Or be revealed as poetry that can't be combed into a formal system ?
Can we have a sine qua nons for an unbounded infinite. Yes, but there is only one. That would be "not X". If not X were true, then X would not follow. Anything more specific may be a sqn for a bounded infinite, but it cannot be a sqn for an unbounded infinite.
The same applies to the principle of regulation. Within X words, Y meaning, and Z contexts we are still bound by words, meaning, and context. Let simplify this further. W = { X, Y, and Z } all without "numbers" or explicit individual representations. W is still bound by X, Y, and Z. The only way for W to be unbounded is just "W".
Can thinking things within this limit form and use conclude the logic of the principle of regulation is necessary. Absolutely. But can this be concluded from "W" alone? No, I don't believe it can.
No, I'm not stating this. I'm stating an unbounded infinite is not a concept. The moment we create a concept within it, we are now within a bounded infinite. As such, there is only one unbounded infinite. Anytime any explicit infinite is proposed, it is by nature bounded.
You shouldn't need sqn's to prove the principle of regulation to logically thinking minds. And even if you do, perhaps its something you could come back and show later? Is the concept of a SQN within an unbounded infinite absolutely needed to continue your line of thought from the PoR proposal? If you just started the sentence with, "If we have the ability to derive, the principle of regulation logically arrives," would that hamper what you want to do? I feel you have so much more to say, and possibly introduce greater thoughts that I would hate to see stopped over focusing on what may be a technical, and perhaps unnecessary detail to show us what you have planned.
This right here is where I think you should go into detail. Prove not only to yourself, but that none of us can conclude anything differently. If you do this, I don't think anyone is going to need the infinite. How in the absence of derivation must we all necessarily have the principle of regulation? If I am not a being able to derivate, could I conclude I could not derivate?'
I asked my questions about time vis-a-vis PoR because I want to know who does PoR as sine qua non have as his neighbors? I was conjecturing that time is one of PoR's neighbors. As such, time does not prove PoR as sine qua non. Instead, time is one of PoR's neighbors, which is to say time & PoR are a matched set. One always implies the other.
I haven't forgotten your explanation to the effect that, by definition, two sine qua nons are mutually exclusive and thus cannot both belong to one set.
Some other candidates for neighbors of PoR might be superordinate & subordinate rules?
If PoR has no neighbors, how can it fulfill the role of sine qua non in total isolation?
When the temporality of an object is undecidable, is not the location of said object also undecidable?
My underlying premise here is that even a purely cognitive "object," holding a priori status, by force of causality (inter-relatedness) obtains location. In this example, location of sine qua non is first member of a sequence.
I'm starting to suspect that sine qua non, as absolute solitary, without neighbors covering peers & subordinates alike, in parallel to the singularity of the Big Bang, cries out for conceptual revamping that addresses the deeply problematical boundary ontology of origins.
I don't think we can say an "unbounded infinite of negations". That's really, a "bounded infinite of negations"
I can see an unbounded infinite negated, because an unbounded infinite is the base from which all bounded infinites are formed.
But if we say that all possible bounded infinites are negated, isn't that the same as stating an unbounded infinite is negated?
The best I can think of is that we must be able to make conceptualizations out of/within the unbounded infinite. Because if something could not, then nothing could create any sort of differentiation between bounded, and unbounded. Does this somehow fit within your PoR?
This again is where I have a hard time. Without a sqn, nothing can be. Which means without a sqn, concepts cannot be either. The way I read the essay and your explanation, it seems to imply without a sqn, the infinite, bounded or unbounded could not be.
Within the scope of the essay, I would disagree (albeit incredibly reasonable to assume). Yes, it is reasonable to infer that the procedure and proof of the essay is necessarily that of temporal relations (sequences in succession of one another). The important thing is that, as of now, I find such a conclusion (i.e., derivation or the principle of regulation is temporal) to only be found by importation of other axioms (or, in my terms, superordinate principles which are not apart of the standard terminology nor proof explicated in the essay. My point here is not to completely discourage your conclusion here, but only to expose that it is by means of other superordinate rules other than what is required (I would argue) to prove PoR to be true. In other words, it is entirely possible for one to accept PoR as true and immediately thereafter assert PoR is in time, is time, is sans time, neither in or outside of time, etc
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I am not entirely certain that a stable methodological approach can be establish to examine the properties or existence of PoR, but that is something I am currently contemplating. I find compelling arguments to assert it is aspatio-temporal (because there is no where which would reasonably pertain specifically to PoR and any derivation of its temporal sequences of derivation are simply via it), but, in contradistinction, I find it compelling to argue for its spatio-temporality (because being sans time & space seems merely to be a conceptualization under space and with time); however, I think both arguments are within the real of critique of derivation (as they are both inheriting from this PoR meta-derivation if you will) and, therefore, I think that, with respect to PoR itself, the best way to conceive of it for the essay is neither true nor false of the former nor the latter. It just simply seems inapplicable, but correct me if I am wrong.
Another member of TPF has in the past submitted a lengthy and sophisticated essay on a theory of everything (or roughly that), starting with an assumption every fact in the universe can be encoded for use in Turing machines. But doesn't explain how.
This essay might get a larger following if all this infinite stuff were in mathematically acceptable nomenclature. Just a thought.
It is true that 1=1 in the world defined by the definitions and rules of mathematics. The rest of us just accept this truth on blind faith based on the accomplishments and power of mathematics to be useful in the sciences.
I have brought up the pitfalls of 'true' in metaphysical reasoning. For metaphysics akin to mathematical reasoning, True is a binary value for evaluating dichotomies, any other use of truth is common but can be shown to be invalid or unsound. Since '1' is just like any other concept, it can not be true that '1' and '1' is anything other than '1'. Just as 'orange' and 'orange' are 'orange' and nothing else. However, instantiations of 'orange' are countable. 1 orange +1 orange = 2 oranges. And 1 apple +1 orange = 2 fruit
Indexical means 'relative to context of utterance' - like 'he' or 'here', as you say. The term 'existence' does not seem relative to context in that way. You go on to say that it has different senses, which is different from indexicality.
You may well be right. Hamlet exists as a character in a play and does not exist as a flesh and blood human being. So sure, there are different kinds of existence in that way. But to say for example that Hamlet exists but does not [open italics]actually[close italics] exist is confused and confusing.
You chose the cup in your hand as a straightforward example of something which exists, distinguishing it perhaps from the tiger in your hallway which (ex hypothesi) does not.
It's a useful example specifically because it won't let us wriggle away from its existence.
The problem is that your cup doesn't exist sans your consciousness and the cup in your dreams also does not exist sans your consciousness. We are left with the problem of distinguishing a cup in the hand from a dreamed cup. That is, a real cup from an imagined cup.
Similarly, the cup in your dreams also exists contextually to phenomena and for all I know it may exist as one infinite substance as well.
But at some time, possibly outside the philosophy laboratory, we are going to have to distinguish the cup of our dreams from the cup in our hands, the car that hit ours from the car that did not, the positive bank balance from the negative.
I mean, while we enjoy this delicious atmosphere of confusion we must still keep a concept of 'existence' tucked in our back pockets for use when we actually need it and not just for when we are playing at metaphysics. And that, I submit - the concepts tucked away for use when we are serious - is our metaphysics.
If the terms mean something like the interpretation I gave them, then I can get little sense out of this - except perhaps that if we fail to follow rules of logical inference, then we will fail to make logical inferences.
WRT = with respect to
Context ≅ Environment. In my thinking, environment suggests state of affairs, which suggests reality.
In your usage here, is individual… can transcend their own context an action symbolic or literal?
An essay is, at bottom, the logical language of argumentation
The stuff of logic is a continuum of conditionals that unfold sequentially, thus implying a temporal process
Although logical expressions can be conceptualized as atemporal mental objects, continuity is always empirical & temporal
If, as I interpret you to be saying with the above two claims, sine qua non is not of anything, and, moreover, is not at all contextual, then I get the impression the whereness of sine qua non is more mysterious than the position of an orbiting electron at any given moment. Is that the case?
I now have an impression of your essay’s essence via use of a helpful metaphor wherein your sine qua non holds status akin to the singularity that precedes the Big Bang.
If there’s even a particle of truth in application of my pre-Big Bang metaphor to your metaphysical claim, then hopefully I can proceed to an understanding you’re wrestling with the boundary ontology of origin.
Boundary Ontology of Origin – continuity via hyper-logic across the super-position of a non-localized QM event.
The above definition is my best-to-date exposition of a hairy beast of a concept that is one of my works-in-progress. I won’t elaborate it’s possible pertinence to your essay because that would entail an inappropriate digression from your work. I will say I expect it to inform some of my commentary upon your work henceforth.
Since you reject time_sine qua non, I think it imperative you state (If you have not done so) whether PoR_sine qua non is temporal, or atemporal.
I’ve been understanding regulation in the everyday sense of a transitive verb that controls & shapes an object under its influence. I don’t presently see this function as being atemporal.
Your above statement, speaking potentially, has a lot to say to the project to bring the rules of inference into congruence with QM.
If the above claim contains a particle of truth, then your sine qua non, as presently perceived by me, embodies something akin to the Original Utterance, itself, in turn, akin to the pre-Big Bang Singularity, itself, in turn, akin to God’s “Let there be light!”
I hope you’ll forgive the tincture of theism_Jungian psychology pooling into my assessment of your essay.
Might sine qua non, per your essay, be your Logos?
I entertain hope that your above claim expresses a/the crux of your essay's purpose.
PoR can never be excluded from context
Proving this logically renders PoR as sine qua non WRT context.
Does this imply the concomitant> Derivation can never be excluded from context.
Does this lead us to> Context contains at least (2) sine qua nons: PoR & Derivation
Please elaborate how regulate & modulate compare.
On this view, from the proposition that X exists we may not infer that X actually exists - it is not 'necessitous.' That's awkward. If you have a theory that your cup may not actually exist (having proposed it yourself as a straighforward example of something that uncontroversially does exist) then you've made a muddle.
To ask "What does it mean for something to exist?" is sensible enough. To give an answer that denies actual existence to the very thing you have chosen as an example of something that exists is confused.
It may be that your cup exists but that your cup is not the thing that I think it is. Just as, for example, stars exist but stars are not the things that the ancients thought they were. They may not even be the things that we think they are.
You think it's clear but I say needs an example or two. E.g. a 'subordinate rule' is 'Don't walk on the grass' and a 'superordinate rule' is 'Notices in this park are posted with authority of the Town Council'. 'Derivation' is 'If p, then q. p. Therefore q.' 'Derivation of derivation' is 'If 'if p, then q. p. Therefore q', then 'If p, then q. Not-q. Therefore not p'. 'Recursive' means, well, I don't have an example. A 'sine qua non' is for example. Examples are the baby-walkers of the mind.
What makes this a rule? What makes it superordinate?
It looks like a proposition. I have say it also looks false
I take 'indiscernible' to mean 'impossible to tell the difference between'. I have never been able to tell the difference between "1" and "1" or between 1 and 1. I can tell the difference between several instances of mentioning the number 1. I would happily buy the proposition that 1 is identical with 1 and that to mention "1" at the start of a sentence is different from mentioning it at the end. Is that what you mean?
If so, that seems OK, but it does not look like a rule. It looks like an observation helping to distinguish an entity from the mention of an entity.
bam! You hit the nail on the head! That's what I was trying to ask and you answered it very well I might add.
So now hmmmmm... So then whats the next essay? I'm dying to see how this all ties into the next part not that I'm smart enough to know how to do anything with it LOL but nonetheless I'll pretend like I am lol
why are they beyond the scope?
and that was the point that I was trying to use to compare is that you're giving parameters and limitations and within those parameters and limitations the tools appear to be real and do work in the manner that they need to because when we question them we're questioning them within the parameters you've set and when we do that they are rendered as real and usable and good but is that only because we're stuck within that narrow parameter?
If we were to expand further past would we find something else?
Now I'm by no means calling your essay limited stupid youthful barbaric or any of those other things by any means it's actually way more complex than my brain is used to dealing with but I was simply using the analogy in comparison of limitations not of complexity by any means.
But regardless you're still not getting the point that I'm trying to convey and I'm having hard time trying to figure out how to convey it so bear with me while I try to gather my thoughts
Like you were saying this entire essay in subsequent essays might work under the rules established in the original essay and everything might function perfectly fine but like you said how do we know that it's real beyond the confinements of the essay itself like you said if we take the essay and throw it away what are we left with how does it affect other things because although it might function the way it says it will function within the essay does it actually function that way in the real world or is it just a mirage
And kudos to Bob for being so patient with us he truly has a virtuous personality LOL it's like a single daycare worker working overtime by themself with a room full of 3-year-old brats that their parents forgot to pick up from school and somehow in the midst of this he remains calm if that ain't zin then I don't know what is LOL
Let's say there are two kids playing with their bicycles one kid does this cool stunt going really really fast totally impresses the other kid so when they go to school the other kid is bragging about his friend and how fast he was and says he's the fastest bicycle rider in the world now when other kids hear this they want to test him so they go out and have a little competition and he beats all of them
now does that mean he's the fastest bicycle in the world?
Likewise why aren't we questioning if that is in fact what is happening with the things presented in your original essay?
I believe you answered this and you replied to me saying that that was beyond the scope of this essay which is fine if that's the case but my question is why?
Me personally I tend not to waste my time with things that aren't as true as possibly can be and I don't find interest in exercising my brain with exercises that don't actually reflect a bigger picture usability and only work within the scope of their intended use because I feel like that can create bad habits and or give a person a false sense of reality kind of like playing video games too much makes you less sociable with people because it's not a good representation of actual reality likewise I only entertain things that are as real as can be
I'm not saying I'm judging your essay by any means in a negative way I understand people like to do mental exercises for various reasons and that's totally cool I was just stating my personal preference
So your cup exists but it does not really exist. It exists in a colloquial sense but not in an ontic sense.
The ontic sense is clarified by adding italicised 'really' to 'exists'. But this does not seem to add anything to the sense. I'm writing this post. Am I really writing this post? If I'm writing it, then I'm really writing it. If I'm really writing it, then I'm writing it. 'Really' is an intensifier, adding to emphasis, but not to sense.
Are they useful tools?
What did you create them in order to achieve?
Are they valid - do they exist?
What questions or problems are you trying to address - what task did you create the tools for?
You seem to be looking for validation that they are good, useful tools.
I am sorry that I can get little sense out of the one you emphasise most. The principle of regulation as formulated seems not to have a clear meaning.
I asked whether this principle can be denied or asserted with equal consequence. Suppose I say - hang on, the opposite is the case - what difficulties would that create for me, what absurdities or contradictions would it land me in?
With my scant knowledge of philosophy (or metaphysics) I can't tell whether Bob is out on the cutting edge or is being cleverly deceptive, ala Sokal affair. Has he taken simple ideas of generational derivations and convoluted them on purpose, or am I just failing to appreciate his insight?
I can't speak for Mayael but I can say how I understood his questions. By 'tools that actually exist' I understood the question to mean the same as I asked. Let's suppose that everything you wrote is the exact opposite of the truth. Let every sentence be negated. Let the principle of regulation be rejected and let sine qua nons go back to being what they were before. If we do that, what has been lost? What problems would that create for us? Is the whole thing a chimera, an airy nothing - a non-existent - a pretence? I am putting the matter more starkly - rudely - than Mayael - who in any case may not have had quite that in mind. So, for what it's worth.
By "a tool that is what it says it is" I understood to mean use of language with clear sense and purpose and without equivocation or confusion
'Ontic' means 'related to existence' and there is no special ontic sense of the word 'existence'. Ontic existence is a kind of existence only in the way that canine dogs are a variety of dog.
Ok so you have all of these things tools whatever you want to call them for simplistic speediness of referencing sake that way I don't have to elaborate on each individual one let's just call a tool like for instance your wrench is a "sine qua non"
Or any one of the other things you pointed out and explained
So with that said everybody's got their tool belt on that you laid out in detail ready for the next essay to arrive for us to then use our tool belt on to work out whatever that essay is talking about
But my question is even though we can use these tools do they actually exist in the sense that it's possible to even have a tool that is what it says it is?
The one that's on the top of my head is the tool called "sine qua non" is it even possible to know a sine qua non?
I know it's easy to say that something could be a sine qua non but are we even capable of knowing something like that can even exist there's so many variables in the world so many possibilities for things so much information that one person cannot know so then to say something like something is a
sine qua non seems to be stating something that is impossible to actually know if it really is a sine qua non or not
So my question is why don't we question if these tools can actually truly exist or if we're just pretending that they exist
Thanks. It's a matter of chains of encompassing superordinate categories with possible overlaps, I suppose. If so, I can see where you deal with infinities.
Same question: Why does metaphysics tend to have foundations that use ∞?
In short, your system/theory is based not on knowledge but on ignorance
Lets look at the true infinite as all possible numbers. Within that infinite, you can have bounded infinites. For example, all numbers that end on the tenth's place is a bounded infinite within the true infinite. A bind is a limit. To speak of an unbounded infinite, is to speak to something without limits.
Within the infinite, I can create many bound ways of comparing numbers. I can create bounded ways of adding, substracting, etc. But does the negation of one of these comparisons negate the true infinity of numbers? No. But if we think about numbers for a second, we realize they are bounds as well. Each "number" is a bounded concept. So we get rid of numbers as well, and we are finally left with true infinity.
When you say a sqn is needed, because without it an unbounded infinity is negated, I'm not sure that's possible.
Is there a superordinate to 1? I'm not sure.
An unbounded infinity is something we can never understand in total, but only in toto as well.
So when you declare a sqn is that without it, unbounded infinity cannot exist, it something that I'm not sure can ever be proven.
Being in bounded infinites is not a bad thing however, as I believe its the only way we can have concepts. Perhaps we can simply reform your idea into, "A sqn is what is needed for concepts to exist." Basically try to find what is logically necessary for concepts to occur.
Yes, we can prove this. To have a subordinate or superordinate concept, one must have two concepts. By the nature of a concept being a derivation, one must be formed before the other. If one cannot conceive of a single concept without the PoR, how does one conceive of the first concept?
One must conceive of that first concept prior to the second according to the PoR. That means one must be able to conceive of a concept without the PoR, because prior to the first concept, one has no concepts. If one can conceive of a concept prior to the PoR, than the PoR is not necessary to conceive of concepts. If this is the case, one could also conceive of a second concept that had no relation to the first concept. The ability to create concepts does not necessarily mean one will create derivated concepts, or use the PoR.
Thus we've shown that while the PoR is a way to view derivation itself, it is not necessary to hold or create concepts. Meaning that the PoR cannot be a sqn as the idea of "concepts" itself can still be conceived without it.
I fail to see why anyone in his right mind would want to use a highly controversial concept such as infinity as the bedrock of his/her thesis (on metaphysics)?
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P.S. A quick question: Why, o why ∞?
Nevertheless, from the posts I read, the OP gets points for being systematic, a quality that I respect (a lot). Bonam Fortunam OP.
Sorry, Bob. See if you can parallel what he did in a short paragraph. A clear example with less abstraction. Give a clear example of the principle of regulation as well. Or just ignore me and continue on - I would not take offense.
Tones-in-a-deep-freeze is more an expert in this area. I'm from the generation of naive set theory. Your use of infinite is a philosophical excursion beyond my experience.
Bob, I recommend you do the same.
My impression is that by reducing the process to what is 'true' you have already relinquished your quest in favor of strictly realist binary meta-possibilities.
For example, there is no truth in science! In science true is replaced by correct or more likely or most likely the case.
In most aspects of personal life the only truth is death (and not even life according to our faithful judges)
If this is so given that the process is not the same as its derivations, then you might limit yourself to closed objective identity and the PNC everywhere.
Since I am a radical metaphysical pluralist I hope I am wrong in this.
I define infinite as volume unspecifiable. This is a way of saying infinities cannot be made explicit. I believe this truth persists even in the instance of hierarchies of infinities.
Positing an infinite value (unspecifiable volume) within bounds is tricky because, in my opinion, territorial limit takes on a special meaning such that limit transforms into asymptote.
Perhaps curiously, an infinite value "warps" a (conceptual) boundary into a "curved space" that functions as an unspecified boundary in that it is a boundary that is never reached.
Is an unreachable boundary really a boundary?
In the instance of a bounded infinity, whose unspecifiable volume is quite free to expand forever, can we truthfully claim that it is contained?
It occurs to my visualization that a bounded infinity is a configuration wherein an unspecifiable volume has PoR as a neighbor who speaks another language and thus, there is no dialogue between the two. In this situation, can we truthfully say PoR acts as modulator of unspecifiable volume?
the inherent unspecifiability of an infinite volume implies its expansion towards a boundary is necessarily asymptotic.
To far greater extent than Philosophim, there's much I neither know nor understand, thus I might be egregiously wrong when I use my argument above to expand Philosophim's doubt to include bounded contexts.
Having said that, I admit I do, now, have the audacity to entertain nascent doubt about the PoR's ability to modulate a bounded infinity.
No, that wasn't my intention. What I was trying to note was there are an infinite number of things I could postulate with "unmarried man", that I could not postulate without "unmarried man"
If we disregard all possible synonyms for "unmarried man" in all possible contexts, would this be a sqn?
Of course, there are a potentially infinite number of derivations we can establish from "unmarried man" that we could not without the concept of "unmarried man". From the finite springs the infinite, though this infinite is bounded by the finite superordinate.
The problem I see you running into is when you note a "universal" infinite. Having worked with infinite before, its very easy to lose the real consequences of true infinity. Real infinity has no limit. Which means practically any formation within that infinite can also be negated.
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As noted, continuous data is still a bounded infinite. Without the context of dimension, height just dissolves into the true infinite. There are an infinite amount of potential dimensions that we can create within that true infinite.
To your point, I'm noting that the rule of regulation too would dissolve into the true infinite without certain bounded contexts. If a sqn must be true universally, then it must be true in the unbounded infinite.
This is still within your own bounded context. I take no objection to there existing a sqn within a bounded context. It is completely true that you thought everything you did, and could only come to one conclusion. But is that true of all contexts, of the true infinity?
There are some people who cannot visualize in their mind. As in, they cannot think of images like most people can. They close their eyes, and the world is completely dark for them. Think of the host of conclusions and thinking you've done with your ability to visualize in your head, and then try to imagine the conclusions one can or cannot make if they cannot visualize.
In the same manner, a personal conclusion of thought within your own bounded context does not prove a universal context. In the same manner, we can imagine a creature that can think without the rule of regulation. Its difficult for those of us who use the rule of regulation on a daily basis to imagine this, but we already know that some things think differently from ourselves. This is what I was noting earlier. If you personally think using the rule of regulation, and nothing else, then yes, its a sqn for you. But that doesn't mean its a sqn for something that does not think like you do.
First, there's the idea that we're assuming our own basis of thought applies to all other thinking things. We cannot conclude that just because you and I think in the terms of the principle of regulation, that every other thinking thing does as well. All it takes is one thinking thing that does not, and then we don't have a universal sqn anymore. I'm not saying you can't come up with a universal sqn, but it must be provably true within the true infinite. I don't see the PoR doing that currently.
Second, we can speculate that a plant, or any other creature thinks with the PoR, but we have to prove that. The burden of proof is not on me within the true infinite, the burden of proof is on yourself. And even if we prove that, we must prove it for all plants of that type, then all plants, all creatures, etc. The PoR is not something provable, because it is a bounded idea that relies on certain bounded infinites thinking in a particular manner.
That being said, it may be that there are things I still don't understand, so please correct me if I'm in error. I also think the PoR is a fine principle within bounded contexts, and see nothing overtly wrong with it within these bounded contexts. I just don't think at this time that you've provided what is needed to show it is true universally, and not just within the contexts you've been thinking in.
Could you clarify with an example here? When you mean infinite, do you mean "All possible derivations in total/tota"? To compare again to the bachelor, we could derive another term called a bachelum, which is an unmarried man that is about to be married. Again, we could not derive the term bachelum without the superodinate "unmarried man". As such, there are an infinite derivations we could not create without the concept of "unmarried man", many which we do not directly know or have been invented yet.
As such, there are an infinite derivation we could not create without the concept of “unmarried man”
Could you give an example of what you mean by context here?
If it is unbounded context, I cannot see a sqn forming simply by the fact language and thinking can change. Lets look at the principle of regulation. A fine principle, but can it be proven that its a sqn in unbounded context?
What if something does not think in a derivative manner? This may be due to low intellect, or simply a brain that does not process in such a way. Does a plant think in terms of the principle of regulation for example?
The problem with an unbounded infinite is we can always come up with a situation that negates another.
To your end, I believe you are implying a bounded context. For example, in individuals who have the capacity to only think in superordinate and subordinate manners, we could say the principle of regulation holds. Because people in this context have no other way of possibly thinking, it is impossible to think differently. Among creatures that had alternative thinking processes, the principle of regulation does not apply to them.
With a view towards answering the above question, I'm making an attempt to get my general bearings within your project by elaborating the overview below. Let me know if it's sufficiently accurate to be helpful.
Schematic of Foundational Metaphysics of Derivation
A scheme to establish an algorithm for expressing & establishing a causal chain of derivatives culminating in a conclusion. This algorithm will be expressed in terms of the widest generality.
Some key elements that hold priority within the scheme:
{Infinite Series} bound, unbound, indeterminate
{Ground} not subjective, not objective
By convention, the derivatives are configured in accordance with the established rules of inference.
The upshot of the scheme is elaboration of a plan applicable to the entire edifice of derivation to a conclusion.
Successful execution of the scheme will, by design, entail the establishment of a foundational metaphysics of derivation to a conclusion.
This foundational algorithm will embody a logical imperative for all derivations to conclusion.
I asked what difficulties would be caused by denying everything you wrote - for example, supposing there never is such a thing as a principle of regulation, never has been and never need be. Does that cause a problem in any way? The answer to that might give me an idea about the value of the theory - that is, why it might be needed.
Not at all. I just pop in now and then whenever math is mentioned and provide my perspective. Most in my profession are not in foundations. In the most recent 24 hour period only 1 in 58 papers submitted to ArXiv.org were in that subject (logic, set theory, etc.).
I appreciate your friendly attitude! :cool:
I am trying to suppose that derivation has no foundation and no derivation; or that derivation cannot be abstracted; or, if it can be abstracted, it cannot be abstracted towards a utilization
; or, if it can be abstracted towards a utilization, it cannot be abstracted to a specifically recursive utilization; and it may be that, even if all that can be settled, the recursive utilization may be unbounded but not infinite (like the surface of sphere) or it may be infinite but not unbounded (like the sum of a convergent series) or it may be neither infinite nor unbounded or it may not even be the kind of thing that could described as either.
I should add that whilst I'm attempting to make these suppositions, I am not succeeding well. I can't get much sense out of any of them - either supposing their truth or their falsity. So I wonder: what problems or questions are you addressing?
How have other people addressed them? What difference would it make if you changed your mind and decided to deny everything that you wrote in the essay - say, there is no principle of regulation, never was and never needed to be - what difficulties would that cause for us?
Let me see if I can sum up your argument. sine qua non means "without which, not". Which means, "If this does not exist, this derivation cannot follow"?
As an example, A -> B. But also, C -> B. If we removed A from the derivation, we would still have C. So neither A, nor C, are a sqn. If however we had A -> D, and in the removal of A, it is no longer possible to ever derive D, we have a sqn. Does this approximate the idea fairly?
If so, this is similar to a contrapositive of derivation. Perhaps a way to view it is a bachelor is an unmarried man. The term bachelor is derived from the "unmarried man". Without an unmarried man, there can be no bachelor. A man is a bachelor if and only if he is unmarried. Being an unmarried man is the foundation of a being a bachelor. In this case, we could call "unmarried man" to be a superordinate rule. The subordinate rule would be the creation of the term "bachelor".
I think what you also wanted to note was that a superordinate rule can be a subordinate rule in relation to its previous derivation as well. So, I could look at the term "man", and note (as an example, not denoting the correctness) that some creature with an 46 chromosomes in an XY structure exist, and from there, we derive the word "man". In this case, the chromosomes would be the superordinate, while the term "man" would be the subordinate.
That being the case, we can create superordinate clauses that work, but do not negate the subordinate when removed.
It is not necessary that I know of chromosomes to derive the word "man". I could note its a "human with particular reproductive anatomy". Thus while the chromosomes can be a superoridinate to man, it is not a sqn.
Sorry to have gotten off on this tangent.
I don't understand your philosophical argument. To me "derivation" means putting together certain things, and this can involve the passage of time. Hence, a kind of reverse iteration of causations.
Well, evidently I have no idea what I am doing...I thought you were opening a discussion on a focused topic. Please disregard my previous comment.
examination of derivation-of-derivation means establishing continuity between phenomenal experience and first causes.
An example is Aristotle’s unmoved mover as the cause of all motion.
analysis & derivation share important common ground to the effect that derivation is a type of analysis.
What’s the difference between a bounded finite & a bounded infinity?
Is content sans form intelligible? Is there a type of form that has no boundaries? What’s an example of boundaryless form? If there can a content without boundaries, how is it differentiable from other contents? How is a set composed of boundaryless contents intelligible as a set of discrete things?
Can you visualize content that is discrete & perceivable and without form?
Can you visualize form that is composed of nothing?
Consider the set of all natural numbers. Imagine the set is a bag & the natural numbers are colored balls being thrown into the bag. This can be but an asymptotic approach to bounded infinity, as any specifiable boundary cannot hold or bind an unspecifiably large volume.
Let me assert a premise – All origins are paradoxes.
Your narrative ventures into paradox.
“1” and “1” are identical but not indiscernible. This implies that “1” simultaneously
is/is-not itself, a paradox.
You support the above with,
It must also be regarded, briefly, that law of noncontradiction can possibly be negated by the individual at hand by means of this principle of regulation and, therefore, the principle of regulation can be regarded as the most abstract form of the law of noncontradiction.
At this point, principle of regulation has expanded its scope to encompass the super-position of QM (in cognitive mode). Importantly, in so doing, it contradicts itself super-positionally.
Now your essay seems poised to utilize higher-order logic henceforth.
First causes, I assert, possess transcendent boundaries, which is to say, non-local boundaries. As such, these boundaries of first causes require examination by higher-order analysis.
Axioms are the metaphysical boundaries of 3-space phenomena.
If the above is true, then analysis, in the instance of derivation from non-local origins, must be higher-order analysis, which means a multi-dimensional matrix above our 3-space matrix. This higher-order matrix is the tesseract, a 4-space matrix + time.
What is the first question?
What basic rules or laws have you decided are unchallengeable (that which cannot be contradicted)?
I suppose these unchallengeable laws are related to what you have determined to be sine qua nons (absolutely necessary)
By its very nature, "Metaphysics" is a type of "thinking outside the box."
The entire concept of "infinity" [(positive or negative)(bounded or unbounded)] is alien to Metaphysics
In each study, inquiry or, investigation, of that which is determined to be a Metaphysical event is explained in the portion of the outcome or product that deals with methodology.
I mean for example "Prima facea" would be one of them it would be a "tool" and by tool /semantic / metaphysical concept I'm just sticking labels on the same thing over and over again to try to make sure I cover the whole thing in stickers because I don't know exactly what the preferred thing to call it is but I'll call it a tool because it's something you utilize
Hmmm I'll try , so what I mean is that how do we know that the "tool" is even the very thing that it's name claims it to be
I realize you explain each one of them in great detail about how to use it specifically as well as its nature however we never question if that's a facade
because it's impossible for a human being to invoke that tool or even impossible for the human brain to know if something like that existed being the only one of its kind and things of that matter
An example being my personal view on time we use this concept called time or "tool" called time and according to the parameters we're told we're allowed to judge Time by it works and according to the parameters we're told to use time it works and usually we never question it because it works however I view time as just a concept that has been overlaid on an action that actually exists to make it look as if time is the thing that actually exists when it's not it's like a facade
I believe that there's change change happens to different things at different speeds and this happens in space so you could say SpaceTime but actual time linear the one that pseudoscience says eventually we'll be able to go back in time or hop to the Future in as if there's a version of us waiting somewhere in a filing cabinet to be messed with that concept called time does not exist yet it's easily usable and works in most scenarios and most people go their whole life without questioning it so that's the kind of situation I'm wondering could occur with these other tools.
Things like time is a tool the theory of gravity is a tool things of that nature the segments of your essay are discussing the mechanics of a tool I just don't have a better word to use so I'm confusing everybody using my weird bucket of random words LOL my apologies
What I mean is there's so many steps in so many guidelines I think it's impossible for somebody to put down all their bad habits and all their good habits for that matter and use the format laid before us in this essay in its entirety I think there's too much to it too many steps I think that not only are people going to forget how to use the tool the way you said to use it but I think we're just going to revert back to our old habits when reading your next essay because your first one was so complex
I guess what I'm trying to say is that a person can make almost anything logically look true and be usable so long as you control what is considered to be true and how people use it
It's easy to use and it works when used but are we actually using it properly?
Can we actually really know if a situation qualifies the use of the term "sine qua non"?
How can re really know if there's no other option for a thing or situation I can we really know?
It's simply a process that's unbounded.
In math an actual infinite potential (I've never heard it called that - but I don't live in that mathematical world) is vague unless it corresponds to a cardinality.
Tones-in-a-deep-freeze could go into this in a much more rigorous way.
I would have guessed more precise.
Give me an example from the real world of what you are talking about.