Am I the discoverer of the effects of greenhouse gases on the environment, or am I the one who best shapes public policy to curtail emissions? — Todd Martin
Acolytes are expected to develop indifference to the discomforts of heat and cold . . . — Harold Stewart
There are a countably infinity of Turing machines hence a countable infinity of computable numbers, hence a bijection between the natural numbers and the noncomputable numbers. — fishfry
I think what I really like about the Dialogues of Plato is just that they take a bite at stuff that is NOT the kind of things like laws of physics, stuff like friendship, love, how to run a state — Ansiktsburk
One of the unsolved problems in science is the so-called Theory Of Everything (TOE). While I'm not clear on the details and hopefully that doesn't matter , , , — TheMadFool
If it is just drawing from things that already exist? — Darkneos
{ } is a subset of A, { } has N as an element. So A = {x, y, N} — TheMadFool
Ergo, Nothing is impossible. That's why there's something. — TheMadFool
Nothing = The empty set = { } — TheMadFool
In the pre-universe either something comes from nothing or there was an eternal and immaterial (no-thing) first existant. It is so simple. — val p miranda
I don't see it as a valid question, more like a waste of time. — Darkneos
For this theory of reality being a simulation to fly, it's necessary that the program that codes the simulation be finite for if not the program can't be completed/finished let alone executed on a computer. — TheMadFool
↪jgill
There is a common confusion between intention and intentionality, just as there is between potential and potentiality. The former has content, the latter is indeterminate: better understood as a faculty rather than a capacity. — Possibility
Intentionality is a predictive distribution of effort and attention - it requires consciousness, but one need not be conscious of it — Possibility
Science has become more and more compartmentalized and specialized to a degree that the language of science is not easily accessible or comprehensible to the otherwise generally well educated. — magritte
An act is not recognised as ‘creative’ until an abstract thinker attributes intentionality - but the act still happens — Possibility
You seemed to have this misconception too. Probably you still do, considering your repeated snarky remarks, instead of actually putting forward arguments — leo
This isn't a diagram of how much emphasis any particular human society contingently puts on the different subjects, but of the inherent relationships between the different subjects — Pfhorrest
What we create isn't always positive, and what we destroy isn't always negative. — leo
Does creativity come before the act? — Brett
It’s an adaptation of the Quadrivium’s . . . — Pfhorrest
Change is both a creation and a destruction, creation of what comes to be and destruction of what ceases to be. So it would be misguided to use change as a synonym for destruction. — leo
You might also want to take a look at topology — TheMadFool
The point is that destruction isn’t inherently bad, contrary to popular belief. Maybe you need to overcome that belief too — leo
I hope my participation in this thread doesn't inconvenience or distress you too much. — fishfry
I don't see a point in continuing this conversation. — SophistiCat
When did science relinquish logic from its tool box — Metaphysician Undercover
You say you created something because you focus on what comes to be, the field of mathematics that includes this "form". If you focus on what ceased to be, the field of mathematics without that "form", you would say you destroyed something. But really you both created and destroyed something — leo
If I said that I would be content enough if nothing happened after physical death . . . — TiredThinker
Russell is clearly wrong. This paradox is now clearly fixed. Can we move on in a unified manner? — Philosopher19
I am a scientist — Sir Philo Sophia
Having made that statement you are obliged to supply details. — jgill
