To me, "essence" suggests a set of necessary and sufficient properties that uniquely identify an existing, individual object. Existence isn't a property; that would imply there are objects in the world that lack it - which is absurd. All objects in the world exist.There can be an internal explanation: the existence of the first cause is explained inherently if its existence is part of its essence. — A Christian Philosophy
Logic has a reason for existing, as provided in the OP under section "Argument in defence of the PSR". — A Christian Philosophy
P -> Q
If John is in Tokyo, then John is in Japan.
R
John is in Paris (not in Tokyo). <=== A fact from real life situation.
S
Paris is not in Japan <=== Another fact from real life situation.
R & S ->~Q
Therefore John is not in Japan.
P -> Q
R
S
R & S->~Q
Therefore ~Q — Corvus
What you're not seeing - I don't know why - is that you're making two different arguments.
If john is in Tokyo, then John is in Japan. John is not in Tokyo. Maybe he is in Osaka or Yokohama.
But you're argument really is, If John is in Tokyo then John is in Japan. John is in Paris, therefore he is not in Japan. In this argument is the extra premise.
You can conclude John is not in Japan not because he is not in Tokyo, but because he is in Paris. — tim wood
I am unclear on what you mean by "natural" vs "super-natural". How do you define those two terms? — A Christian Philosophy
Essence is the same as identity, metaphysically speaking. As per the law of identity, everything has an identity. But sometimes a thing supervenes on more fundamental parts such that it gets its identity not from the whole but from the parts. E.g. a rock supervenes on fundamental physical elements like matter and energy, and so the rock does not have its own identity but gets its from its fundamental physical elements. Since the fundamental physical elements do not supervene on anything more fundamental (by definition of being fundamental), then their properties are essential to their identity.To me, "essence" suggests a set of necessary and sufficient properties that uniquely identify an existing, individual object. [...] Perhaps you mean something else. If so, explain what you mean, and why anyone should accept such a metaphysical framework. — Relativist
Some objects lack existence. Otherwise, the following propositions would not make sense, but they do.Existence isn't a property; that would imply there are objects in the world that lack it - which is absurd. All objects in the world exist. — Relativist
It's not a synonym. I think you're saying that an identity has a unique essence. But that still leaves "essence" undefined. You later said, "a being, whose essence is to have existence". This suggests "existing" is an essence (part of an essence?).Essence is the same as identity, metaphysically speaking. — A Christian Philosophy
Events aren't objects; they are points (or intervals) in time. By "object", I'm refering to ontological objects- things that exist. You're conflating concepts (or definitions) with "objects".Some objects lack existence. Otherwise, the following propositions would not make sense, but they do.
Before I existed, I did not exist; and after death, I might cease to exist.
Horses exist but unicorns do not.
There will be a solar eclipse during this date in the future; but the event does not exist yet. — A Christian Philosophy
As per the OP section "Argument in defence of the PSR", logic (and the PSR) are first principles of metaphysics. This means they exist in all possibe worlds, which means they have necessary existence. Thus, logic and the PSR exist necessarily or inherently. This is an internal reason which is valid under the PSR.What is the reason for the existence of logic? — RussellA
Something that is fundamental or basic can still meet the PSR as long as it has necessary existence. This would be an internal reason which is valid under the PSR. Now, we said that the PSR is a first principle of metaphysics. This means it exists in all possible worlds, which means it has necessary existence.If the PSR is true - and you think it is - then you can't just say that something is fundamental or basic. Such a status is precisely what the PSR denies. The PSR says that everything - everything - has an explanation. So what's the explanation of it? — Clearbury
Does "natural" only mean things in the world that we already know of, and "super-natural" means things that we don't know of yet? — A Christian Philosophy
We could entertain that the laws of nature are caused by prior laws, but this only pushes the problem one step back. To avoid the risk of infinite regress, a fundamental laws must be explained by something that requires an explanation but not a cause. — A Christian Philosophy
As per the OP section "Argument in defence of the PSR", logic (and the PSR) are first principles of metaphysics. This means they exist in all possibe worlds, which means they have necessary existence. Thus, logic and the PSR exist necessarily or inherently. This is an internal reason which is valid under the PSR. — A Christian Philosophy
The context of the discussion is metaphysics- so the relevant modality is metaphysical possibility/necessity. — Relativist
I've proposed that it is a metaphysical axiom that contingency needs to be accounted for: X is contingent iff whatever accounts for X could possibly account for ~X. In the absence of such an account, X is metaphyically necessary. A first cause is not accounted for by anything else, therefore it cannot be contingent. This conclusion follows from my axiom — Relativist
You also alluded to an "absence of constraints" applying (I assume) to a first cause. It is contrained to being whatever it was, conceptual possibilities notwithstanding. — Relativist
which is obviously wrong.
If "John is in Tokyo" then "John is in Japan", but if "John is not in Tokyo" then John could be some other place in Japan. — EricH
If John is in Paris is claimed as the axiom or fact in this proof above, then it gives a logical implication that John is not anywhere in Japan. — Corvus
It sounds like you have never heard of "reductio ad absurdum" in Logical Proof. — Corvus
Actually, I take them to be synonymous. But I'll explain what I mean by identity: If we can say "A is nothing but B", then A does not have its own identity and it supervenes on B. E.g. "A rock is nothing but molecules put together", and therefore a rock does not have its own identity. But we cannot say "A is nothing but B" forever. At some point, we reach the bottom. This bottom has its own identity.It's not a synonym. I think you're saying that an identity has a unique essence. — Relativist
It's a supposition, but yes. Being fundamental, these strings do not supervene on anything else, and thus have their own identity. Since we identify these as existing always, existence is an essential property.Suppose there is a fundamental layer of reality, for example: 20-dimensional strings. Everything is composed of them, and they are not composed of anything deeper. These strings exist at all times and locations. Does this fit your paradigm of having "existence" as part of its "essence"? — Relativist
Would a horse count as an ontological object? If so, then we can still say that before horses existed, then they did not have existence. If not, then what do you consider as objects?Events aren't objects; they are points (or intervals) in time. By "object", I'm refering to ontological objects- things that exist. You're conflating concepts (or definitions) with "objects". We can refer to objects in the past, present, or future. — Relativist
While I am not a physicalist, I am not assuming that physicalism is false in this discussion. Depending on where the above points end up, I can try to come up with better examples later.You said. "a rock supervenes on fundamental physical elements like matter and energy, and so the rock does not have its own identity but gets its from its fundamental physical elements." If physicalism is true, the same thing can be said about you and me, as you say about the rock. This suggests you're assuming physicalism is false. Is that correct? — Relativist
But this means, that if physicalism is true, and strings are the bottom layer, then everything is "nothing but" strings - so nothing has an identity other than the strings. This makes no sense. Composite objects, such as rocks and horses, exist.If we can say "A is nothing but B", then A does not have its own identity and it supervenes on B. E.g. "A rock is nothing but molecules put together", and therefore a rock does not have its own identity. — A Christian Philosophy
Sure, horses are ontological objects. No objects that we define as horses existed prior to some earlier specific point of time. Although we can say "horses didn't have existence prior to that point of time", it doesn't mean there's a metaphysical object "horse" that sometimes exists and sometimes doesn't.Would a horse count as an ontological object? If so, then we can still say that before horses existed, then they did not have existence. If not, then what do you consider as objects? — A Christian Philosophy
Two things.It is because you accept the idea that everything must have a cause and reject the idea that the laws of nature are self-caused that you "deduce" that there must be something that causes the laws of nature. — Fooloso4
The PSR as a first principle of metaphysics has been defended in the OP under section "Argument in defence of the PSR", and as a principle, there cannot be any exceptions.Rather than questioning the principle that there must be a cause you simply posit the existence of one because you believe that there must be one. — Fooloso4
There are several branches of logic but the science of logic as a whole is one coherent system. E.g. fuzzy logic is a branch that may be more suitable than other branches in some cases, but the different branches of logic do not contradict each other.There are many different type of logic, suggesting that no one logic exists necessarily. For example, there is Propositional Logic, First Order Logic, Second order logic , Higher order logic, Fuzzy logic, Modal logic, Intuitionistic Logic, Dialetheism, etc. — RussellA
I'll unpack the explanation: if a thing has necessary or inherent existence, then the proposition "this thing, whose existence is inherent, exists" is a tautology, and tautologies are necessarily true; while their negations are self-contradictory and thus necessarily false. This type of explanation fulfills the PSR.Labelling something a necessary existence does nothing to explain it. — Clearbury
This is because the shadow exists out of causal necessity (reason type 2 in the OP under section "PSR in Metaphysics") and not logical necessity (reason type 1). Things with causal necessity need further explanations because the cause, being a separate thing, must be explained. Things with logical necessity do not need further explanations because there is no other separate thing to explain.The shadow exists of necessity, yet it clearly needs - and has - an explanation. — Clearbury
I'll unpack the explanation: if a thing has necessary or inherent existence, then the proposition "this thing, whose existence is inherent, exists" is a tautology, — A Christian Philosophy
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