Why don't you just run the code and see?The following pseudocode provides a demonstration of C3 and is the correct way to interpret the logic of Thomson's lamp: — Michael
Why don't you just run the code and see? — Ludwig V
Fair enough. But that's a much better description, IMO. What more is there to say?But we don't need to run the code. We can understand the logic of it and so know that there is no consistent answer. It cannot be true, cannot be false, and cannot be anything other than true or false. — Michael
The sum is not the total addition of all the entries, but the limit of the total addition of all the entries. — Ludwig V
Yes. Sorry. Careless.No, the infinite sum is the limit of the sequence of the finite sums. — TonesInDeepFreeze
1 I don't see this use of "metaphysical" has any strong relationship to the traditional meaning of the term, so the choice could be regarded as misleading. "New metaphysics" might work. — Ludwig V
2 If this is "synthetic necessity", I wonder how we might define "contingent" - the opposite of "necessary" in the traditional structure of these terms. — Ludwig V
3 This is classified as "a posteriori" because it is contingent on the relevant rules existing and applying. But all analytic truths are contingent on the relevant definitions (rules of language) existing and applying, so does the term "a priori" have any use? — Ludwig V
Yes. Exactly.Case in point, the arrangement of games, as described in Toulmin's article, seems to have nothing to do with 'metaphysics' as traditionally used. — Lionino
I'm afraid I couldn't follow your account of this. I'll have to take another look at it later on. But I'm not sure that the project of trying to articulate the Venn diagram is necessarily the best way to go. It may be constraining, rather than guiding, your thinking."Metaphysical possibility" is sought as distinct from logical and physical possibility. — Lionino
Yes, but are the philosophers who want to make synthetic necessity among them?Some philosophers make away with both the a posteriori / a priori and analytic/synthetic distinctions, — Lionino
I'm afraid that I was brought up in the tradition that says that the analytic/synthetic distinction is the only one that means anything. My dilemma is that can see some sense in the point that that one only applies to language, where a priori applies to knowledge and contingent applies to "the world".I take the traditional view and accept all those distinctions. — Lionino
Density is a property of orderings. An ordering is dense if and only if between any two points there is another point. If time is divisible ad infinitum, then the ordering of points of time is dense. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But it is still the case that the lamp cannot arbitrarily be on (whether at midnight or any other time). It can only be turned on by pushing a button when it is off. You continually ignore this fact when you talk about the mathematical value ω. — Michael
I submit that neither description [Aladdin or Bernard's - ed] is self-contradictory, or, more cautiously, that Thomson's argument shows neither description to be self-contradictory (although possibly some other argument might).
According to Thomson, Aladdin 's lamp cannot be on at , because Aladdin turned it off after each time he turned it on. But this is true only of instants before ! From this it follows only that there is no time between and at which the lamp was on and which was not followed by a time also before at which it was off. Nothing whatever has been said about the lamp at or later. And similarly with Bernard's lamp. The only reasons Thomson gives for supposing that his lamp will not be off at are ones which hold only for times before . The explanation is quite simply that Thomson's instructions do not cover the state of the lamp at , although they do tell us what will be its state at every instant between and (including ). Certainly, the lamp must be on or off at (provided that it hasn't gone up in a metaphysical puff of smoke in the interval), but nothingf we are told implies which it is to be. The arguments to the effect that it can't be either just have no bearing on the case. To suppose that they do is to suppose that a description of the physical state of the lamp at (with respect to the property of being on or off) is a logical consequence of a description of its state (with respect to the samne property) at times prior to . I don't know whether this is true or not, and in section II I shall briefly investigate some matters that bear on this issue. But, true or not, the argument is invalid without the addition of a premise to that effect.
— Benecerraf
I address it all here. P1 is an implicit premise in Thomson's argument. He is asking "what happens to a lamp if we push its button an infinite number of times?", not "what happens to a lamp if we push its button an infinite number of times and then some arbitrary thing happens to it?". — Michael
If your only way to make sense of a supertask is by introducing God or magic to fix the problem at the end then you haven't made sense of a supertask at all. — Michael
You might as well try to resolve something like the grandfather paradox by using the same. Time travel into the past isn't physically possible but granting its possibility for the sake of argument doesn't then entail that anything goes, but that seems to be your approach to this issue. — Michael
I don't know if a button is pushed or not at the terminal time. Who says it's not? — fishfry
The terminal state is arbitrary. — fishfry
That seems to be true, so Benacerraf is right.Benacerraf argues that neither outcome is inconsistent with the rules of the problem, — fishfry
That seems to be true, so Benacerraf is right. — Ludwig V
The laws of noncontradiction and excluded middle are implied. — Michael
Am I contradicting you? — Ludwig V
Benacerraf argues that neither outcome is inconsistent with the rules of the problem,
— fishfry
That seems to be true, so Benacerraf is right. — Ludwig V
I am arguing that the supertask is metaphysically impossible. — Michael
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