But as I've already argued, that's false by your own lights - God, having created time, would exist in it, yet God is uncaused. — Bartricks
You could insist that God does not exist in time, but you'd need an argument to show that. And so far as I can tell, your only argument is that he created it. But that fails because creating something does not preclude one from being in it. I create a cave, I am in a cave. — Bartricks
Now, from what I understand your claim is that we can just say ‘is’ or ‘is not’ rather than ‘can’ and ‘cannot’. In other words you wish to replace ‘how something must be’ with ‘how something is’. — Miles
If I asked you ‘is this object a squared-circle?’ what would you reply?
In your system of thought you will say ‘it is not’.
I will say on what grounds do you say that, and you will say well I have examined it and it is not.
I will then say maybe your examination was not correct so is it possible that you are wrong and is it possible that X is a squared-circle? — Miles
To suggest its possibility is to suggest a contradiction. — Miles
The only path to dismantle the original God or first cause argument is to reject its key premises. And remember it had two halves; the 1st half concluded that a causal chain needs a first uncaused cause, and the 2nd half defined the uncaused cause as something simple and unique in number. — Miles
And no point saying ‘well we will just accept the conclusion until some other argument comes along to reject it and that the conclusion is not necessarily true because one day it may be proven wrong’. That is not in the spirit of a philosophical or scientific enquiry. — Miles
If you create a painting, do you exist in it? — Devans99
So take square circles. I think they certainly do not exist. But I do not think they 'necessarily' do not exist. Still, I am absolutely certain they do not exist. — Bartricks
If you were to ask me if it is possible that the object is a square circle, I would say no. — Bartricks
But if you were to ask me the slightly different question "is it possible for there to be square circles" I would say yes. — Bartricks
If your position is that everything is possible (in order to avoid that somethings are impossible) then you are in for a shuck: for the statement 'everything is possible' means 'impossible is also possible' which is a contradiction, unless of course you mean 'impossible is not possible' in which case somethings are not possible. — Miles
To say "they certainly do not exist" just means they can't exist. — Miles
If not then your notion of 'certainly' becomes pointless and adds no value or extra information to the sentence. — Miles
But reason is our faculty as rational beings. — Miles
And then you talk about how truths such as 'squared circles are impossible' cannot tell us anything about objects that actually exists such as their size and so on. Sure, perhaps so. But my point was to demonstrate there are different types of truths and some are necessarily true, not that all are. — Miles
As I said you definitely need to let go of this need to get rid of necessity because your arguments are missing the target. I would understand your insistence if we were somehow conflating between necessary truth and true necessarily, in which case you could target your arguments better at that conflation. But this has never been the case here. — Miles
Look, the statement you made when you agreed with me that ‘there are no squared circles’ is a general statement without you having checked every inch of the known world. And this is why this statement just means ‘there can’t be any squared circles’. You yourself made a general statement implying necessity. — Miles
Unless you now retract that statement and concede there is a possibility that there can be squared circles. And that would mean it is possible for this object in this room to be a squared circle. — Miles
You are constantly making general statements which carry with them force of necessity without which they cannot be general statements.I do not see any evidence that this is the case. My arguments make no appeal to necessity. — Bartricks
I have. What is the truth-maker of a necessary truth? — Bartricks
Your line of thought is not clear again, you need to structure the arguments better. — Miles
The distinction between our reason and the faculty and reason and so on, all not clear at all. — Miles
It is a mistake to think that our reasoning as a process (faculty or a vehicle) is separate than what we reason we about. Just like any process, our faculty is a potential that becomes actualised when we reason. — Miles
Sometimes the problem with forums is before you know it you lose the thread of the original question and the topic becomes very confused. — Miles
You are constantly making general statements which carry with them force of necessity without which they cannot be general statements. — Miles
Oh man, how could you make this assertion:
how can you say epistemically there cannot be any squared circles but metaphysically they can be??? — Miles
What we can say of metaphysics is what we can know, otherwise we may as well say any thing we like and throw the books in the bin. — Miles
No, but if you create time then you do exist in it, for there is now a now and you are in it. For if you have created time yet do not exist in the present moment, then you do not exist. For what is it not to exist apart from not existing in the present moment? — Bartricks
As I mentioned before check out demonstration or negation of the Law of contradiction. This law is a necessary truth because we use it to demonstrate or to negate it. There are many examples of it. — Miles
And you clearly and confidently replied no you wouldn’t check it because you agree there cannot be any square circles. — Miles
But then you add ‘it is not necessarily never’ as though you are making a valid statement. — Miles
What you don’t seem to appreciate is that ‘cannot be’ just means ‘it is impossible’. — Miles
If according to reason something is impossible, we cannot then say well maybe it is possible outside of our reason. That my friend is a meaningless statement for reasons I gave in the above paragraph.
And then you talk of mistakes in reasoning in trying to explain your views on the faculty of reason vs. our particular reasons. — Miles
But we have errors in judgment as we have error in senses. Different organs and parts are involved and sometimes these organs are weakened or something else gets in the way and they do not process the information, sometimes it is lack of familiarity sometimes it is lack of remembering certain facts an so on. Things are not as simple as you outline them. — Miles
I am not saying you are wrong, I am just saying you need to go into far more detail to see whether you are presenting a powerful argument. — Miles
(The other thing I can see is maybe you are trying to talk about objective truth, subjective truth, and these in relation to necessity. Maybe what you are trying to say that such truths as ‘there are no squared circles’ are subjective as in subject to reason, but not objectively true. If this is what you mean then the discussion needs to be focused just on these so that we can have targeted discussions). — Miles
But forget 'certainty' if it cannot tell you whether something is possible or impossible or actual. To know something goes beyond a particular case, and has a sense of generality, even if we talk purely of sense experiences and not the objects in themselves (whatever that might mean). — Miles
I think we are getting closer to identifying the symptoms. — Miles
The issue is you don’t have a clear notion of necessity even though you are denying it. What I mean is ‘what is necessity for you which you are denying’? — Miles
My position on it is clear, for me it means 'what is impossible and what must be' vs. 'what is possible'. Such that talk of necessity is talk of an exclusive relationship between possibility and impossibility. You can drop the concept of necessity if you wish but you would need to take a position whether something is possible or impossible. And as soon as you say something is impossible then it means under no circumstances can it be possible. — Miles
What you mean by necessity seems confused to me and this I think is why you are now getting yourself in all sorts of knots. — Miles
Square circles do not exist. There are none - none - in reality. I am quite sure of it. But they are possible. They 'can' exist, — Bartricks
You could for example say (as you have) we don't know every aspect of the world and contradictions are one such aspect. — Miles
For me squared circles are impossible meaning they cannot exist - that is what impossible is. If it could exist it wouldn't be impossible. — Miles
This is the most clear indication why you need to revise your position. — Miles
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