Three years later... another attempt to generate interest... — creativesoul
Apple pies consist - in part at least - of apples. Apple pies are existentially dependent upon apples. Apples are existentially dependent upon apple trees. When A is existentially dependent upon B and B is existentially dependent upon C, then A is existentially dependent upon C. Apple pies are existentially dependent upon apple trees. Apple pies cannot exist prior to apples or apple trees. — creativesoul
The outline proves itself very useful for evolutionarily amenable discussions about complex things; things that are comprised of a set of more basic irrevocable elemental constituents(simpler things). Water, for instance, or civilization, government, stories, language, meaning, thought, belief, logic, truth. concepts, linguistic frameworks, conceptual schemes, etc. — creativesoul
Three years later... another attempt to generate interest... — creativesoul
Let's see what happens when we 'plug in' something a bit more interesting/compelling.. — creativesoul
The OP seems fairly obvious. — Leontiskos
Your OP is very interesting, and I am surprised that it didn't get attention back then. I hope this thread gets more replies, because it deserves it. Although I am not an expert on logic, I am interested in your premises and conclusions. But it is obvious that I would probably not have the answers or debate you are looking for. Yet, I would make an attempt to keep up with the path or sense of your thread. — javi2541997
Apple pies consist - in part at least - of apples. Apple pies are existentially dependent upon apples. Apples are existentially dependent upon apple trees. When A is existentially dependent upon B and B is existentially dependent upon C, then A is existentially dependent upon C. Apple pies are existentially dependent upon apple trees. Apple pies cannot exist prior to apples or apple trees.
— creativesoul
I agree that B - or apples - is existentially dependent upon C - apple trees - but A - apple pies - is not existentially dependent upon C, because its existence depends on other factors.
p1 I have the apples but not the rest of the ingredients. So, apple pies are existentially dependent upon the latter - or other factors... — javi2541997
p2 I have all the ingredients, but I do not cook the apple pie. It depends existentially upon me, not B or C. — javi2541997
p3 Apple trees and apples are produced to make juice - for example - so it is not necessarily that their purpose for existing is the apple pie. — javi2541997
Is the order that emerges from the chaos of the very early universe causal or consequential? — Wayfarer
A second question is, exactly what do the purported simple elements comprise? — Wayfarer
So I'm afraid the 'sheer simplicity' of your outine might only be because it's simplistic. It's a very appealing intuitive image, that of simple elements giving rise to more complex phenomena through the evolutionary process, and arguably one of the reigning metaphors suggested by evolution. But there are a great many philosophical and scientific conundrums thrown up by it. — Wayfarer
I'm more concerned with current important events and practices in the macro world with a particular interest on how individual and collective thought and belief systems play a role. — creativesoul
Let's see what happens when we 'plug in' something a bit more interesting/compelling..
— creativesoul
What was the more interesting/compelling application you had in mind? — Leontiskos
Well we plainly have different notions of what that consists of, but never mind, I hope someone else has a contribution to make. — Wayfarer
I agree that apple pies are existentially dependent upon more than just apples, hence, the "- in part at least -" bit. There is more to a complex entity than just one singled out element, and the emergence of complex entities includes all of the elementary constituents comprising the entity. That is the hallmark of necessary elemental constituents; if we remove any particular one, what's left is not enough. No single one is both necessary and sufficient. — creativesoul
There are uncooked apple pies. — creativesoul
Apple pies are existentially dependent upon having the elements combined by some capable agent. However, not all complex entities are. — creativesoul
Apple trees existed prior to apple pies. Insert p1. Hence, apple trees cannot be existentially dependent upon apple pies. — creativesoul
Obvious? I think the OP has tricky premises which are interesting to discuss. I do not see it is so obvious that A - apple pie - is existentially dependent upon C - apple trees -, unless I am missing something 'obvious' in those premises... — javi2541997
I get the feeling that you're somehow offended? — creativesoul
2. That "elemental" parts are, in ways, more fundemental than wholes. The elemental parts must exist before the wholes, no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think you are mixing up sufficient and necessary conditions. This is how I read the OP: If A is existentially dependent upon B, then B is a necessary condition for A, but not (necessarily) a sufficient condition. Apples are necessary for apple pie, but they are not sufficient. — Leontiskos
You might be interested in Hegel's two Logics, which follow a somewhat similar methodology. But Hegel has the added criteria that we must start without any presuppositions, from a "blank slate." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I had the same thought, but when I re-read the OP I realized it doesn't commit itself to this. With the exception of p5, the OP is entirely negative: it is all "cannot". "Must exist prior" is no part of the OP. — Leontiskos
Not at all - just a bit exasperated at having misinterpreted the aim of the OP. — Wayfarer
I think we have to focus on what is needed to exist a priori to let apple pies exist. Because, despite apples and apple trees being key elements to their existence, we understand that they are not the only elements of an eventual apple pie. — javi2541997
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