Logically speaking the argument (C) is valid - anything follows a contradiction. But it is unsound because contradictions (N & ~N) are always false. — TheMadFool
Your statement is dead on except the last bit about not having a choice in the matter. — noAxioms
It's all evidence, but each one of us may decide what it is evidence of.Who gets to decide? — T Clark
I don't agree that there's a past or future that exists and in which "there are things." Only the present exists. Only the changes that are currently happening exist. — Terrapin Station
So, you don't find anything wrong with a game in which heads I win and tails you lose???!! — TheMadFool
My question is why are two mutually contradictory states (ordinary laws of nature AND miracles - breaking the aforementioned laws) taken to be evidence for the same thing - God? — TheMadFool
Would you like others to distrust you, yes or no? — Harry Hindu
If not, then wouldn't it be a punishment if someone distrusted you after something you did that you are being blamed for? Yes, or no? — Harry Hindu
So you believe that noses are not particular material, in particular relations, undergoing particular processes? — Terrapin Station
Right, so you can't object that consciousness can't be material because if so, it can't be "qualitatively identical." — Terrapin Station
Which makes whether it's subjective or objective hardly irrevelant. If it requires a mind it's subjective. Per my usage, that's the definition of subjective. — Terrapin Station
Why aren't people satisfied, so to speak, with the ''evidence'' provided in the Teleological argument? — TheMadFool
At any rate, so things that are material can be qualitatively identical in your view. — Terrapin Station
Also, similarity is simply things being relatively more alike than different in some respect. That's an objective quality. — Terrapin Station
What I don't get is why you have a "qualitative identity" that can't obtain via material. — Terrapin Station
I don't recall what you said about noses earlier. Do you believe that noses aren't "qualitatively identical" (I'm putting that phrase in quotation marks partially because I don't use it), or do you believe that there's something about noses that isn't material? — Terrapin Station
It seems odd to me that you'd be so eager to say that "2+2" isn't identical to "4," yet you readily say that Joe's subjective experience is identical to Pete's (or at least some part of it is). — Terrapin Station
Blaming, praising and judgement of guilt are the same as holding someone responsible. So that would be circular. — Harry Hindu
Distrusting someone is a punishment. — Harry Hindu
What use is blaming someone without punishing them (creating a negative consequence as a result of their action in order to prevent those actions in the future)? In my experience, simply blaming people isn't useful. You have to supply a negative consequence in order to prevent future acts, or they just end up doing it again. — Harry Hindu
Sure, "4" refers to 4, "2" refers to 2. — Srap Tasmaner
I think Frege construes 2 + 2 as a function. "2" has a sense, and refers to 2. "+" has a sense, but doesn't refer to an object. — Srap Tasmaner
Frege considers 4 a simple object. "4" is a name for 4 with a simple sense, but 4 also has infinitely many names with complex senses, but still the simple reference 4. — Srap Tasmaner
"2 + 2" and "4" are, usually, different ways of referring to 4. They have different senses, but the same reference. — Srap Tasmaner
If indeterminism, the position that some things are not efficiently caused at all, is understood to be the case, then those undetermined events must be seen as either purely random, absolutely arbitrary, or purposely caused by 'something' outside of the system of efficient causation. Any truly final cause must, logically, be a cause which is not itself caused. — John
I can't see how necessity can be understood to obtain in particular interactions unless determinism is assumed to be the case. — John
Did I say that it refers to a type of thing? — Terrapin Station
Because it's useful to think in "type" terms and language couldn't work without type terms. — Terrapin Station
There's no difference on the conventional usage of "identical" in philosophy. But in your view, the difference is what? — Terrapin Station
I haven't seen it put the way you put it before. It sounds like you are saying that Aristotle's aim was to distinguish the different ways in which people used (the ancient Greek equivalent of) the word 'cause'. If so, then maybe I have been too hard on him. I don't know how Ancient Greeks used words. He's likely to know much more about that than me. Also, even though there will be big differences between how they used a word and how we use its modern equivalent, I think I see some similarities between the uses he describes and the modern uses. — andrewk
I don't see people around me using 'cause' in the sense of his 'final cause' though. Maybe it's just the society in which I live, but people I know just don't use the word 'cause' that way. I have no reason to suspect that Ancient Greeks didn't though. The closest I have observed is that people will use the word 'because' to explain why they did something. But I find the similarity between 'because' and 'cause' purely textual, not semantic. — andrewk
This is not true. Take the hammer and nail example. If striking the nail with the hammer is the efficient cause of driving the nail, that entails no necessity that the hammer striking the nail with sufficient accuracy logically must result in it being driven, or even that its being driven is physically necessary . — John
I'm referring to identity in the 2+2 is identical to 4 sense. — Terrapin Station
Because it's useful to think in "type" terms and language couldn't work without type terms. I'm not sure that you're clear that I'm simply denying that multiple people have a single, numerically identical subjective experience. — Terrapin Station
It's just like one person's nose is different than another's. They don't somehow share just one nose. — Terrapin Station
