This is painfully bad commentary but as you are Catholic, it is unsurprising. — AmadeusD
Most atheists I know found the famous four fairly underwhelming as thinkers, more like good polemicists — Tom Storm
I was just stating that I can find no way to explain how it would be possible for one point on the wheel's circumference to to be traveling at a different speed to another point on the circumference. That just cannot happen. — Sir2u
But we can always add to that the speed of rotation of the earth, the speed of orbit of the earth, the speed of the sun orbiting the Milky Way. — Sir2u
We should approach all topics available for scientific inquiry as if the goal is further reduction to physics. — frank
In this example, it is logically possible that X but actually impossible that X; but according to your reasoning actual impossibility would collapse into logical impossibility: which does not happen here. — Bob Ross
Which, what they would want to say in this case is that, !(Y ^ X) ^ Y → !X. P, in this case, does not produce a logical contradiction with X such that X ^ !X but, rather, that X ‘violates’ the law of gravity, which Y, and posits if that is true than it is “incoherent”, albeit not logically contradictory, with X. It is perfectly logically validly to posit that “a human being can fly” and “’a human being can fly’ violates the law of gravity”: nothing logically wrong with that.
I think you are conflating the logical impossibility of someone accepting X outside of the theory logically contradicting the theory (i.e., !{X ^ [P → !X] }) with the theory itself demonstrating the logical impossibility of positing X. — Bob Ross
It is perfectly logically validly to posit that “a human being can fly” and “’a human being can fly’ violates the law of gravity”: nothing logically wrong with that. — Bob Ross
Metaphysical impossibility is any proposition which violates the presupposed metaphysical theory, no different than how actual/physical possibility is predicated on our scientific theories. — Bob Ross
In this example, it is logically possible that X but actually impossible that X; but according to your reasoning actual impossibility would collapse into logical impossibility: which does not happen here. — Bob Ross
1. X is logically possible and is logically possible relative to the axioms and inferences of P. — Bob Ross
3. X is actually possible, since you defined it as a “non-physical thing”, as it does not violate the laws of nature, being above nature itself. — Bob Ross
2. X is metaphysically impossible, because there is at least one proposition, Y, in P that is incoherent with X such that !(Y ^ X) ^ Y → !X. — Bob Ross
it entails logical contradiction.If we then choose physicalism as a metaphysical system M, we are affirming M, which implies affirming all its axioms (A1, A2, A3... An) and consequently from the axioms its theorems (T1, T2, T3). Therefore, by choosing physicalism, we state A1 "there are only physical things", A1 due to the laws of logic can be rewritten to "there are no non-physical things". So, by stating P "there is a spiritual thing" — which due to the definition of these words can be rewritten to "there is a non-physical thing" — we are denying A1. We end up with A1 and notA1, or P and notP, which is a logical contradiction. — Lionino
a physicalistic theory, P, that demonstrates some incoherence with the theory and X such that !X — Bob Ross
Anything we can justifiably believe. We navigate the world based on beliefs we hold about the world that aren't strictly provable. It can't even be proven there's a world external to our minds. — Relativist
I don't even think that all propositions which are regarded as metaphysically impossible are reducible to an axiom in the metaphysical theory.
— Bob Ross
I agree. — Relativist
It may also be motivated by the naive assumption we should only believe things that can be "proven". — Relativist
I just don't think that 'going against one of the theorems [or beliefs or statements]" in M entails necessarily a logical contradiction — Bob Ross
Are good looking people nicer than average looking people, or are good looking people less nice than average looking people? — Agree-to-Disagree
the part at the top travels at the same speed — Sir2u
You define knowing as "most rational conclusion" and your "knowing" can be utterly changed if new evidence is introduced. — mentos987
Secondly, you threw a curveball here because you posited !X as itself simply affirmed in M, so, of course, affirming M ^ X leads to a logical contradiction (in this case) — Bob Ross
However, it is important to note that the logical contradiction here does not lead to X being logically impossible, it leads us to X ^ !X being logically impossible — Bob Ross
No this is a logical contradiction, not a non-logical contradiction or incoherence — Bob Ross
This is because M ^ X leads to a logical contradiction which is only due to the fact that one also affirms M which leads to !X—so X is not logically impossible but, rather, it is logically impossible for it to be true that M ^ X in this case because it can be expanded to [M → !X] ^ X. — Bob Ross
Yes. Consider the logical touchstone of analytic truth. If x is red then x is coloured. Its analyticity derives from the metaphysical reality of the species-genus relationship. If you denude a proposition of all connection to this categorical content, you are left with a purely formal construct that has no meaning. — Pantagruel
You know it when you see it.
It's just hard to put it into exact, systematic, interpersonally verifiable concepts. — baker
How do you see "Doesn't know" as different from "unknowing"? Aren't they the same thing? — Philosophim
Agnostic - Doesn't know if God exists or not — Philosophim
Finally! You just admitted French is Latin. :smile: — javi2541997
which is the legitimate etymology of that term — Wayfarer
[i.e., M entails a proposition, Y, which is incoherent, but not necessarily logically contradictory, with X]. In this form, it is clear that something could be metaphysically impossible yet logically possible, because Y ^ X is not a logical contradiction; instead, the argument rests on the idea that Y strongly, in a non-logical sense, opposes X. — Bob Ross
An example is 'alienate' coined in the 16th century. — BC
I don't have a problem saying that Latin came into English through French — BC
I wouldn’t say that metaphysical impossible is derived solely from the semantics of M but, rather, the underlying meaning associated with those semantics. Semantics is just the analysis of words, not its underlying contents. — Bob Ross
It will always be logically possible so long as the logic has no contradiction in it — Bob Ross
No. “In S, light goes faster than c” is logically possible because the logic, if generated within a truth table, does not result in every result being false — Bob Ross
I am not sure I followed this part, so I can’t really comment. — Bob Ross
'Spirit' comes from the Latin word 'to breathe.' What we breathe is air, which is certainly matter, however thin. — Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark
– AnonymousEve's disobedience warped reality, changed the laws of physics, changed the genomes of some herbivores so much that they turned into carnivores, spawned harmful bacteria and viruses, and turned the sun from a spiked yellow ball with a baby's face on its center into a nuclear reactor that powers Earth's ecosystems but also gives you cancer.
Seems to me it's not a very accurate list. No mention of the Covid pandemic for example. — universeness
it deems logically impossible, but what appears from the vantage of that metaphysics as unintelligible, senseless and incoherent — Joshs
Metaphysical impossibility is any proposition which violates the presupposed metaphysical theory, no different than how actual/physical possibility is predicated on our scientific theories — Bob Ross
For instance, in the metaphysics of epiphenomenalism it is impossible that consciousness could alter its constituency of brain via the choices consciousness makes, this despite such top-down process being logically possible all the same — javra
But I kept the doubt in mind: is it not a matter of semantics even then? Because in epiphenomenalism, the mental changing the material is impossible within that metaphysics. But in epiphenomenalism, isn't the inability to change the material part of the definition of what is mental? And thus the mental changing the material becomes a logical contradiction within that metaphysics? Maybe that discussion ultimately boils down to some analytic X synthetic distinction, but I am eager to hear your take on it. — Lionino
Each metaphysical system will then galvanize its own semantics — javra
To deprive epiphenomenalism of the impossibility of mind affecting matter is to then nullify the entirety of the metaphysical webbing of understandings which epiphenomenalism is. This, were it to occur, would then leave a vacuum of explanatory power and, hence, of general understanding, for all those that previously upheld the metaphysics of epiphenomenalism. — javra
This being a longer path toward saying that I fully agree metaphysical differences can be said to boil down to semantics. I’d only add that, for one example, the particular semantic of “mind” in the case of epiphenomenalism appears to me inextricably bound into the entire webbing of semantics—of logic- and physicality-bound understandings—which this one metaphysics in fact is, if not merely being a webbing of understandings from which this metaphysics is constituted — javra
This is only possible for a logic that is is purely syntactical — Pantagruel
But I don't understand when an atheist say I don't believe in "God". Because it already presupposes there is only one singular definition to which they refer. Their own one.
But this doesn't apply to everyone's concept of it. — Benj96
This isn't to say you can't have philosophical discussions about maths problems - like 0.999... = 1 can get into potential vs actual infinity and whether the limit construction in analysis actually represents the concept of infinity. Which makes the OP less philosophy adjacent than 0.999... = 1 — fdrake
except I think that "confused" is not the same as not bothering with fully knowing the meaning of a world before using it — mentos987