In the process of thinking and acting, the reason for our thinking and acting, which is to obtain our intended conceptual destination in thought or action, — TheGreatArcanum
It seems that you didn't read the whole thing, — TheGreatArcanum
I didn't see how this question was relevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
The referent being the same referent each time it is referred to does not logically depend upon the referent being physically unchanging from one moment to the next. — Janus
Philosophy helps you acquire facts about the world? i.e it helps you see "what the world is like factually"? — Zosito
One of the poor quickly realizes he can be more powerful by voting with the rich — ernestm
I think we'd have to move to inductive logic, but inductive conclusions are debatable. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that by standard geometrical definitions, the tape measure has both points and extension, and to mark off a particular segment of extension requires points, which by definition have no spatial extension and are not sensible? — Metaphysician Undercover
This does not follow logically, because both "point" and "extension" require a definition, — Metaphysician Undercover
I keep having to repeat that I have not said identicality is equivalent to identity. — Janus
Over the whole time of its existence an entity is obviously identical to itself, — Janus
We could say that one is recognizing something that has a particular set of causal connections to a prior existent.Not at all, it is merely to recognize entities. — Janus
To identify is to establish, if not to conceptualize, identity. So, now you are admitting that identity as it is established is not an abstraction. — Janus
As I said before, even animals can identify objects and entities in their environments; and I doubt they are capable of abstraction — Janus
But you ignore what I have said which is that identicality (of parts) is not equivalent to identity (of the whole). — Janus
I haven't said that it would or would not imply that. I don't even know what it could mean or what an "extramental" world could be. — Janus
But as a nominalist, you know that nothing is absolute, so why would we begin to think such about Aristotle? — Merkwurdichliebe
So, what relevance do they have? Can we determine them or not? — Janus
I don't see any relevance in what you say here. — Janus
because there exists at least one final cause, first causes must exist, — TheGreatArcanum
So, when is a particular object that particular object then? — Janus
because you deny that there is any persistent identity across time, and thus any persistent entity, which could be identified as an object. — Janus
