Presumably, in order to do this, there are sets. — Banno
Suppose you come upon a universe that is empty. You say, "Oranges are absent. Pears are absent. Pomegranates are absent ..." That's a lot of absence, and it takes a mind or an observer to notice it. In a universe containing nothing, there is nothing ... not even absence. This is the same conceptual error the OP is making. Nothing is nothing. There can't be anything. No concepts, not even absence. If you notice there are no oranges, who is doing the noticing? — fishfry
You agree? If the class has 30 people enrolled and 29 show up, one is absent. Not seven billion. — fishfry
How do you define nothing? — Christoffer
If you define that space as having properties, but if there are no properties to that space, isn't it then nothing? — Christoffer
Is it not still a room even if space in between is a vacuum, not even with quantum particles? Does a room need air to be a room? — Christoffer
I hold to my own absolute truth: no cunning arrangement of words can oblige things to be thus and not so. — unenlightened
Shall we we say that 'coming from' already presumes space and time? — unenlightened
You have to add nothing to the building blocks; walls, floors, and ceilings of a house in order for space to create rooms. — Christoffer
Guess the question would be does the space between objects exist. — Rank Amateur
Maybe I am looking at this incorrectly, if you point is “nothing” has no physical presence, I agree- but I don’t think that is any kind of important concept — Rank Amateur
So where does it all come from? — unenlightened
I visualized the universe erupting out of nothing as a quantum fluctuation and I realized that it was possible that it explained the critical density of the universe. — Edward Tryon
You don't have to play Chess. — S
not sure the concept of an absence of something occupying some specific space, in some specific time is any less meaningful than the concept of something occupying some specific space at some specific time. — Rank Amateur
Current theories centered on the big bang are primarily the result of reifying mathematics. — Terrapin Station
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It sounds like Aristotle didn't have too much to go on in terms of the natural world and of course, we can't blame him for that since he lived so long ago. I think that back then, the conclusion most would come to is that matter stays the way it is, and only forces of nature could change how matter is. — TogetherTurtle
I don't know how that would make sense, though. I can't make sense of there being anything that's not matter or some relation of matter. — Terrapin Station
Space and time aren't "things in themselves," they supervene on matter and its relations. — Terrapin Station
Is this ontology thing even the right way to think about this, or is there a better way? Perhaps making it more about language or categories? Is this just what is called a language game, or is there something more substantial to it? — S
So if we didn't invent language--and specifically a language like English, then we didn't create it, we're not the originators of it. Who or what is? — Terrapin Station
It means that whatever it is, or whatever the science says it is, that doesn't mean that we have to start talking funny. — S
Whatever it is, let's not throw ordinary language philosophy out with the rubbish. — S
Dunno how reality can be all that far removed from our human experience, — Mww
greed; subjective idealism went out with continental German idealism, which advocated a necessary external material reality. — Mww
Interesting. I doubt any professionals disagree with realism, but I certainly hope they don’t agree with realism exclusively. — Mww
Isn't that essentially what humans do? How might the human ones count then if that's all the AI is doing? — noAxioms
which with the other Abrahamic religions is fundamentally intolerant and exclusive, and therefore necessarily antagonistic to any proposition which would appear to cast doubt on its tenets. — Ciceronianus the White
Its just that we have to throw out the 'view from nowhere' , the God's truth', the idea of linear progress, and replace these notions with a more mobile idea of consensus. — Joshs
If diminishes truth in the world – and therefor diminishes trust
If one believes truth and trust are good – things that diminish them are bad
The liar is treating those lied to as a means to an end
Lying makes it harder for those lied to to make an informed decision
Lying corrupts the liar - (a gateway moral wrong to other moral wrongs) — Rank Amateur