the statement is extremely deep because it shares the same fabric/common theme as philosophical questions such as 'what is the meaning of life?'; the idea of 'purpose'... — BeanutPutter
If the knob falls off a door, we have a knobless door, not a wall. — Hanover
But a cat without arms is not. Unless it doesn't have legs either, in which case it is a snake, as Professor S has so perspicaciously noted. — T Clark
Maybe expand on your point a bit. — Baden
But, but...lift doors can still look or function like a wall, when closed.
There needs to be a button, a knob or a key to open any such 'wall'. — Amity
But, but...lift doors can still look or function like a wall, when closed.
There needs to be a button, a knob or a key to open any such 'wall'.
— Amity
I like this, instead of expanding the point, you've redefined one of the main elements of the question. And that, my friends, is what we call "philosophy." — T Clark
But, but...lift doors can still look or function like a wall, when closed.
There needs to be a button, a knob or a key to open any such 'wall'.
— Amity
I like this, instead of expanding the point, you've redefined one of the main elements of the question. And that, my friends, is what we call "philosophy." — T Clark
Really ? :yikes:
I didn't know that...
Well...thank you, I think :chin: — Amity
It's not really redefining anything to portray a door as a wall (in some circumstances). That's just being flexible, and saying 'let's just see where this goes...'. :up: — Pattern-chaser
'flexibility of thought and vocabulary'
The key to passing through the dogma wall... — Amity
Is that a pet theory ? — Amity
A door is a passage. — Shamshir
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.