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.
"For that matter, the fire that brings the water to a boil does not have the property of being at 100C." — 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. — Samuel Lacrampe
'Greater' here means that the effect cannot possess a property that was not present in its cause(s). — Samuel Lacrampe
I don't understand your position. Are you denying that there is energy transfer from the fire to the water? If yes, then what is the causal relationship between the two, if any? If no, then what is wrong with my premise? That energy is the common property between the cause and the effect.The fire underneath the boiling pot has neither the energy nor the temperature of the boiling water. It also does not possess the property of boiling. — SophistiCat
I don't understand your position. Are you denying that there is energy transfer from the fire to the water? If yes, then what is the causal relationship between the two, if any? If no, then what is wrong with my premise? That energy is the common property between the cause and the effect. — Samuel Lacrampe
I just caused that sentence to exist. It has the property of being composed of words; I am not composed of words. — 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. — Samuel Lacrampe
all the properties passed down from cause to effect always come down to either matter or energy — Samuel Lacrampe
Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
I think that indeed we can reduce the thesis "conservation of property" to "conservation of mass and energy" when it comes to the natural or material world.So does your thesis of "conservation of properties," if we're calling it that, come down to a restatement of the first law of thermodynamics (with a nod to the second), once you've reduced everything to matter and energy? — Srap Tasmaner
Information or knowledge is neither matter or energy, because it can be shared without being lost by the emitter. Thus information fits the "conservation of property" thesis in the sense that the receiver may not receive more than what is emitted, but it does not follow the laws of thermodynamics because the information is not merely transferred, but duplicated.You also mentioned genes, so there's an issue about information... — Srap Tasmaner
It changes my argument drastically if we only consider material things, but we can try it out for fun anyways:What does the argument look like stated in those terms? — Srap Tasmaner
natural or material things. — Samuel Lacrampe
I am not advocating materialism, but I also thought that naturalism and materialism were interchangeable words. What is the difference between the two? — Samuel Lacrampe
the Big Bang (assuming it is the first cause) was very massive and powerful. — Samuel Lacrampe
the natural world is all there is — Hugh Harris
Define 'natural world' — lambda
So, the rings wouldn't actually "mean" the age of the tree if an observer wasn't there to observe the rings?The rings in a tree stump mean something to an observer who is capable of interpreting it.
The reason meaning is fundamental is not because it is a constituent of objects, but because it is a constituent of experience. We attribute meaning, and explain and understand the world in terms of meaning. This is the case whether or not it exists in the sense that the objects of scientific analysis exist. In that sense it is epistemically prior to what we categorise as 'objectively real'. — Wayfarer
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