2. Ariel would be grrreater if not just fictional — jorndoe
What's the basis for this? Is a real detective greater than Sherlock Holmes? I think not! Is existence not more so a limitation and an impediment? — unenlightened
Venture into a seaside grotto, where you’ll find Ariel amongst some of her treasures. She has gadgets and gizmos aplenty, and she’s always happy to make new friends – especially human ones!
Source: Meet Ariel at Her Grotto
I would suggest the obvious, that "greatest" "grrreatest" here has to just be an evaluation, and can't be a quantifiable difference in affectiveness or potency, or ability, as the capabilities of a thing are implied in its very essence. — Wosret
Existence isn't a predicate. — Wosret
Surely real is grrreater than fictional. — jorndoe
That Ruth is stranger than Richard is itself a happy fantasy. No! Fiction wins every time, and on every measure. It is more potent, more satisfying, more congenial, more complete and more consistent. You have been deceived by fake news. And there is the proof of it. — unenlightened
1. define Ariel as a maximally grrreat mermaid
2. Ariel would be grrreater if not just fictional
3. therefore Ariel must be real, since otherwise 1 is contradicted — jorndoe
To further expand, what's implied in the way you're talking is that Ariel is really thoughts in people's head, pictures, pixels on screens, words on pages, recorded sound vibrations by people pretending to be her and such, and then you're equivocating this with what Ariel actually is supposed to be. — Wosret
There's no way of adjudicating what 'maximally great' might be. (Mermaid beauty contest? Who would be called on to judge?) — Wayfarer
a hypothetical 100 pound weight is actually weightless because it isn't real — Wosret
2 Quixflooper would be more zanquacious if not just gonksploosh — VagabondSpectre
There's no criterion for what 'maximallygreatgrrreat' means in respect of fictitious creatures. There's no way of adjudicating what 'maximallygreatgrrreat' might be. (Mermaid beauty contest? Who would be called on to judge?) — Wayfarer
Here 2 gives a partial metric on grrreatness, where a real mermaid is independent, self-aware, sentient, alive, which a fictional mermaid is not. — jorndoe
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