I don't understand what you mean by this question. Can you explain it? — andrewk
I explained in the post to which you were referring that the criterion is that both instances be part of the process that we understand to be the ship of Theseus. — andrewk
What something is is not simply a question of its material constitution but of its relationship to other things as well. — darthbarracuda
The "original ship of Theseus" is the one made up of the original planks. The "current ship of Theseus" is the one that has had all of its planks replaced over time. Remember, these are just possible names that I suggested people might use to distinguish them; there is nothing philosophically significant about the terms "original" and "current" themselves. — aletheist
That's why I said that a process metaphysics prevents the sort of paradoxes that can arise in trying to analyse this within an object-based metaphysics. — andrewk
So that is the 'switch' from 'the ship' to 'a person' . And, note, the assumption that 'an entire being' CAN be replaced by replacing the components, in the same way that an artefact can. So there's an implicit materialist assumption: that personal identity is of the same order as the identity of material objects, whereas I don't know if that is true at all — Wayfarer
Hence I suspect that most people would call the reconstructed ship A something like "the original ship of Theseus" to distinguish it from ship B as "the current ship of Theseus." — aletheist
No, as I explained, I don't agree. Why would you think that completely annihilating an object, and then completely rebuilding a copy of the original object, with the same parts, constitutes having the same object? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it is not tied to that. The requirement is that only one plank be replaced at a time. Those replacements could happen at the rate of one per nanosecond, or one per century. The speed is irrelevant. Just think about playing a video of that process in fast or slow motion. No matter what speed you play it at, it will never look the same as one in which the ship is exploded by a bomb and rebuilt from scratch. — andrewk
No, as I explained, I don't agree. Why would you think that completely annihilating an object, and then completely rebuilding a copy of the original object, with the same parts, constitutes having the same object? — Metaphysician Undercover
'A is going to Thessalonika, B is going to Crete.'
I don't see any paradox here. — Wayfarer
When I say that 'time is not the important element', I mean the time it takes for the change process to be completed. We can't disregard the time dimension competely, because that would make it impossible to even refer to 'the ship afterwards' and 'the ship before' — andrewk
So maybe I'm agreeing with you that time is not the important element. It seems to me that what is important is that only one component at a time is replaced - so that the ship is not missing say more than 1% of its components at any instant. — andrewk
). But this relevance is tied to the notion of speed (time) of construction/destruction which you agreed is irrelevant.not missing say more than 1% of its components...
So maybe I'm agreeing with you that time is not the important element. It seems to me that what is important is that only one component at a time is replaced - so that the ship is not missing say more than 1% of its components at any instant. — andrewk
But they are not self-aware. My computer is unaware of itself, as is my phone, they don't know that they are who they are. How can I? — dm12
That is what happens when quantum energy turns into matter — Rich
Because conscious is creative send intelligent and can create matter. Where does matter get the intelligence? From God? — Rich
I suspect understanding of concepts like nothing, infinity, god, what is before and after life lie deep in our mind, not in our brain. — Ashwin Poonawala
How little we know is astonishing. — Exodus
if you can entertain the notion that consciousness creates matter which is far more likely than matter created consciousness — Rich
The feeling that there is a self, a me or mine, that has to be saved, is exactly what has to be lost. That is what the crucifiction represents, complete self-giving. Then there is nobody left to save! — Wayfarer
Karma makes no sense to me without assuming God and Divine Justice either. Without God it just seems to be an amplified naive notion of deterministic causation. — John
if everything is made up of just permutations and combinations of elements, what makes me me? — dm12
So for a lot of people it's like - let's not go there. I'd rather not think about that. — Wayfarer
Like, what is the Darwinian explanation for musical prodigy? Or prodigy of any kind? (Oh, I know - 'makes more kids'. Like, spin me another one.) — Wayfarer
Is math "central" to the Sun, or is it central to our perception of the Sun, or is it central to a scientific understanding of the Sun -- or is it merely a tool that has proven to be extremely useful in cultivating empirical knowledge of natural phenomena, including the Sun? — Cabbage Farmer
Such capacities are prior to sophisticated techniques of precise comparison, measurement, and enumeration, and are independent of the concept of number. — Cabbage Farmer
Do you see any signs of miracle births? — Bitter Crank
Also, I wouldn't count on a lack of oil bringing an end to war. People did just fine fighting wars before the first bucket of oil was poured into a barrel. — Bitter Crank
Everything in the mind is a concept; this includes our understanding of non-existence. Yet it feels to us that what we think of when we observe in our minds the concept of non-existence somehow accurately reflects what non-existence is in actuality, but where is the evidence for this? — intrapersona
In other words, for most of society as naive realists or materialists it feels intuitive to think that when you die there is nothing (probably inferred from self-awareness stopping during sleep), but "nothing" is just a concept in the mind. YOU nor any man have any guarantee that you know what nothing means, nor what infinity actually is. Why then are people so sure that their conceptions reflect true states of affairs in the external world accurately? It is clear that these concepts transcend the limits of our feeble human minds and yet we act and think as if we have an absolute true comprehension of what they are and how they exist (probably because it is too difficult for us to think otherwise). — intrapersona
Likewise, everything in this world is merely a construct of our comprehension and we act as if we are windows for the truth even though it is only a circular self-affirming impression that we attain from putting together our sensory worlds. — intrapersona
I think I can safely assume that just because homosexuality is innate doesn't make it 'justified' (aka naturalistic fallacy, or appeal to nature.)
Sorry for the lack of a better word. — NukeyFox
Homosexuality seems (at least to me) to be quite a shaky topic. And I think it is so, because it's just a specific case of moral luck. And the consequence is something that not everyone can agree too. — NukeyFox
I don't think that a God which is just in the future is consistent with any concept of God that I know of. — Metaphysician Undercover
How can I explain the perception of the past? It could be that that too was mentally generated from a perception of another table before that, and so on ... But How did I get the very first perception? — Samuel Lacrampe