If I start throwing out terms like enantidromia (which funnily enough has a red squiggly line under it!) I think that is less tangible than what I may wish to get across.
My vocabulary is above average as I have a love of language and I'm far enough past juvenile years to have naturally amalgamated a quarry of terms and phrases into a broad enough lexicon. — I like sushi
It will always be nebulous because as far as I can tell there isn't a form of communication available to express what I mean (or rather there is a lack of concepts OR I just haven't found them yet OR I'm too far gone to recognise them) — I like sushi
Fuzzy logic in lived life not in abstract realms. — I like sushi
I'm not omnipotent — I like sushi
what do you mean? — I like sushi
I didn't. but clearly I did to you as you're using the term 'mathematically' in a rather specific and rather unusual sense. — I like sushi
You've made leprechauns part of the domain by presupposing the predicate "...is a leprechaun".
That is, fictional species are part of the conversation, so you can talk about them in your scheme.
In free logic leprechauns would not be members of the domain of things that exist - E!. But you could still make inferences about them.
However as noted above, you could not infer their existence, even in free logic.
In classical logic, to make the inference you would have to presume the predicate "... is a leprechaun". How you understand that predicate remains moot; and one can play on that ambiguity. — Banno
My 'position' is not crystallised nor do I wish it to be. — I like sushi
I can dumb it down and state some points regarding ontology and epistemology? — I like sushi
It will always be nebulous because as far as I can tell there isn't a form of communication available to express what I mean (or rather there is a lack of concepts OR I just haven't found them yet OR I'm too far gone to recognise them) — I like sushi
I prefer sex to porn (i.e. playing guitar to button-mashing Guitar Hero). — 180 Proof
So you agree plastic is nature, but it takes 450years to decompose. But this is my opinion if you make unreal image there is nature and unnatural, how you would not be exploitative ? The premise is there is not such a thing as unnatural - the unreal game in our heads are a problem. Do you agree ? — Nothing
Just take a look around on this forum... I guess you saw that one coming.
I don't understand what your intentions are here. The first thing that came up in my mind though was a character jumping up 12 levels for no apparent reason. Turned out to be caused by a cosmic particle entering the undermoony from the celestial sphere. Causing a 1 or 0 in the memory to flip.
Now if that ain't magic. — Cartuna
You die body goes to earth — Nothing
Aquinas called the Omnipotence of God the "Primary Cause", — Gnomon
If only it'd enable virtual diarrhoea. — baker
Virtual philosophy — TheMadFool
If only it'd enable virtual diarrhoea. — baker
No "paradox", Fool, just more sloppy "thinking". — 180 Proof
I'm an (antitheist) atheist and I've made many posts arguing against the PoE. Also, the phrase "this world is the best of all possible worlds" makes no modal sense to me insofar as I'm an actualist (which means I reject 'possibilism' (i.e. possible world semantics) or 'modal realism'). Your 'simulation ad absurdum', Fool, is besides the point, even incoherent as a solution in search of a problem — 180 Proof
That would be thought-determinism in a nutshell, wouldn’t it? :grin: — Paul Michael
THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER. — Multivac (The Last Question)
The simulated agents within the simulated world cannot "break its rules" – change the program. Real agents are not subject to the enabling-constraints of their simulations. No "paradox", just sloppy "thinking". — 180 Proof
Simplistic — 180 Proof
thoughts occur linearly through time in succession. — Paul Michael
The program rules simulate a physics for a simulated world. Simulation programs themselves, however, must be consistent with real world physics (e.g. Universal Turing machines). — 180 Proof
Don't change the subject Answer my last question first. — 180 Proof
Why did the man’s friend die?
It depends on your beliefs how you express your answer. The answer could be ‘he died because he was born, he died because his friend was wrongly accused of stealing at work, he died because not enough oxygen was getting to his brain, he died because he betrayed his friend, etc.,. — I like sushi
‘Knowledge’ (outside known sets of rules and limits) is always driven by ‘belief’ which is in turn framed by ‘truth attitudes’ (how we actively appeal to evidence and how we define evidence). — I like sushi
Abstractions — I like sushi
‘Stupidity’ is the genius of humanity - as in it is an ‘ethical’ way to do ‘unethical’ human experimentation. — I like sushi
stating that ontology is just the same thing as epistemology — I like sushi
One thing we know about humans. They will adjust their view more if new facts favour them, yet they will not adjust as much for facts that don’t favour them. We are ‘hard-wired’ like this. — I like sushi
Then there are those that clamour over ‘knowledge’ and dismiss ‘belief’ outright … which is a bizarre ‘belief’ to hold for someone claiming to logical and rationa — I like sushi
will just have a cold war with them until they tire of this as well.. — dclements
Good for the resident artificial consciousnesses.
— TheMadFool
How would we (the simulation makers) know that? — 180 Proof
Our story begins In Media Res. Record of the past is incomplete and fragmentary, the future is an opaque fog, visibility down to a few minutes. — TheMadFool
"Good" for whom? — 180 Proof