I'm afraid what you said there at the end makes no grammatical sense: “Socrates died when he was die” — Amalac
What is "died" then? — TheMadFool
My intuition, for what its worth, recommends that I should consider "died" as equivalent with "dead" and definitely not "die". This intuition may need further investigation but that's a topic for another discussion. — TheMadFool
Then Sextus is going to say that if Socrates died at point t, and he was already dead at point t (since the state of Socrates at any given point in time is defined by the changes in the previous points in time), that implies he died twice — Amalac
Yep and yep. By pointing. By saying now. — Trinidad
Is the mooted standard Metre Rule, the one in Paris from which all others are copied, a metre long? How could you tell - by measuring it against itself? But that's not performing a measurement. — Banno
When socrates died, he has already died, so the premise that socrates couldn't have died when he died seems invalid. — Corvus
nor did he die when he was dead, since he would have died twice. — Sextus Empiricus
When someone is already dead, it is not valid to declare, he cannot die. — Corvus
A premise can't be valid or invalid, only an argument can. A premise can only be true, false or meaningless.
If you say that premise is false, what's your response to this then?: — Amalac
What do you mean by “not valid” here? I guess you mean illegitimate?
But why isn't it legitimate? Isn't it correct to say that a living thing can only die once? Because the only way someone could die twice would be if they died, then came back to life, and then died again, which is surely impossible right? — Amalac
When already died (I guess you mean dead?), saying the he cannot die, sounds like some tautology or meaningless proposition to make. — Corvus
Not sure about not legitimate - never came across that term in the Logic books. — Corvus
It's not meaningless (and it's not a tautology either, since it's not logically impossible for someone to come back to life, merely physically impossible as far as we know), the proposition: “When someone is dead, he cannot die (again)” is clearly true, since if someone was dead and then died, he would have died twice, which is impossible.
At least, that seems to be what Sextus is saying. — Amalac
“Not legitimate” as in unreasonable. — Amalac
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