That's the nub of the issue. In the Einstein-Bergson debate, Einstein, a scientific realist, insisted that time is real irrespective of whether anyone measures it or not. Bergson, as I interpret it, insists that measurement is an intrinsic aspect of time, and that therefore, time is not only objective. And if that goes for time, then the implications are far-reaching. — Wayfarer
However, the researchers emphasise that this statistical pattern doesn’t lead to the conclusion that whale song is a language that conveys meaning as we would understand it. They suggest that a possible reason for the commonality is that both whale song and human language are learned culturally.
Good point. Logical truths are true in every interpretation, so they are supposedly safe from Quine's criticism. One consequence of that is the rejection of de re modality.Quine's issue about synonymy doesn't apply to logical truths. — J
Tableness. The essence of a table is its tableness. — Arcane Sandwich
Any what? Tables? Time? Essences?So why would you even say that there aren't any? — Arcane Sandwich
You're living in the past.Today is Sunday (in Argentina). — Arcane Sandwich
Fine. You can tell me why, later. :razz:Nonsense — Arcane Sandwich

Only on Sunday.Spinozist — Arcane Sandwich
what the blimey this got to do with a Thread called "Ontology of Time". — Arcane Sandwich
Yep. Again, there is a difference between the type, "table" and the individual, "This table".Start with a dinner table, then disassemble it. All there parts are still there, but you no longer have a table. — Relativist
An object is more than the set of parts that compose it. It's the composed parts + the way they are arranged that makes it something more. — Relativist
Well, obviously.if you say that the pile of wood chips is identical to the table, then your ontology can't explain artefact destruction (or artefact creation). — Arcane Sandwich
Being able to persist while going through the woodchipper is a property that the collections of atoms has, and the table does not have this property. — Arcane Sandwich
Yep. Different properties may be attributed to the same individual under different descriptions....the table and the atoms that compose it have different properties. — Arcane Sandwich
Yeah, it is. It is the same table if I gouge out my initials in the woodwork. Removing a few atoms will not make it cease to be that table. We use such terms in suitable vague ways quite successfully.2nd reason: if a table is identical to the atoms that compose it, then if you remove a single atom, you're no longer dealing with the same table — Arcane Sandwich
The table is the exact same object as the atoms that compose it.1) If tables exist, then a table is one more object in addition to the atoms that compose it. — Arcane Sandwich
