Okay, let me take this step-by-step:
1. First moment in time, there is just being (I don't claim you believe this, but you have to deny it).
2. For this moment in time, due to the lack of any laws or anything specific, it would be logically consistent that a banana spawns at coordinates x,y,z.
3. By the same logic, it would also be logically consistent that an apple spawns at coordinates x,y,z.
So, in the next moment in time, what happens? Do both spawn? Well, each spawning is separately consistent, but together, they are inconsistent. — Ø implies everything
If logic is necessary for survival then other animals require it as well. — Fooloso4
Then there are two logically consistent worlds - one in which an apple spawns and one in which a banana spawns. Both worlds exist because they are logically consistent. — litewave
Okay, now we are getting somewhere. This splitting of worlds; has it happened after sentience entered the picture? — Ø implies everything
If one simply answers that the original sentience is no longer present, and two new sentiences were born (both having access to the original sentience's memories, and experiencing their birth as continuous extension of the original sentience's experience), then you have answered the question. — Ø implies everything
I think you can put it that way. Another possibility might be that there were two worlds with two sentiences where everything was the same up to a moment when an apple appeared in one world and a banana in the other world. — litewave
Ravens are intelligent birds but they do not need nuts to survive. — Fooloso4
They do not need logic to eat. — Fooloso4
You have gotten way off topic. — Fooloso4
Absolute nothingness is impossible for us to comprehend. This marks a limit to human understanding. — Fooloso4
If logic is necessary for survival then other animals require it as well.
Isomorphism to reality is not necessary for survival either — Fooloso4
I responded to this by claiming that logic allows us to comprehend the implications (and really, lack thereof) of absolute nothingness. — Ø implies everything
All you've succeeded in doing is making the grammatical point that if there is something then there is not nothing. — Banno
Hume wrote in his Treaties, “If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.” — Corvus
I don't think that works, because it introduces the choice again. Since both worlds already existed separately, then they were two separate objects (despite their identicality). Thus, a paralogical choice is made between which of the two worlds gets a banana and which gets an apple. — Ø implies everything
The problem is that if logic is about something then it cannot be about nothing. — Fooloso4
You seem to be thinking of objects as changing in the passage of time but time is structurally (mathematically) a special kind of space, and space doesn't pass; it just exists. What appears in our experience as the future already exists, just like the past, and it exists the way it is and cannot be different, because that would constitute a logical inconsistency. — litewave
,... saying "absolute nothingness is impossible, therefore something existing is a metaphysical/logical necessity." — Ø implies everything
language on holiday. — Banno
For Wittgenstein, words don’t “mean things” just because of some magical quality they have.
Instead, words are tools which get their meaning from the context they’re used in. And the purpose we put them too. Meaning derives from this context. And, in particular, the context of what we want to do with them. In this situation, we decide to use this word for that purpose.
All philosophy, is in some crude sense, an argument about “what do you mean by the word X”? It’s about finding consistent and useful conceptual frameworks to try to make sense of the world.
What Wittgenstein reminds us is that many times when we get counter-intuitive results or insoluble problems in philosophy. It’s because we took words which got their meaning in one context “on holiday” to a different context where they don’t still have their original meaning given by the new context, but we expect them to be able to do useful work for us. Simply from some residual meaning they were carrying around with them.
But this is, for Wittgenstein, wrong. The word didn’t retain its original meaningfulness in the new context. And our belief that it did is now the cause of an insoluble problem. — Phil Jones
However, eternalism is itself very problematic, philosophically. How do you explain our changing experience? — Ø implies everything
Each temporal part od myself experiences only its moment but my whole temporal self somehow (subconsciously?) experiences itself as a whole too, which perhaps provides the impression that the different experiences at different moments belong to me as to a single object. — litewave
I don't have our experience of passing time figured out, honestly it seems like a major mindfuck. — litewave
the words are not the point — Ø implies everything
It has been a few months since that post has been written, so I was wondering about it myself, but it was for this point, I think.Hume wrote in his Treaties, “If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.”
— Corvus
I like the fragment, but I don't see how it connects with absolute nothingness being an empty concept (something I agree with too). — Lionino
In Hume's view, "Absolute Nothingness" is an empty concept, which denotes nothing. — Corvus
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