Derail.
I'm not interested in physical possibility.
The OP is specifically on logical possibility.
Try to discipline yourself if you want to be relevant.
If I can imagine it, it's logically possible?
EB
Derail.
Speakpigeon wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 8:49 pm Derail.
I'm not interested in physical possibility.
The OP is specifically on logical possibility.
Try to discipline yourself if you want to be relevant.
If I can imagine it, it's logically possible?
You seem to know really very little about anything outside computers. You're like a specialist in Quantum Physics insisting on giving advice to the President of the United States about world affairs.Logik wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 8:57 pmSpeakpigeon wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 8:49 pm I'm not interested in physical possibility.
The OP is specifically on logical possibility.![]()
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What the fuck are you talking about?
Can you think of something that is PHYSICALLY possible but it is not LOGICALLY possible?
Reality doesn't follow logic. Logic follows reality.
Speakpigeon wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 9:04 pm You seem to know really very little about anything outside computers.
Man. Another idealised and over-simplistic perspective on logic. Deconstructing your bullshit is really draining and I am running out of wine.-1- wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 6:36 pm The rules of logic are the operators that drive operations performed. If you say "P or Q" it is a rule that either P or Q, or both, if true, then the result is true. That is one rule of logic.
It is constructive and constructed. But that alone says nothing about the presence of rules.
The driving of a car on a city street is an action that is constructed and constructive. But there are rules how to drive a car.
You are just your own old self, Logik: contrarian even to the detriment of being right.
No it isn't.
I HAVE to name it some other way? Says who? You
Replace "narcissistic rage" with "idealistic rage" and look in the mirror.
A shared vocabulary is essential for clear communication.
An explanation was necessary because your unique meaning is not contained in a standard dictionary.Logik wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 11:29 am I didn't need a dictionary to explain to you what I mean by "square circle". I explained it to you with pictures and followed it up with high school Mathematics.
It's just a cylinder whose height is equal to its diameter. I have labeled that object a "square circle" for my own, communicative convenience.
Yes, you should have used squirkle instead of square circle from the start.
Yes and no. A shared, general-purpose vocabulary is needed to frame the conversation/debate. Allow two (otherwise strangers) to get on the "same page" so that we have a point of departure. A broad-yet-shared context.commonsense wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 1:01 am A shared vocabulary is essential for clear communication.
At least 60% of the phenomena/objects around you (the things you experience day to day) are NOT in the dictionary.commonsense wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 1:01 am An explanation was necessary because your unique meaning is not contained in a standard dictionary.
Why? I explained it clearly and concisely. You know damn well what I mean by "square circle"commonsense wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 1:01 am Yes, you should have used squirkle instead of square circle from the start.
Name them.
You can't draw an extrapolation that all other arguments will be similar to those between you and JohnDoe7.
You're a cat that really is gone.
What is it that you are talking about? You are compeltely crazy. Not a concept, not a word you say makes sense, you are only desperately trying to make your argument work.Logik wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 9:31 pmNo it isn't.![]()
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Because Mathematics is idealised and because points are ASSUMED as zero-space/zero-volume entities in geometry. A point is a something that is supposedly nothing. The moment you depart your imagination reality has a different set of ideas.
When you draw a circle on a piece of paper, you have actually drawn two, concentric circles. The radius of the outside circle is <the thickness of your pencil> greater than the inside circle.
A 2-dimensional CONCEPT of a circle realized in 3-dimensional space becomes either a torus or a cylinder. We don't have zero-thickness materials.
So you are forced into a having a 3rd dimension whether you want to or not.
I HAVE to name it some other way? Says who? YouGo fuck yourself.
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I use language however I want to and for my own needs and purposes
If you don't like it - send the Grammathematics police to my house.
In addition to being an idealist, you are also a linguistic prescriptivist ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_prescription ).
Replace "narcissistic rage" with "idealistic rage" and look in the mirror.
There are no such things as circles outside of your mind. Go ahead and show me one.
To end this on a brighter note, now I know that you are an idealist, linguistic prescriptivist who doesn't tolerate inconsistency.
So this interaction has been incredibly useful for me in learning how to program... errr no. Push your buttons.
Yay![]()
I am using language that is understood by computer scientists, mathematicians, physicists, engineers and logicians.
I am trying to treat you like an adult. But you continue to behave like an intellectual child.
Good luck! My sanity is in check. Thank you for your concern.