You think that existing eternally and existing of necessity are the same. — Bartricks
However, I do think that if something is eternal, that it is absolutely necessary and not relatively necessary, — TheGreatArcanum
I have already created an entire method and system of philosophy using axioms such as these, as well as others. my conclusions prove mental monism true. It really is quite a spectacular system. I am almost ready to publish and am looking for editors. I’m also ready to present my work in a formalized setting. — TheGreatArcanum
You could always quote something from that link and discuss it. — creativesoul
It would benefit this community if after publication you'd kindly let us know the publisher, the publication, and the venue (in case it's a paper you present) and the corresponding details so we could follow the events. This of course is not a demand but a request. Thanks. — god must be atheist
and I told him that and eternal being is, by definition, a necessary being — TheGreatArcanum
If entity A is necessary for the existence of entity B (and B is not necessary for A), then does it necessarily follow that that entity A is also logically prior to entity B, and if entity A is logically prior to entity B, does that not also mean that it is temporally prior to entity B as well (in terms of the first possible occurrence of entity B), or does logical necessity not necessarily also imply temporal priority? — TheGreatArcanum
Yeah, I'm not keen on using "necessary" to discriminate between kinds of true statements. I prefer the way I set out in that OP. We may discuss the differences, or not. — creativesoul
You cannot have one without the other. Earlier you spoke of necessary truths didn't you? — creativesoul
I have created an entire system of philosophy — TheGreatArcanum
does logical necessity not necessarily also imply temporal priority — TheGreatArcanum
“….. It is very remarkable that we cannot perceive the possibility of a thing from the category alone, but must always have an intuition, by which to make evident the objective reality of the pure conception of the understanding….” — Mww
….then you haven’t created an entirely new system of philosophy at all, but instead, merely clothed an established transcendental philosophy in a different colored dress, insofar as the understanding, being conditioned by time alone, makes temporal priority explicit in the deduction of its categories. — Mww
Still…..cheers for diving into the deep end. Most folks don’t even realize there is one. — Mww
I'm not doubting that you have not laid it all out. I'm rejecting using the notion of "necessary" as a means to discriminate between kinds of true statements. — creativesoul
my method is grounded (….) in the axioms that mediate the categories of the mind. — TheGreatArcanum
I would say that intuition is conditioned by time alone, but also by memory, and also, that time and intuition are co-necessary. — TheGreatArcanum
That would be interesting. What does a propositional account of such axiom look like? In a tripartite logical human cognitive system, the categories are the mediator. Being pure conceptions themselves, it would seem self-destructive of the system for the pure mediator to be mediated. — Mww
I might caution, perhaps unnecessarily, that metaphysical reductionism can only go so far before it becomes logically absurd. — Mww
“but also by” negates “alone”. Minor self-contradiction, to be sure, but might warrant some re-consideration. — Mww
If you say intuition is conditioned by time alone, are you referring to the faculty of phenomenal representation in itself, without regard to sensibility? I ask because intuition of real physical objects by which our internal phenomena are possible, are also equally conditioned by space. — Mww
Time and intuition are co-necessary…..for what? For cognition in general, sure. Intuition, whether faculty or representation created by that faculty, without time is impossible for humans, but time is already given whether there be intuition or not. Your thesis should demonstrate how time is in fact a given, if it is, or, how the system would operate if it is not. — Mww
Finally….do you have a connection between the conception “memory” and the conception “consciousness”? — Mww
My main categories of the mind are memory, understanding, and intentionality — TheGreatArcanum
I would never claim that intuition is conditioned by time alone unless I’ve made a typo. — TheGreatArcanum
time is given whether or not there is intuition, if and only if the mind is not an eternally existing entity. I can show that the mind is eternally existing — TheGreatArcanum
….(time and intuition are) co-necessary for each other — TheGreatArcanum
my conception is that consciousness pertains to the logical relationships between the categories of the mind and the categories of sensation….. — TheGreatArcanum
…..while subjectivity, or the mind in itself, pertains to the internal relationships between the categories of the mind considered in themselves — TheGreatArcanum
In my parlance, and perhaps I should have made it explicit, the time I talk about is no more than the time I conceive as ground for something else also of mine that I can talk about. Hence, a mind considered as eternally existing is not a required antecedent for this conception of time. — Mww
Perhaps in your parlance, time is being treated as a completely self-subsisting something-or-other, then the argument could be made that kind of time needs an eternally existing mind for its possibility. Dunno how an eternally existing anything can be shown beyond logical conditions. And logical conditions alone have no warrant for ontological existences. — Mww
Ok, with qualifications, in that you assign categories differently than what I’m used to. Usually, the categories proper have no internal relation, at least to each other, which I take you to mean. — Mww
Anyway….this new philosophical method. How does it work? What’s the irreducible starting point? — Mww
I am using a variation of Kant’s definition of synthetic and analytic truths, one which is defined in terms of necessity and contingency and not containment and non-containment. — TheGreatArcanum
I think that the purely logical categories do share modal relationships with each other. — TheGreatArcanum
there is no method like mine — TheGreatArcanum
the law of identity (for example) (X=X) — TheGreatArcanum
that which exists is necessarily defined in relation to what it is not — TheGreatArcanum
Does it escape Quine's deconstruction of that distinction in Two Dogmas? — creativesoul
I’d agree modal categories share the relationship of time with each other, but that’s the extent of my agreement so far. Mostly because I don’t consider the categories in accordance with your thesis. — Mww
What method? There may be an irreducible first principle employed by the method, but first principles do not describe the method that uses it. — Mww
Precedence. As in ordered sequential priorities? So…Law of Ordered Sequential Priorities? Sounds an awful lot like plain ol’ cause and effect to me. Why isn’t it? — Mww
is straight outta Aristotle, unequivocally applicable to objects whether in concerto or in abstractia — Mww
you had to reason to your first principle. — Mww
If it’s new, it shouldn’t have anything to compare with, insofar as the new cancels the established, or at the very least, makes it obsolete. — Mww
for all? how can it be true for some and not for all? do you have any examples of things that can come into being independently of the things which are necessary for their existence? — TheGreatArcanum
If x is contingent upon y (e.g. motion is contingent upon space), it doesn’t mean that y causes x — TheGreatArcanum
the method is defined in relation to itself, in a circular fashion, but it isn’t fallacious — TheGreatArcanum
can something be is identical to itself…. — TheGreatArcanum
can something be is identical to itself and not possible, necessary, or contingent? — TheGreatArcanum
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