I suppose we might specify a possible world such that the folk therein believe their world is not the actual world.
A world of mad fools? — Banno
Might be either. You haven't yet specified. — Banno
Actually I explicitly said that the folk in each possible world think their world is the actual world.
But yes, there is only one actual world, within the structure of modal logic. — Banno
If you think that, you've missed the point. — Banno
Suppose a world Y is not actual. Why? There has to be a reason why that is.
— TheMadFool
There is a possible world in which my cat is ginger.
In the actual world, he is black.
Now the reason, if you need one, that the possible world in which my cat is ginger is not the actual world is that my cat is black. — Banno
Nuh. "Actual" is an indexical. Like left and right. The folk in each possible world think they are in the actual world.
Add that "Necessarily" is just "In all possible worlds", and hopefully you will see why your proposition is ill-formed. — Banno
This: =>, is not the same as this <=>. Implies does not mean means.
And you still have the problem of validity, truth/falsity, soundness. And even this not a complete specification.
George is at home or George is at the store.
George is not at home.
George is at the store.
Valid, true, sound. But oops, George isn't at the store! Logic, caveat emptor. Or at least understand its limits and boundaries. — tim wood
Free will, but also cause and repercussion.
God gave Adam and Eve free will:
You are free to eat from any tree in the garden
but also told:
You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you must not touch it, or you will die
Using same rhetoric we can conclude:
They disobeyed but didn't die, doesn't that make God a liar?
Because he said:
you must not touch it, or you will die — SpaceDweller
Also this is what you're saying.
1. If X is an actual world then X is a possible world.
2. If X is a possible world then X is an actual world.
I can also say:
1. If is apple then it is a fruit
2. If is fruit then it is an apple
Possible world has a greater scope that contains all actual worlds
Therefore you can't say that a possible world is an actual world because possible worlds do not completely contain actual worlds in its set- there are some worlds that are just potential. Otherwise it would be not be a set of potential worlds but actual worlds. — ninjachewit
"Is not," "can't be": not interchangeable, not substitutable one for the other. Yours, then QE~D. — tim wood
But we're not talking about points in space are we? — khaled
There is a gap" is not a logical statement. — khaled
instead of "an actual world", I'd use "the actual world", but maybe that's just me?
1. X is a possible world ∧ X is not the actual world = X is a possible world but not our's
Say, one where Napoleon drowned by suicide. At least that seems possible.
2. X is a possible world ∧ X is the actual world = X is our world
Or, instead of "an actual world", we could use "a real world", i.e. not fictional or merely imagined, despite being unknown to us.
1. X is a possible world ∧ X is not real = a possible world but imaginary/fictional
2. X is a possible world ∧ X is real = our world or another real world (unknown to us)
(Technically, there's a presumption that our world is a self-consistent whole, but that doesn't seem controversial; either way, the possible world semantics, I think, is intended to allow reasoning that includes our world, the actual world.)
If that makes any sense... — jorndoe
“Possible” means can exist in a possible world. Not actually exists in some world. — khaled
If I say an argument is invalid it means there's a world in which all the premises are true and the conclusion is false. — TheMadFool
Not in this world necessarily though so who cares? — khaled
Yes, that's an argument that Dummo would be impressed by. Whereas I think it's stupid. — Bartricks
What's a possible world?
May I talk with the same right about toity worlds? Have you read Toity Worlds by Professor Boule Sheet?
There's a toity world in which there is a centaur. And there's a toity world in which there is a true contradiction. Might that centaur come and get me from the toity world in which it is living? Should I be afraid? Will it bring the true contradiction with it? — Bartricks
Do you know what the paper is called, and who wrote it? — Wayfarer
David Chalmers first formulated the problem in his paper Facing up to the problem of consciousness (1995). — Wikipedia
Dummo thinks that if it is possible for there to be true contradictions, then there are some. Do you agree? — Bartricks
Death is the ultimate mystery for humans. I think it's possible that when we die our consciousness enters another body and we can call this reincarnation or the ressurection of the body (if we get the same body back). The thing for me is that it seems we are bodies and brains so we seem to die on our death beds for good but Buddhism offers the possibility that consciousness is substance less such that it can go somewhere else when the body dies. You're right though that this is all completely speculative and it's something we can't figure out. It's nice however to have a belief in an afterlife — Gregory
TheMadFool said it is relevant to know whether God can go or do wrong, since that specific God has property of being omnibenevolent, I think is therefore irrelevant to argue over something that is already known, there is no assumption or personal position here.
So why don't we just focus on the knowledge of good and evil? — SpaceDweller
As you implied, the Garden of Eden myth seems to be intended as a warning against "evil" Science, which trusts its sensory extensions and rational conclusions more than the absolute Word of God : "apple bad, trust me". That's also why the Bible repeatedly indicates that physical Flesh (including taste & touch) is corrupted, and only the non-physical Spirit is pure & good, and a direct link to God --- so, trust, and don't bother to verify.. — Gnomon
Of course, in the Garden, those child-like humans had direct sensory experience with God, who walked in the garden, making sounds that frightened the babes-in-the-woods. Today, we are bereft of that intimate contact, and the original words of God, are now -- reportedly -- recorded in man-made books, after passing through the fallible minds of many generations of sinful fleshly humans. Therefore, it follows that the self-reliance of Science may be the product of a Satanic plot. Hence, your label "malus scientia" seems to be appropriate. Unless, human reason is the only remaining reliable Word (Logos) of the Creator — Gnomon
He isn't 'beyond time'. See OP. — Bartricks
for a contradiction to be true, then it is true. — Bartricks
I take it you've read McTaggart? — Bartricks
Thus, the idea of God existing outside of time is a perfectly coherent one. — Bartricks
I'm not just telling you, I am demonstrating it:
All theorems of propositional calculus are necessary theorems of modal logic.
The Law of Noncontradiction is a theorem of propositional calculus.
Therefore the Law of noncontradiction is a necessary theorem of modal logic.
If the Law of Noncontradiction is a necessary theorem, then it is not contingent.
The law of noncontradiction is not contingent.
So, where does this argument go wrong? Want me to do it for you? — Banno
But that is an assertion, not an argument. — Wayfarer