So I asked the question: what is an example of the types of things that don't have a beginning? Because I can't really see why an argument based on this is 'disingenuous'. — Wayfarer
hey fishfry, what kinds of things exactly don't 'begin to exist'? I think if you look at any object in the known universe, then all of them 'began to exist' at some point in time, didn't they? Even atoms began to exist, we are told. So, without any hand-waving, what kinds of things, generally speaking, don't begin to exist? — Wayfarer
Premise-1: Everything in the world has a cause. — Brian A
I think we also want a way to talk about fiction (hypothesis, supposition, etc) "in world." So there are two answers, say, to "Does Santa fly in a helicopter?" One is "No, because he doesn't exist," but another is "No, it's a sleigh pulled by flying reindeer." Both have their use. — Srap Tasmaner
How about if you wanted to state that a set contains at least one member? — Joseph
The only sensible way to write it is ∃x∈S. — Joseph
That is a case of a standalone quantifier. — Joseph
Next, how would you state that a set is empty in predicate logic? — Joseph
∀x∈S[¬∃x] — Joseph
Well, I too think my grasp of Russell's paradox isn't up to mark to continue the discussion into anything fruitful. — TheMadFool
As for time being involved in logic, I think I'm correct. — TheMadFool
I'm saying if we simply switch from ''pause mode'' (sentential logic) to ''play mode'', as we do when watching movies, the contradiction disappears because time changes. — TheMadFool
X being inside AND outside is a contradiction. But the rule doesn't say that. It simply alternates the two states on a timeline, at different points of time. — TheMadFool
IF you assume that ''set contains itself'' and ''the set doesn't contain itself'' imply each other THEN we have a contradiction. — TheMadFool
But contradictions are impossible — TheMadFool
Therefore, as for the liar paradox, there's a time gap between ''it contains itself'' and ''it doesn't contain itself''. — TheMadFool
I think I understand now. Small differences in initial states have vastly different outcomes. For example, the temperature may differ by 0.000007 degrees but this tiny difference can mean the difference between fair weather and storms. The butterfly is simply a metaphor for this small difference in a variable. — TheMadFool
Isn't that the gist of your post? — TheMadFool
↪fishfry Small changes making big differences.
So, can I change the fate of the universe by blinking my eye? — TheMadFool
I think this would be better
"it is impossible to calculate the long term effect on the weather of a butterfly flapping its wings". — Jake Tarragon
It seems you don't understand either category theory (at a philosophical level) or semiosis and are just seeking to nitpick with contradictory sounding quotes. — apokrisis
Hot damn! ;) — apokrisis
If it is a theorem that has been proved, then it follows, does it not? What am I missing? — aletheist
For any value of N whatsoever, 2^N > N. Therefore, a power set always has more members than the set from which it is derived. This is true even if N is infinite; the power set of the natural numbers must have more members than the (infinite) set of the natural numbers. — aletheist
Therefore, a power set always has more members than the set from which it is derived. This is true even if N is infinite; the power set of the natural numbers must have more members than the (infinite) set of the natural numbers. — aletheist
the irreducible triadicity of a sign relation. — apokrisis
Just struggling a bit with how 'sign relations' come into the picture outside of biology..... — Wayfarer
How could a set have a cardinality if it's not possible to enumerate that entire set? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is so only because in principle the set of, say, even numbers, can be placed in one to one correspondence with the set of both even and odd numbers. — John
If you read up on Peirce's synecheism - as his model of continuity - it gets clearer. The "continuity" then is of the systematic "constraints plus freedoms" kind that I employ. — apokrisis
I will take your word for it, but my understanding is that the precise nature of the relationship between Peirce's continuum and nonstandard analysis is still not fully settled. — aletheist
We typically treat the two values as equal, but arguably there is an infinitesimal (non-zero) difference between them. As you might have guessed, the Peircean continuum is non-Archimedean. — aletheist
You are very sensitive. I apologise if you have feelings that are easily hurt. But is this my problem or your problem? — apokrisis
what I am looking for from you is a genuine counter-argument, — apokrisis
a restatement of a particular institutional view that is widely held for the pragmatic reasons I've previously stated. — apokrisis
So this is why the Toms and Fishfrys are so content with what they learn in class. — apokrisis
Perhaps, but it seems to me that we have then already conceded that the real numbers do not and cannot constitute a true continuum. They are now just labels that we have assigned to particular locations along the line, not parts of the line itself. — aletheist
So you defined a point as a howling inconsistency - the very thing that can't exist? The zero dimensionality that somehow still occupies a place within a continuity of dimensionality? — apokrisis
If you can divide the point on one of its sides ... — apokrisis
Is there any way that mathematics could evolve going forward that would enable it to deal with continuity more successfully? — aletheist
It's a very important result in mathematics. The continuum has the cardinality of the power set or the natural numbers. It's a much bigger infinity. — tom
One of these infinities is bigger than the other, much bigger. In fact the measure of the natural numbers on the continuum is zero. — tom
Therefore we can conclude that the set of natural numbers is not countable.
— Metaphysician Undercover
And yet set theory explicitly says otherwise. — aletheist
one should never take too much notice of a mathematician making extrapolations of a metaphysical nature. They are bound to be misguided just because they hold in their hands a very impreessive hammer and so are looking about for some new annoying nail to bang flat. — apokrisis
So I would still like to see the alleged proof that the real numbers form a true continuum as Peirce defined it, which (as I understand it) is similar but not identical to the intuitionistic continuum. — aletheist
No, you claimed the reals can be disordered — tom
If you think you can disorder the reals, then pleas indicate the number following this one, and suggest between which two numbers you might place it: — tom
Yeah sure, that's the name you gave instead of the name "countable". But I'm not sure that I would agree with the assumption that there is a substantial difference between a foozlable infinity, and an unfoozlable infinity. We can call them countable and uncountable infinities if that's easier. — Metaphysician Undercover
Countable means capable of being counted. If it cannot be counted, as is the case with something infinite, or endless, it is not capable of being counted. Therefore the infinite is not countable. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think the issue here has been metaphysical — apokrisis
