Does "everything" include potential entities that could and could not happen, exist in our world or not exist, and are abstract, fictitious, or imaginary?
Do we include "everything" in addition to material things, non-material things, spiritual things, etc.? — wax1232
Interesting. So language and the world are co-extensive?"Everything can be talked about." — Srap Tasmaner
"Everything can be talked about."
â Srap Tasmaner
Interesting. So language and the world are co-extensive? — Banno
The OP said that by "everything" he meant the universe. — Mongrel
I like to think we could learn something about how language works if we really understood that. — Srap Tasmaner
Does "everything" include potential entities that could and could not happen, exist in our world or not exist, and are abstract, fictitious, or imaginary? — wax1232
fictitious, or imaginary — wax1232
Surely a utilitarian would agree? — Banno
You are talking about every triangle in realationship to having four sides. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Now one might point out the unrestricted "everything" is talking about possibilities, saying that our language may talk of anything. This is true, but what does it mean? Well, it isolates the specific possibility of what our language can say. In the sense that it talks about anything, it's restricted to a specific possibility. It not about an unrestricted "everything" at all. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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