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by Nevermark
111 days ago
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It isn't a brute fact, because there is no alternative. That is the definition of fully determined. X can uniquely be Y. And it can't be anything else than Y. The extreme opposition to a brute fact. Can we accept that any proposed model of reality potentially must, at a minimum, be self-determining without resort to any "other"? The unique constraint of strict self-containment and determination is a tautological challenge, but therefore also a valid axiom. |
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> And that it can't be the full reality if it is not self-determining, draws from anything else, any other domain, depends on any non-internal choice, any wisp of external determination?
No, brute contingent facts do not require external determination, so I reject this obviously. Or, I accept it and it's irrelevant because, again, brute contingent facts do not require external determination.