Why do you think that it has been annihilated, rather than just broken? Is it just an exaggeration? Or something else? Although, if it was just an exaggeration, then you wouldn't really mean what you say, and you wouldn't really think that it has been annihilated. — Chief Owl Sapientia
Then let's see if we can do that, because I want to understand your point of view, which seems to differ from my own. It seems to me like you might be moving the goalposts by referring to a "drinking glass". The drinking function ceased, but that is just a subject's way of seeing the object. The drinking part is not a part of the object. — Chief Owl Sapientia
If a certain structure is an essential part of the existence of an object, and that certain structure is destructed, then the object would cease to exist. Is that your thinking? — Chief Owl Sapientia
But one can identify the object in different ways, so as to identify a particular. We're talking about this cup, not that cup, or any other cup. I could point to it or give it a unique name or specify its time or location with enough precision to differentiate it from others. — Chief Owl Sapientia
I am only talking about mathematics in this thread, not ontology; maybe you should start your own thread on "Continuity and Ontology." — aletheist
I think it would take a global catastrophe, or a long and resisted period of global depression, to actually put population growth into the negative. — VagabondSpectre
Fertilization boosts efficiency but it's not necessary. — VagabondSpectre
It's not so much about description, but about how identity is assigned. If a group of people think of it in the way that you describe above, and assign identity accordingly, then that is the practical meaning of identity for that group of people. — Sapientia
There can be no annihilation of an object and a rebuilding of it. That is impossible. It would have to be something else which is annihilated, or something else which has ceased. Your example of the glass is not an example of an object being annihilated and rebuilt. The object is just broken, melted and reformed, not annihilated. — Sapientia
Any attempted solution which priorities one way of speaking and rules out others will always have to compete with the opposing proposed solutions which it rules out, rather than reconcile these proposed solutions under a broader encompassing theory which avoids the kind of problems that these proposed solutions face. There are more sophisticated and less problematic proposed solutions to this problem. — Chief Owl Sapientia
If experience can’t be the object of knowledge, then you can’t make any claims about it. Full stop. There’s no middle ground here that I can see, but perhaps you could take a stab at explaining how your claims about experience are possible if experience literally can’t be known. — Aaron R
That would be news to mathematicians. — aletheist
Not at the same time and in the same respect, hence no contradiction. — aletheist
An ideal is a timeless truth. And that a continuum cannot be divided is such an ideal. So are you arguing that there will be a time after the ideal continuity is divided and then there would no longer be such an ideal? But since an ideal is a timeless truth, if there will be a time when there is no longer an ideal continuity, then there must not be an ideal continuity even now.It is not possible to divide it and still have a continuum. — aletheist
Dividing it is precisely what causes it to change from a continuum to a non-continuum. — aletheist
You are clearly not paying attention at all. — aletheist
I didn't. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Since this is the case, the problem you present is nothing more than a red-herring — TheWillowOfDarkness
What you suggest as a problem is just a category error, a mistaken assumption that unity is given by other things. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No, the unity of an object does not exist in the first place and has no end, so there is no end to the particular continuum-- hence the dead and fictional are still whole, despite being broken apart or never existing. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Claimed numerical continuum must be an illusions because this, the electromagnetically regulated reality we perceive, is almost always the world of zero. Meaning no matter what we find via the senses and our sensory based instruments we find only +1 & -1 of discrete objects. — Wolf
Descriptions are descriptions and in all situations must be taken as some attempt but in no way or manner so they ever come close to the actual experience. — Rich
Labeling with descriptions are useless. What is useful, is watch the ocean and the waves and observe closely what is actually happening as forms come and go in seamless never ending pattern of becoming and going. No states, no division, no difference between the whole and the parts, no way to divide, no b way to say this is where it begins and this is where it ends, yet it is all there. — Rich
So while I do think that mathematics in accordance with the arithmetic/Dedekind-Cantor/set-theoretic paradigm is intrinsically discrete, I deny that all mathematics is constrained to refer only to discrete units. We certainly have not determined otherwise in this thread. — aletheist
One more time: I have always and only been dealing with mathematics and ideal states of affairs throughout this thread. Your unwillingness or inability to think of a continuum in mathematical/ideal terms is your own limitation, not mine. — aletheist
Which is exactly what I have done. You have not demonstrated otherwise; you just keep asserting it over and over, apparently expecting a different result. Where have I claimed that both P and not-P are true at the same time and in the same respect? — aletheist
What I stated is that a continuum cannot be divided into parts that are themselves indivisible; so it can be divided into parts that are themselves divisible, although once that happens it is no longer a continuum. — aletheist
Because points are indivisible, and a continuous line cannot be divided into parts that are themselves indivisible. Try to keep up. — aletheist
As I said, you are locked into the standard rules of classical logic, which are very useful for most purposes, but not for understanding the nature of true continuity. Failure of excluded middle is not a contradiction in all viable forms of logic. — aletheist
Any object has a start and end... but these can only be finite states. They are never a whole in the first place. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Niether of these objects are a whole, either of the plan or the object. — TheWillowOfDarkness
My plan doesn't suddenly become "not whole" because it began and ended. Nor does the created object. The point is starts and ends do not amount to a breaking of a contiuum. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If one could break a contiuum, it not indivisible. The infinite nature of a contiuum means it must be unaffected by beginnings and ends. — TheWillowOfDarkness
As I have repeatedly made clear, I am discussing mathematics here, which has to do with ideal states of affairs; I am not saying anything whatsoever about physical objects. — aletheist
There has to be a way to distinguish a continuum (such as a line) from an indivisible (such as a point). — aletheist
There is nothing contradictory about my/Peirce's definition, and if you are going to keep insisting that there is, we might as well call yet another impasse and go our separate ways. — aletheist
But by my definition, it cannot be so divided; therefore, not only is it not discrete, it is not even potentially discrete. A true continuum cannot be composed of discrete elements, and it also cannot be decomposed into discrete elements. We can only introduce indivisible points along a continuous line, and those points are not parts of the continuous line itself. — aletheist
We can only introduce indivisible points along a continuous line, and those points are not parts of the continuous line itself. — aletheist
Therefore, the principle of excluded middle does not apply to that which is continuous; and this is all that it means to say that a continuum has only indefinite or potential parts. — aletheist
As oxymorinic as it sounds it could be a case of reason-based convention, just not arbitrary convention. — TheMadFool
The point being that if the paradox has any worth i is the exposure of our poor understanding of identity. — TheMadFool
They are one and the same. It is a continuum. The is no discontinuity between that which physical and that which creates it. I am bewildered at how you are able to separate the two. If we aren't energy, then what are we? The energetic form is simply moving within an energy field as a wave moves in water. There is no separation. — Rich
Actually, it is constantly changing. Some quite overtly others very subtly. But everything is constantly changing in one manner or another. Energy never stands still. Heraclitus was right and my guess is that he intuited it. If you were correct, then a whole new problem is created, like how does all quanta stop long enough, in concert with each other, to create your state. That would be interesting. — Rich
That which cannot be divided at all is an individual, not a continuum - e.g., a point rather than a line. There has to be a way to distinguish these two concepts. — aletheist
What would you call something that satisfies the following definition of a continuum? That which has potential parts, all of which would have parts of the same kind, such that it could be divided (but would then cease to be continuous), and none of the resulting parts would ever be incapable of further division. — aletheist
This just seems completely backwards to me. How can we identify any real examples of continua without first defining what it means to be continuous? What interests me is whether there is anything real that satisfies my definition of continuity, even if you want to call it something else. — aletheist
The whole doesn't get divided in instances where we cut up an object. In such an instance, we are destroying a particular state of the world. When we cut a carrot, we don't target the whole. The knife doesn't split a whole into two halves, such there is a division of the whole.
If I try and say: "Here is half the whole carrot," my statement is incohrent. Since the whole is indivisible, I can't split it such that I have half the whole here and the other half of the whole over there.
In a sense we could say I destroy the whole. In cutting, I take a state expressing an infinite of continuity out of the world. Where one the whole was expressed in the world in front of me, now it is only done so in logic. There's never a split in the whole though, such that we end up with seperate parts of it. We are only destroying an object which expesses the whole. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Following on, this also means particular continuities don't have a beginning or end. Yes, any given object has a start and end, but this is not the unity expressed by it. Whether we are talking about a rock, a person or bacteria, it doesn't take existence for them to be whole-- imagined objects are no less whole than existing ones. In the birth and death of states, there only presence in time, as divided moments. It is only those divided moments, expressing a whole, which are lost and formed. Wholes themsleves are neither created or destroyed. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There are no states in nature. — Rich
Not really. To say that a continuum has no definite parts just means that it does not have any distinct, discrete, or indivisible parts. With this qualification, I might even be willing to grant that a continuum has no parts at all, as long as it remains undivided. — aletheist
After all, we agree that the act of dividing a continuum breaks its continuity; so what "infinitely divisible" means in this context is that if we start dividing a continuum, we will never reach the point (literally) of reducing it to an indivisible part. In other words, a continuum is indivisible in the specific sense that if it were divided into parts, and thus made discontinuous, then none of those parts would be indivisible. What do you think? — aletheist
Again, whether there are any real continua is a separate question from what it means to be continuous. — aletheist
I think that the first thing to establish is whether space and time are themselves continuous. If not - if they are discrete - then presumably all spatio-temporal entities are also discrete. However, if we establish that they are continuous, then we can investigate whether anything within space and time is also continuous. — aletheist
If there's any convention in the paradox we're discussing it is not of type 1 (arbitrary). Rather ''identity'' is a reason-based convention. We have to reason out what ''identity'' means and then, much later after rigorous analysis, we establish the convention that ''identity'' means so and so.
Hence, we can't simply brush aside the problem by saying it's just a matter of convention. — TheMadFool
The description changes, not the intrinsic continuity. — Rich
As with mathematics, descriptions (for communication purposes only) is symbolic. Symbols are not that which is being described. Just because I describe two different events in my life does is constantly starting and stopping. Duration is continuous when observed directly. Symbolics only are necessary for communication or as a tool for manipulation. — Rich
The important point is that no continuity is ever lost and no symbolic, which is intrinsically formed by individual units can possibly capture this continuity. — Rich
This thread is basically about the ability for symbolics to adequately describe continuity. It can't. In fact, the description they yield is pretty much totally contrary to experience. The waves never, ever, ever break the continuity of the ocean. The objects are formed and reformed out of the continuity. — Rich
Absolutely not. When a wave in an ocean transforms in two or more or even dissolves in the ocean, no continuity is lost whatsoever. — Rich
Forms of substance are nothing more than waves in the fabric of the universe. They are just more solid by degrees. How does one break continuity in the universe, in space, in duration? With a very fine knife? Exactly how fine? Finer than Planck's constant? Continuity can never be broken. It can only be reformed, as waves reform in oceans. — Rich
As children it is common for us to play games. One of these games involves breaking apart toys into its components and then rebuilding. We've all done it and we've seen others do it too. In such cases we never think that the process of annihilation - reconstruction yields a different toy. Are you saying this common sense intuition is wrong? — TheMadFool
Overall, the intensity fluctuations of solar radiation are small. In long-term average they amount to only the fraction of a percent of the total irradiance. The ultraviolet radiation, however, shows greater fluctuations and is also regarded as particularly climate-effective. Since the Earth's atmosphere absorbs this radiation to a large extent, it influences critical chemical reactions in the upper layers of the atmosphere. Indirectly, these processes can also affect the temperature at the Earth's surface.
Our "cutting" of a whole is merely picking out something specific. — TheWillowOfDarkness
There isn't a conflict. Ideal continuity is present. Any infinite can't be divided such that it said to begin or end. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Your failure to understand it does not render it incoherent. I understand it, I just seem to be unable (so far) to explain it in a way that you will accept. Is this, in the end, the substance of our disagreement here? If you were to wake up tomorrow and decide that the notion of an indefinite part makes sense to you after all, would you have any other objections remaining? — aletheist
We have already agreed that a continuum does not consist of points, that it is undivided, and that it is indivisible in the sense that once it is divided, it is no longer continuous. It seems, then, that the last hurdle - as I have already suggested - is your insistence that a continuum cannot have parts of any kind, grounded in your rejection of indefinite parts, such as infinitesimals or Zalamea's "neighborhoods." Do you concur with this assessment? — aletheist
If and when you ever come to understand this, you will then finally understand what Peirce and I mean by a true continuum. — aletheist
In any case, as Peirce stated (and you also quoted), "a continuum, where it is continuous and unbroken, contains no definite parts" (emphasis added). Therefore, its parts are indefinite; or as I have said about infinitesimals, indistinct (but distinguishable). — aletheist
The continuum is the more basic concept here, not its parts. You cannot assemble a continuum from its parts, you can only divide it into parts; and once you have done so, even just once, it is no longer a continuum. — aletheist
A continuous line is divisible if there is no location along it where it is incapable of being divided; but again, once it is divided, it is no longer continuous. — aletheist
How do you deal with facts like, for example, a motor vehicle consists of parts, it is divisible, it can be disassembled and its various parts sent all over the world? — John
Let us imagine a scenario which hopefully will make you see my POV.
Ship A needs to be transported from city x to city y. However, it has to be done by land and also it becomes necessary to disassemble it for easier transport. These kind of situations are quite common. So nothing difficult in imagining it.
After the parts of ship A reach city y they are reassembled in the original exact configuration. In this case annihilation is present but the ship A hasn't lost its identity. There is nothing grossly wrong in holding such a belief. — TheMadFool
Notice that infinite divisibility, by itself, is not sufficient to make something continuous; I suspect that I may not have made this clear previously. However, the definition that I have invoked most often - that which has parts, all of which have parts of the same kind - is exactly what Peirce presented here (twice), attributing it to Kant and providing (in my opinion) a convincing case for it. The parts of a continuum, most notably infinitesimals, are not definite; once we create them by the very act of defining them, we have broken the continuity. — aletheist
On the whole, therefore, I think we must say that continuity is the relation of the parts of an unbroken space or time.
...
In accordance with this it seems necessary to say that a continuum, where it is continuous and unbroken, contains no definite parts; that its parts are created in the act of defining them and the precise definition of them breaks the continuity. — CP 6.168, c. 1903-1904, paragraph breaks added
"Once divided" is a different situation from "divisible." Once divided, the line is indeed no longer continuous; but as long as it remains continuous, the line is both infinitely divisible and undivided. Obviously "divisible" in this context does not mean "capable of remaining continuous after being divided," as you seem to be taking it. — aletheist
First of all, you keep referring to "a continuity" as if it were a thing. Continuity is a property, not a thing; a continuum is a thing that has the property of continuity - i.e., being continuous. — aletheist
Take a blank piece of paper and draw a line with arrows at both ends, then draw a series of five equally spaced dots along the line between the arrows. Mark each dot with a numeral from 0 to 4. The drawing itself is not a continuous line with points along it, it is a representation - a sign - of a continuous line with points along it; the latter constitutes the sign's object. What we come to understand by observing (and perhaps modifying) the drawing is the sign's interpretant. All signs are irreducibly triadic in this way - the object determines the sign to determine the interpretant; the sign stands for its object to its interpretant. — aletheist
There are three ways that a sign can be related to its object. In simple terms, an icon represents its object by virtue of similarity, an index by virtue of an actual connection, and a symbol by virtue of a convention. As a whole, the drawing is an icon; specifically, a diagram, which means that it embodies the significant relations among the parts of its object. Individually, the drawn line and dots are also icons of a continuous line and points, respectively; but they are symbols, as well, because we conventionally ignore the width and crookedness of a drawn line, as well as the diameter and ovalness of a drawn dot, since they are intended to represent a one-dimensional line and a dimensionless point. The arrows at the ends of the drawn lines are likewise symbols, conventionally suggesting the infinite extension of the line in both directions. The numerals labeling the dots are indices, calling attention to them and assigning an order to them as an actual measurement of the drawn line. They are also symbols, conventionally representing the corresponding numbers. — aletheist
What can we learn about continuity from this diagram? We marked five points with dots and assigned numerals to them. Are those dots parts of the line? No, they are additions to the line; we did not draw any dots while drawing the line itself, we came back and drew them later. — aletheist
Likewise, any point along a continuous line is not part of the line; it cannot be, because a continuum must be infinitely divisible into parts that are themselves infinitely divisible. — aletheist
As I keep having to remind you, everything in pure mathematics is "imaginary" - ideal, hypothetical, etc. The question of whether there are any real continua is separate from the question of what it means to be continuous. We have to sort out the latter before we can even start investigating the former. — aletheist
This still reflects deep confusion about infinitesimals. They are not "points," and they are not "values." In our diagram, they are extremely short lines within the continuous line, indistinct but distinguishable for a particular purpose. — aletheist
No matter how high the magnification, you would never see any gaps in the line; but you would also never find any place along the line where it would be impossible to divide it by introducing a discontinuity in the form of a dimensionless point. This is precisely what it means to be continuous - undivided, yet infinitely divisible. — aletheist
When it comes to "what continuity really is," there is no "fact of the matter" - it is a mathematical concept, so we can define it however we like. — aletheist
On the contrary, my interest is in a particular concept, not a particular terminology. Telling me that my definition is "wrong" is ultimately beside the point. — aletheist
You remember how all this started, right? A contrived example. — Baden
Your meaning is exclusive. — Baden
Continuing from there, we collect ALL the atoms that were replaced in person A and reconstitute it as another body in its original configuration. Wouldn't you say this is person A? Isn't ship A the ship of Theseus? — TheMadFool
There's two ways of looking at it. I made it clear in my first post. I'm not saying either is nonsensical on its own terms. However, if you claim that to be red is just to look red, that's equivalent to saying there can be no science of colour. But there is. So, you're wrong. — Baden
No one doubts that A is a referent of ''the ship of Theseus. — TheMadFool
To explain, imagine if ship A was torn down at one go while simultaneously replacing the parts to build ship B. Permit me to use the word ''instantaneous'' here. So, if the whole exercise was done instantaneously there would be no doubt that A is the ship of Theseus. Ship B is just a copy of A.
Therefore, the gradual replacement of ship A's parts counts as a relevant factor in the paradox. But is it truly relevant? — TheMadFool
Good observation! — Wayfarer
As I have stated over and over, in this thread and others, a true continuum is that which has parts, ALL of which have parts of the same kind. — aletheist
