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by aatd86
216 days ago
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Funny thing is to ask: 'Is blue, blue?'
Now with existence: 'Does existence, exist?'
And then a bit differently: 'Is nothing something?' We see that these are different types of impredicativity. Existence just needs itself to define itself.
Nothing cannot exist if nothing actually somehow is. It needs existence.
Blue is a word. It does not exhibit the characteristic is describes.
The set of all things blue does not contain the proposition 'blue'. While the set of all things that exist contains itself?
Sweet baby Ouroboros ;D |
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1. The question of whether concepts exist in the absence of a human mind to imagine them. This is still debated in philosophy. I'm not an expert, so I won't make a claim about this, but I will point out that if it was easy to resolve, it probably wouldn't be a field of active debate after 2000+ years.
2. The question of whether it is necessary that _something_ physically must exist. This I do make a strong claim on: it is not necessary that something physically exist. There is no law that forces objects to exist. We find ourselves in a universe where objects do exist. This is not required. It just happens to be the case.
Side-note: I find the response "Nope :)" to be kindof condescending. I realize English may be a second language to you, so maybe you don't feel the subtle jab in that -- no worries if so, I'm sure I make the same mistakes in other languages all the time. Smiley faces are definitely allowed online, but in general I'd say to use them when making a joke or when acknowledging your own mistake.
Edit: In case somebody is curious, "the question of whether concepts exist in the absence of a human mind to imagine them" is debated at least since plato's time. I believe these concepts-that-exist-without-humans are sometimes called Platonic Forms. They are good for a wikipedia binge!