To return to what you seem to be interested in, temporal precedence is implied in necessity; however, it may not be so for all. — Agent Smith
To A. Smith: if you think you can get Bartricks to agree with anything, then you set yourself up to a Gargantuan task. Moses could get water out of a rock for his people in the desert by simply asking, and rather convincingly. Moses himself could not squeeze an agreement out of Bartricks, in my opinion. — god must be atheist
Karlen: please ignore Bartricks. In my opinion he or she is nothing on this site but an angry, cantencerous, and hugely illogically thinking naysayer. His biggest and only quality contributions on this site is the word choices and phrases he uses to berate and dery his conversations partners. — god must be atheist
P.s. I harbour no more ill feelings for Bartricks; I did have some difficulty dealing with him in the early days of my existence here. I do warn new users, however, and that is the only purpose of this post, to be wary of his antics. — god must be atheist
Then it exists necessarily a — TheGreatArcanum
ok. Is it eternally true, or did it become true in some moment of time, and if so, how long will it be true and when will it become false again? — TheGreatArcanum
by definition, if something exists contingently, it does not exist necessarily, and therefore had the potential to come into and out of being (which is not true of something that exists necessarily because it is eternal). — TheGreatArcanum
it is logically impossible for an entity to exist eternally and not exist necessarily. — TheGreatArcanum
this follows necessarily from the law of non contradiction. if you do not make the distinction between necessary and contingent beings, you cannot make a distinction, conceptually, between eternal and non-eternal beings (or relations), and you cannot simply presume that non-eternal beings do not exist without proof (which I presume is what you’re going to do next). — TheGreatArcanum
they are not different. — TheGreatArcanum
what you mean to say is that “there are no necessary or contingent truths except for the truth that “there are no necessary or contingent truths,” and this is a self-contradiction. — TheGreatArcanum
how can it be possible for something to exist eternally and exist not necessarily, but contingently. this is another logically impossible state of relations here… — TheGreatArcanum
when you say that “logical necessity is logically impossible,” you cannot do so without contradicting yourself, for the proposition is either necessary or it is not necessary and therefore contingent, and if it is contingent, it is true sometimes and not at others, and also, necessarily continent and not possibly contingent. do you see how your using the category of necessity to deny the possibility of necessity here? — TheGreatArcanum
Are you also prepared to deny that fact that the present logically follows from the past and that the past and present do not exist simultaneously? — TheGreatArcanum
You cannot deny the existence of the categories of necessity and contingency without denying the existence of time. — TheGreatArcanum
secondly, it contains contradictions, for the first like part of the statement says that both floors are eternal and the second part says that the second is it eternal. if they both exist eternally, they are both exist necessarily. — TheGreatArcanum
irstly, this is a logically impossible hypothetical scenario, so there’s no point of even trying to use it as a mental experiment. — TheGreatArcanum
I am not sure what you mean by “skeptic about necessity?” — TheGreatArcanum
But standards of rationality change. Slavery was an accepted institution in ancient Greece. The slave Epictetus was a Stoic, which makes sense. But then so was Marcus Aurelius. So rejection of an argument at a social level could be the institution of a new rational standard — Pantagruel