If you count "1", then it is implied that there is one thing (an object) counted. Do you, or do you not agree with this?
— Metaphysician Undercover
Agree. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That was a while ago. But you're still asking!
I think you agree with me on the necessity of having two objects to make the use of "2" or "second", a true or valid use. — Metaphysician Undercover
There you even correctly posted yourself that you surmise that I agree that if we count 2 objects then there exist 2 objects.
The context here has been of a shelf that has books on it. I've said more than once that if you count 1 book or 2 books, then, yes, there are books on the shelf.
From this thread, this is the context in which we are talking about a shelf that has books on it:
To have a count of one, there must be an object which is counted. In order for the count to be a valid count, there must be something which is counted. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that there must be some of these things (objects) which are classed as "books", for us to have a true count.
— Metaphysician Undercover
I've answered that already a few times. To have a non-empty count, of course there exist the objects counted, and in you example, these objects are books. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Do you agree that there is no activity of counting if there is no objects counted?
— Metaphysician Undercover
Now I'm answering yet again, there is no no-empty count if there are not objects counted. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Therefore the number 5 loses its meaning if it does not refer to five of something counted, books in this case. — Metaphysician Undercover
The context is not a shelf with no books, but a shelf with 5 books.
In everyday understanding, when we count, we associate one thing with 1, then the next thing with 2, etc. — TonesInDeepFreeze
There I keep in context of having at least one book on the shelf.
To have a count of one, there must be an object which is counted. In order for the count to be a valid count, there must be something which is counted. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, the context is that there are books on the shelf.
The count of two is justified by the existence of two such objects — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, the context is that there are books on the shelf.
Now:
If no books are counted, do you consider this to be a count? — Metaphysician Undercover
I already addressed that. If there are no books, then it's not a non-empty count. It's not the kind of count we're talking about in your example.
do you agree that it is necessary that there is a thing counted
— Metaphysician Undercover
To have a count (in sense (1)), you need something to count. (Except in the base case, there is the empty count.) — TonesInDeepFreeze
And that parenthetical is simply to make clear that in this context we're not talking about the technical notion of an empty count. We're talking about counts that start at 1.
/
I'll say it one more time in this forrm: If there is a count that reaches 1, then there exists at least one object counted, and if there is a count that reaches 2, then there exist at least two objects counted.
And that reflects the representation with a bijection. If a natural number n is in the range, then there must be at least n objects in the domain.
You don't read my posts adequately to register in your mind what I wrote, let alone understanding them.
And you're even more ridiculous, since the question of whether there are objects counted - already answered by me - is answered right in the representation with a bijection itself. You can see for yourself that the two books are right there in the domain of the bijection.
/
I'm asking you if you believe there is such a thing as an empty count — Metaphysician Undercover
Your original and ongoing question regarded the context in which there are books on the shelf. You didn't ask me about the notion of an empty count.
I mentioned the empty count only to avoid a pedantic, technical hitch. I am not talking about empty counts in the context where there are books on the shelf.
But about the empty count: It's a technical set theoretical matter. It's not intended that the use of the word 'count' in 'empty count' corresponds to our everyday English senses of 'count'. I happily agree that it's an odd use of the word 'count'. If you don't like the notion, then that's okay in this context, because the representation with a bijection doesn't depend on the notion.
/
you are counting hypothetical doors, symbolic representations of doors — Metaphysician Undercover
But it's still counting.
If you present this as a true count of actual captains of an actual starship, you'd be engaged in deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ah, you resort to the strawman. We are not claiming it is a count of actual captains.