with the self-evident principle that 'nothing can come from nothing'. Therefore the event 'a thing begins to exist' must come from something. And a thing cannot cause itself into existence, because to cause something, one must first exist, which is self-contradictory. Therefore everything that begins to exist requires an external cause for its existence."Everything that begins to exist requires a cause for its existence" is just a variation on the Principle of Sufficient Reason, which I don't think we are obligated to accept as a dogma. — SophistiCat
In any case, your conclusion (that the cause must possess all properties of its effects) obviously does not follow. — SophistiCat
I tried to prove this here. Where do you see a flaw in the reasoning?But conservation of properties does not follow from this. — SophistiCat
let's provisionally accept that the statement 'no effect has a property not possessed by its cause' is not patently false, until either a clear exception arises, or a flaw is found in the reasoning of the original argument here. — Samuel Lacrampe
Using the law of noncontradiction, either a thing has a cause or not. This is true regardless if the thing is observable or not, because the law of noncontradiction is an absolute. — Samuel Lacrampe
Unless we have a means which would in principle decide the truth-value of a given statement, we do not have for it a notion of truth and falsity which would entitle us to say that it must be true or false.
Maybe you could give me an example of an object causing another to exist, so I know what you mean. — Srap Tasmaner
I summon Hume's principle that there are no innate ideas, that all conceptions must come from experience; and thus anything that we can conceive must exist at some point. This does not mean that just because I can imagine a unicorn, that unicorns exist, but that the basic components of the unicorn (colours, shapes, sounds, ...) must exist. — Samuel Lacrampe
I think this is logically provable: Once again, let's start with the self-evident principle that 'nothing can come from nothing'. — Samuel Lacrampe
I tried to prove this here. Where do you see a flaw in the reasoning? — Samuel Lacrampe
My position, from a non-religious point of view, is that supernaturalism is much more probabilistic than either form of naturalism. I base this on my studies of near death experiences, which is based on the consistent testimonial evidence of NDEs across a wide variety of religious and non-religious cultures; across a wide variety of age groups; and occurring across a wide variety of experiences that can bring on an NDE. I haven't seen any argument from a naturalistic point of view that can explain these experiences away. The testimonial evidence, I would contend, which is based on literally millions of accounts of these experiences is very difficult to dismiss, i.e., based on the numbers, variety, and consistency of the testimony.The position I propose to defend is weak naturalism. Conforming broadly to the standard of scientific inquiry known as methodological naturalism, it can be distinguished from the stronger position of philosophical naturalism, which claims categorically that the natural world is all there is. I'm also contending that naturalism is more probable than supernaturalism.
Weak naturalism: as far as we know, the natural world is all there is. I defend the claim that naturalism is more probable than supernaturalism... — Hugh Harris
- If something can exist, then it can be conceived of, because we can conceive all logical possibilities.
- If something can be conceived of, then it must exist. (as defended by Hume)
∴ If something can exist, then it must exist. — Samuel Lacrampe
I could hand you a dictionary/encyclopedia, but wouldn't you prefer to experience x for yourself? Why is a dictionary full of pictures better than one without? It's because words are simply scribbles that refer to x. Words are an indirect way, but better than nothing (like when you don't know the language of the person you are trying to share x with so you resort to showing pictures of x), of showing x. Even pictures only get you part of the way - something that words can then be used to supplement (but even then still don't get you all the way there to everything that entails x). To truly know x, requires an experience of x over time.Sure, Harry Hindu, well, you could just hand me a dictionary/encyclopedia, those have plenty good definitions.
But, there are no running elephants in dictionaries, for example. You might, however, show evidence of a stampede or whatever, and that's "real" in this sense at least:
x is real ⇔ x exists irrespective of anyone's definitions — jorndoe
(may or may not be a worthwhile thesis, don't know).
On the other hand, dictionaries excel at context-building, e.g. may state where elephants live or something. You won't find flying pink elephants in dictionaries either, by the way, but that didn't stop me from just mentioning them. :)
Anyway, I've just noticed there are some relations among ...
Invention Discovery
Definition Evidence
Quiddity Existence
... when it comes to epistemic claims.
Definitions are fine; my depreciation is just when some such x is defined only (possibly invented). — jorndoe
If something can exist, then it must exist.
This sounds like a self-contradiction: Do you (or Michael Dummett) have a means which would in principle decide the truth-value of that very statement? If not, then according to that statement, we do not have for it a notion of truth and falsity which would entitle us to say that it must be true or false.Unless we have a means which would in principle decide the truth-value of a given statement, we do not have for it a notion of truth and falsity which would entitle us to say that it must be true or false.
While I take your statement in consideration, I do not base truth on philosophers and their authority, but rather on philosophy. I trust you do the same.So you should at least be aware that there are philosophers who have qualms about drawing "logical" conclusions about matters we can in principle know nothing about. — Srap Tasmaner
Still an incorrect causal relationship. The words have a physical property (say pixels on the screen), and a meaning. The meaning of the words is caused by you directly, and they are also a property of you because you can think (i.e. you meant what you wrote). You are not composed of pixels, but the direct cause of the pixels is the computer, which has the ability to create these pixels.I just caused that sentence to exist. It has the property of being composed of words; I am not composed of words. — Srap Tasmaner
The fire emits the energy received by the water to boil, and the "boiling" effect is just the combination of the energy (caused by the fire) and the potential of water molecules to boil (not caused by the fire). And we know the energy received cannot be more than the energy emitted, due to the first law of thermodynamics.A boiling pot, for instance: neither the fire under the pot nor the water prior to the onset of boiling have the property of boiling. — SophistiCat
Indeed. The fire has a property of being greater than 100C, which agrees with my point that the cause(s) may be greater or equal to the effect.For that matter, the fire that brings the water to a boil does not have the property of being at 100C. — SophistiCat
Yep. I stand corrected. Upon further thinking, I too don't actually believe that all that exists can be conceived. Thanks for finding the flaw in that reasoning.The first premise is, at best, a rather optimistic statement about our cognitive faculties. But, even if it happens to be true, I wouldn't take it as a metaphysical first principle: the world has no obligation to be comprehensible to the human intellect. And if you take it definitionally (possibility is conceivability) then you are trivializing your conclusion. — SophistiCat
Does it make my reasoning invalid?This does not mean that just because I can imagine a unicorn, that unicorns exist, but that the basic components of the unicorn (colours, shapes, sounds, ...) must exist. — Samuel Lacrampe
If something can exist, then it must exist — Srap Tasmaner
I wonder if the universe were infinite, then wouldn't what is actually possible have to become actual at some point? — Cavacava
I'm a realist — Harry Hindu
I wonder if the universe were infinite, then wouldn't what is actually possible have to become actual at some point? — Cavacava
There have been scientists that say the opposite, that the brain despises mysteries, hence our natural tendency to solve them, or to figure things out. It seems to me that the only ones that like mysteries are the ones that don't want their beliefs, which they've made an emotional investment in, to be explained away.I tend towards realism (or anti-idealism) as well; alternatives just don't stack up.
But of course the conundrums you brought up still apply. Who doesn't like a good mystery? (Y) — jorndoe
But we don't seem to ever only have definitions to go by. The words, "flying pink elephants" refer to some mental image. Even if I had an flying pink Asian elephant in my mind when I say it, which then triggers a flying pink African elephant in your mind, we'd still both be thinking of flying pink elephants, that is unless I stated specifically, that it was an Asian elephant. This is why it is important that we get our definitions right so that we can be on the same page when talking about something.Anyway, my comment was just an attempt to point out a potential problem with some propositions.
Say, there's not much doubt that the Sun exists, and we may then come up with sufficient definitions thereof (converging on quiddity). Such definitions can be found in dictionaries and whatnot.
If, on the other hand, we only have definitions to go by, then things become more questionable, which was what I meant by defining quiddity (like flying pink elephants perhaps).
Come to think on it, Hume may actually have agreed.
If the potential problem holds up, then it would go towards naturalism of some sort. — jorndoe
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