In fact, anything that can be said about our physical universe can be said as an if-then statement.
In fact, there’s no evidence that our physical universes consists of more than inter-related if-then statements. — Michael Ossipoff
In fact, there’s no evidence that our physical universes consists of more than inter-related if-then statements. — Michael Ossipoff
When we say, “If this, then that”, that statement would be just as true (within our universe’s context of a set of inter-related abstract if-then facts) if there is nothing to our universe other than just the if-then facts themselves. — Michael Ossipoff
there’s no evidence that our physical universes consists of more than inter-related if-then statements. — Michael Ossipoff
1) Is there not always a subset of if-then statements than can be used to derive all of them in any given context? — Jake Tarragon
2) Are mathematical truths perhaps exceptionally irreducible (to if ...thens)?
That would certainly give them a special place in existence - buttressing all of it in fact.
And the latter consequence is, per se, a situation that Tegmark believes in .
I don't think I have much to offer by way of expertise, or if I'm on the right wavelength, but I was thinking on the lines ofI'd like to hear more about it. — Michael Ossipoff
There’s no evidence that our physical universes consists of more than inter-related if-then statements. — Michael Ossipoff
Here I am, sitting in my chair. My fan is on. It's almost time for dinner. The sun is a bit low in the West. The chair arms are brown-stained wood, ash I think. It's smooth. The varnish and stain on the right side, which gets more use, is fading in some spots.
Please explain how this concrete expression of physical reality consists of interrelated if-then statements.
Someone could say that any proposition exists as a proposition, meaning only that it is a proposition. Then every false proposition exists, such as the proposition that circles (by their usual definition) have four sides, or the proposition that if all Slithytoves are purple, and Joe is a Slithytove, then Joe is yellow, or that the shortest distance between two points on a Euclidian plane is along a semicircle. — Michael Ossipoff
An inconsistent proposition is not true in any part of reality, but that means that it is a property that is not instantiated in any part of reality - a property without a thing it would be a property of - and so it is a property that is not a property - it is nothing. — litewave
What if you took an arbitrary statement A and formed a compound statement "if A then A"? It would be always true, a tautology. (same for "A if and only if A") What would that mean in your view?
By the way, it has been asked if there could have been a Nothing in which there weren't even any abstract facts.
But It's been pointed out that there couldn't have not been abstract facts, because then it would have been an abstract fact that there are no abstract facts. — Michael Ossipoff
Even if it's a tautology, and so it isn't useful or necessary to say, it's still one of the valid abstract facts.
...which maybe can be said about my answer, too.. — Michael Ossipoff
When we say, “If this, then that”, that statement would be just as true (within our universe’s context of a set of inter-related abstract if-then facts) if there is nothing to our universe other than just the if-then facts themselves.
There’s no need for the supposed “stuff”. No particular reason to believe in it. I suggest that the alleged “concretely” fundamentally existent “stuff” is as unnecessary an assumption as the old phlogiston. — Michael Ossipoff
I generally favor the position you seem to be promoting here. You say (in a reply to litewave) that you like to avoid the word 'exist', but despite the lack of consensus on its definition, you need to supply one of your own.There’s no need for the supposed “stuff”. No particular reason to believe in it. I suggest that the alleged “concretely” fundamentally existent “stuff” is as unnecessary an assumption as the old phlogiston.
The assertion of its fundamental existence is an unnecessary assumption, making Materialism, Physicalism, Naturalism lose, in a comparison by Ockham’s Principle of Parsimony. — Michael Ossipoff
But It's been pointed out that there couldn't have not been abstract facts, because then it would have been an abstract fact that there are no abstract facts. — Michael Ossipoff
When we say, “If this, then that”, that statement would be just as true (within our universe’s context of a set of inter-related abstract if-then facts) if there is nothing to our universe other than just the if-then facts themselves.
There’s no need for the supposed “stuff”. No particular reason to believe in it. I suggest that the alleged “concretely” fundamentally existent “stuff” is as unnecessary an assumption as the old phlogiston.
As much as I disdain materialism, I feel an obvious rejoinder to this claim is that one cannot drop an if-then statement on one's foot. Sure, if one's foot is in such and such a place and you drop a brick there, then you will suffer pain and injury. But that is not the consequence of an if-then statement; it's the consequence of a physical interaction.
And if there were nothing in our universe, then there would be no-one to entertain any kind of proposition.
What about "if I see a chair then it exists?" — Jake Tarragon
I’d like to add that, so far as I’m aware of, the words “Real”, and “Exist” aren’t metaphysically-defined. Better to not use them. Of, if I use them, it’s with the understanding that they don’t say anything definite or meaningful. You can define them as you like, and people do. — Michael Ossipoff
This conclusion [i.e. that Edinburgh is north of London], however, is met by the difficulty that the relation 'north of' does not seem to exist in the same sense in which Edinburgh and London exist. If we ask 'Where and when does this relation exist?' the answer must be 'Nowhere and nowhen'. There is no place or time where we can find the relation 'north of'. It does not exist in Edinburgh any more than in London, for it relates the two and is neutral as between them. Nor can we say that it exists at any particular time. Now everything that can be apprehended by the senses or by introspection exists at some particular time. Hence the relation 'north of' is radically different from such things. It is neither in space nor in time, neither material nor mental; yet it is something.
Of course I don’t claim to have proof that the metaphysics that I propose is the correct one. I suggest that there isn’t a definite provably correct metaphysics. It seems to me that Nagarjuna, a philosopher writing in India during late Roman times, said that. — Michael Ossipoff
I realize that there was a Classical Greek philosophy called “Skepticism”. Is it alright if I borrow its name for this metaphysics that I propose? I suggest that that name is justified by what I said in the paragraph before this one. — Michael Ossipoff
"This is the only abstract fact" .... as good as "nothing" perhaps? — Jake Tarragon
.... as good as "nothing" perhaps?
There can certainly be, as an abstract object, the statement "There are no abstract facts other than this one." — Michael Ossipoff
In any case, I have formed the view that the laws of logic, natural numbers, and many other things of that kind, are in the general class of things that are real but not existent, i.e. they don't exist as objects of perception, but are aspects of both thought and the world, and without which rational thought and language would not be possible. — Wayfarer
I think this statement is inconsistent, because it needs a logic that generates also other facts. For example, it uses relations of abstraction (instantiation) and other-than (difference/similarity), which generate a vast world of possibilities. — litewave
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