it's puzzling that you don't subscribe to Platonism and assert that the set of all sets has ontological value. Can you lay out your reasoning here? — Wallows
Does that mean you admit it is mysticism? — I like sushi
Wrong. That is not what was meant. You’re referring to an item preceding language (or rather you THINK you are) with no logical justification. — I like sushi
A set is a selection of items with specific attributes. To talk of a set of things with attributes is to exclude nothing. — I like sushi
This is no more than a misapplication of linguistics to abstract logical concepts. — I like sushi
Sets only have meaning in relation to other possible sets. To talk of ALL sets is nonsense as it is to talk of ‘backwards yellow’ or ‘big shaped flavours’ - such strings of words are of use in a playful artistic endeavor. — I like sushi
perhaps essentialism, no? — Wallows
nothing is identical through time. — Terrapin Station
...what we're talking about can be identical.
— Terrapin Station
Incoherence anyone? — creativesoul
wasn't saying "mutually exclusive" either. Meaning is a mental event. It's a type of thought. — Terrapin Station
Meaning isn't something different than thinking, so what you're asking here makes no sense. You're talking about meaning as if it's something independent of thinking. — Terrapin Station
You can talk about P at T1, and I can talk about P at T1, and P at T1 is identical to P at T1--so what we're talking about can be identical. You're confusing that with our thinking, our utterances, etc. at T2, T3, etc. As always, what we're pointing to isn't the same thing as our pointing. — Terrapin Station
You missed option 4:
There is an underlying catergory error taking that a change in the world involves a change in meanings or abstracted ideas.
In this instance, the nominalist has a position which obtains: all events of time are change (moments of existence), while every meaning is it's own and the same regardless of point in time ( which is, in turn, how change is coherently defined, since being a change, every moment must stand as it own unique meanging ). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Since you asked, go ahead and pick one. I'd go with the pig. Oink oink. :_) — Wallows
Truth value is a judgment that an individual makes on each instance, by the way. They do that in conjunction with their meaning assignments on that instance. — Terrapin Station
How would we arrive at the idea that in order for meaning to be meaning, it can't change. It it's changing meaning, it's not meaning at all? — Terrapin Station
Again, I'm pretty sure that you're not even familiar with nominalism.
Note that what nominalists are saying is that this:
A
and this:
A
are not actually identical.
What they're not saying, and I think you're thinking that they are saying this, is that we get something like this:
A
changing to something like this:
B
They're not saying that.
They're saying it's:
A
and
A
But that those aren't actually identical. — Terrapin Station
Re this, let's clarify how you're using "senseless" there. Is it basically just a value statement? — Terrapin Station
Okay, so moving on, we already answered this. They are non-identical instances of the phrases.
Maybe it's not clear what you're asking, though. What sorts of answers would you accept to other "what do they become" questions? — Terrapin Station
Your responses to this do not bode well for you wanting an editor, by the way. You won't even fix something simple that makes no sense as conventional English. — Terrapin Station
It makes no sense in conventional English. "<Past participle> to that their own" makes no sense in conventional English. — Terrapin Station
Is English your first language? — Terrapin Station
"Predisposed to that their own"? — Terrapin Station
Before you post something, read it out loud. Does that sentence make sense to you when you read it out loud? — Terrapin Station
It's not as if this is hard to figure out. If nothing is identical through time, then "Nothing is identical through time" isn't identical through time.
You're conflating "not identical" and "isn't the case/isn't true."
Not at all the same idea. — Terrapin Station
as nothing is identical through time. — Terrapin Station
The answer changes even though I say the so-called "same thing," because nothing is literally identical through time. The idea of something being the same through time is an abstraction--and abstraction that itself is different at different times.
What we answer--say that it's a bottle or whatever, is an abstraction that we've created. The object fits the concept we've constructed. Essences are the necessary aspects of our conception, what we require to call some x "a bottle" (or whatever the concept at hand).
I'm a nominalist, by the way. — Terrapin Station
No such thing. — Terrapin Station
If it exists in the imagination does it exist or does it not exist? Start with two: does two exist? And do ideas have no essence and no ontological value? — tim wood
Essence is simply a way of thinking about things--it's what an individual considers necessary features to apply a concept term as they've formulated the concept. — Terrapin Station
No idea — Devans99
I don't think thats topologically possible — Devans99
How can a set contain contain itself and not contain itself at the same time? Surely that is a logical contradiction? — Devans99
1. Creating anything infinity large is impossible; not enough time / would never finish — Devans99
2. Creating anything infinity small is impossible; no matter how small it is made, it could still be smaller — Devans99
3. Only in our minds can things continue ‘forever’; in reality this would be akin to magic — Devans99
The existence of a set of all sets is only a contradiction if the ground of all being, that is, the set of all sets in nature as opposed to in the imagination, does not reside in a paradox or a contradiction. if the set of all sets in nature has ontological value, and both contains itself and does not contain itself at the same time and in the same respect, there is no contradiction. it just means that the ground of being is paradoxical, which is the case. to say that there is no first set is even more absurd than saying that there is, for to say that there is no first set is to say that all being has its origin in absolute non-existence, or the absence of essnce altogether, or rather, the non-potential for existence to be, yet existence is, so absolute non-existence cannot be, meaning that existence must be contained within that which has an essence, and that which has an essence is necessarily a set. the set of all sets must exist. — TheGreatArcanum