As an adopted convention, it doesn't make sense to ask whether two things really are identical. — sime
If you include things like time and position then two objects can never be identical — khaled
Like the morning and evening star, water and H2O, temperature and molecular motion, Samuel Clemens and Mark Twain, the empty set and 0, or the charge of every electron in the universe.
Or that damned ship that had all its parts replaced during its voyage. — Marchesk
By 'identical' I mean similar in every detail; exactly alike. — believenothing
I think everything is unique in some way or other. If two things appear to be identical they would still be different if they are in different locations for example. — believenothing
It is conceivable, however, that the wardrobe chest I just got delivered to my house made of compressed wood contains two identical wardrobe chests, both occupying the same space at the same time and in the same respect. — god must be atheist
As for sub-atomic particles - do they have any identity, if they don’t even have a position? I mean, electrons and photons notoriously manifest as waves in some contexts, and particles in others. So if they don’t have an identity prior to measurement then they're indistinguishable as a matter of principle - as you say - but perhaps not in the way you mean. — Wayfarer
This is just a different notion of identity to the classical idea where particles always have a definite position and momentum. — Andrew M
If two things appear to be identical they would still be different if they are in different locations for example — believenothing
I dont think an item or concept could be identical with itself either, because things change over time and the only way I can imagine to prove — believenothing
:up:who remembers will always be different from what remembers — armonie
An old Hungarian puzzle for kids:
"What's the difference between a sparrow?
?
Both of its wings are identical, especially the left one." — god must be atheist
This is Leibniz' principle, "the identity of indiscernibles". It states that if two objects can be said to have the very same properties, then they are identical. "Identical" means having the same identity, and by Aristotle's law of identity, this means that they are actually one and the same object. — Metaphysician Undercover
What if it's not 'a different notion of identity', but that it's not an identity at all. There are not two things which are identical. It is said that particles aren't even particles until they're measured, prior to that literally all that exists is a distribution of possibilities. It's not as if there's a particle whose whereabouts is unknown, it doesn't have an exact whereabouts, so also does not have an identity. In fact couldn't you say that the measurement is what confers identity on it, by giving it a position and making it 'this particle'? — Wayfarer
One object cannot occupy two locations in space at the same time and it is this impossibility that gives objects their identity. — TheMadFool
Yes, I would just add that this depends on how the object is defined. For example, in a sense it is true that my desk can occupy two locations in space at the same time - one leg here, another leg there! That's because the desk is defined as an object that is extended in space. But if by "location" we mean the spatial extension of the desk then it is true that the desk cannot occupy two locations in space at the same time - because it would violate the definition of the desk and so we would be talking about a different object than a desk.
This should be kept in mind when interpreting quantum mechanics. There is no point particle that occupies two points of space at the same time, but there is a quantum wave, defined as a spatially extended object, that occupies two or more points of space at the same time. Alternatively (and equivalently, if I understand it correctly), there is a point particle that occupies two points of space at the same time if the definition of the "point particle" allows the particle to move not only forward but also backward in time. — litewave
So the state of a particle always has at least some indefinite properties (due to Heisenberg uncertainty), regardless of whether the particle is measured or not. — Andrew M
As far as I understand the quantum wave is just the probability of where a particle is located. — TheMadFool
If two things appear to be identical they would still be different if they are in different locations for example. — believenothing
When it comes to identity, matters are different and space-time properties are critical to its meaning. One object cannot occupy two locations in space at the same time and it is this impossibility that gives objects their identity. So, two/more objects can be identical because they share all properties except space-time properties but they all have different identities because one object can't occupy two locations in space at the same time. — TheMadFool
Let's say we have two apples both of which are completely identical except in one regard: they occupy different positions. Are they identical or not? The answer depends on whether an apple's position constitutes its identity. — Magnus Anderson
If they had the same positions relative to all other objects, they would have the same identity, which means they would be one apple, not two. — litewave
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