Observation and thinking are totally different mental operations. — Corvus
What defines us as Real existing beings, is the [x]ing. — ENOAH
Wrong.
The earliest known translation as "I am thinking, therefore I am" is from 1872 by Charles Porterfield Krauth (The Penn Monthly, Volume 3) — Lionino
Of course they are.Granting observing and thinking are different “operations”, do you think “thinking” and “being” are different operations? — Fire Ologist
All being has unique properties. When you exist, you are in some location i.e. a physical space on the earth a city or town or up on a hill, and you have mass and weight and shape. Your being can be described with the properties.Can you describe something that allows you to distinguish “thinking” from “being”? As in, “I think” distinct from “I am”? — Fire Ologist
How do you know it was an accurate translation? — Corvus
Anyway, "I am thinking" is no much different from "I think" in terms of not able to link to "I am" — Corvus
And thinking has objects and content — Corvus
What were the content and object of "Cogito"? — Corvus
It doesn't matter, Descartes' argument is about the very act of thinking, not about what the thought is about. — Lionino
Logically, semantically, and metaphysically Cogito doesn't make sense at all — Corvus
"I am thinking." loses its credibility and meaning, as soon as the utterer stopped thinking and the utterance "I think". It is only valid when he is thinking. When he ended the utterance, "therefore I am." has no ground or validity, because he is not thinking anymore. — Corvus
This is especially the case, if you accepted the nonsensical claim that "think" implies "existence". — Corvus
"Thinking" also doesn't exclude the possibility of being wrong. How many times have you thought something was the case, but found out it wasn't later on? — Corvus
It could have been "I think that I don't exist, therefore I am." or I think I doubt that I am, therefore I am, ...etc etc. — Corvus
It doesn't rule out these nonsense contradictory possibilities of implications in the expression. — Corvus
Hence it appears that your claim has no logical or theoretical ground for validity. There is no compelling arguments in your claims at all apart from the empty blind declarations that my points are wrong. — Corvus
Apart from the fact you refuse to understand what material implication is, what "therefore" means, and that you have basically zero knowledge of Descartes. — Lionino
All I can advise you is to read my previous posts repeatedly — Corvus
You're demanding other people read your words on repeat until they come to agree with you, while yourself showing a general unwillingness to try to read and understand the arguments presented to you. There's a very narcisstic quality to this approach. And hypocritical, of course. — flannel jesus
You shouldn't be saying it, you shouldn't even be saying it if you were right. It's so disgustingly self righteous and haughty. — flannel jesus
I would drop this; the nail that sticks out gets hammered down, if you catch my drift. There are plenty of other places your posts might be appreciated while you let this cool off, such as in my thread in which I responded to you. — ToothyMaw
Math and little more. At least in respect to generally or widely accepted notions and definitions of numeric constants and operations. — Outlander
Denying the antecent has nothing to do with social pressure, now :roll: — Lionino
Thank you.The shape p→q is invalid under a broad definition of invalid, yes. — Lionino
1. I think ⊃ I exist. (Cogito, assumption)
2. I think. (assumption)
3. ⊢ I exist. (1.2, MPP)
Thank you.I will concede that is not Descartes' argument. — Lionino
The argument is often taken from here:Descartes' argument itself is not an intuition, it is a full-fledged argument as I have shown and as can be verified in the books. — Lionino
I have convinced myself that there is absolutely nothing in the world, no sky, no earth, no minds, no bodies. Does it now follow that I too do not exist? No: if I convinced myself of something then I certainly existed. But there is a deceiver of supreme power and cunning who is deliberately and constantly deceiving me. In that case I too undoubtedly exist, if he is deceiving me; and let him deceive me as much as he can, he will never bring it about that I am nothing so long as I think that I am something. So after considering everything very thoroughly, I must finally conclude that this proposition, I am, I exist, is necessarily true whenever it is put forward by me or conceived in my mind — Second Meditation
Which is valid. But this just says that if some individual has a property, then there is an individual. It works not just for thinking but for being pink. For all x, if x is pink then there is something that is pink. This seems not to capture the quality of the Cogito.U(x)(Tx ⊃ ∃(y)(x=y))
Thinking? At last I have discovered it—thought; this alone is inseparable from me. I am, I exist—that is certain. But for how long? For as long as I am thinking. For it could be that were I totally to cease from thinking, I should totally cease to exist.
For it could be that were I totally to cease from thinking, I should totally cease to exist.
At last I have discovered it—thought; this alone is inseparable from me
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