I think that true opposites exist only when they have been defined to be as (logical) opposites. Then the terms in my view cannot be independent. You can define things to be "true" or "false" or "correct" or "wrong" and the law of the excluded middle works quite well here. Or you can draw a line that has opposite points where the line ends.Do true opposites need to both exist 100% and independently of the other — TiredThinker
Looking for opposites in the real world will be difficult. — ssu
Something like that.I think problems arise when we take an easy case and then try to apply it universally. — Cuthbert
Metaphysics you are saying deals more in absolutes? — TiredThinker
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