Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon Mar 17, 2025 6:38 am
Once you ignore unique identifiers - what's the difference?
The difference is that you're no longer comparing what you started with.
Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon Mar 17, 2025 6:38 am
The non-unique identifiers of two portions of reality.
You need to make up your mind.
Are you comparing the square to the triangle?
Or are you comparing portions of those?
If you're comparing what they have in common, you are comparing portions of those.
Do you understand what that means?
It means that, it is the portions you are comparing that are identical, not the square and the triangle themselves.
Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon Mar 17, 2025 6:38 am
When you are focused on comparing only non-unique identifiers - you have absolutely no idea what those are a priori.
For every identifier encountered:
If it's unique - reject and don't compare.
If it's non-unique - accept and compare.
If I don't discard any unique identifiers during the comparison I can tell you outright - A and B are NOT identical!
In fact the only way A and B can be identical (on your notion of "identity") is if the union of their unique identifiers is empty.
I can tell you still don't fully comprehend the full implications of the fact that BEFORE YOU CAN COMPARE ANYTHING, YOU HAVE TO CHOOSE WHAT YOU'RE COMPARING.
In fact, before you can map anything, or talk about anything, you have to choose what you're mapping or talking about.
And that can be ABSOLUTELY ANY KIND OF SEGMENT OF REALITY.
Nothing is forcing you to choose a physical object TOGETHER with its location in time and space.
Consider this:
Let A be an apple TOGETHER with its location in time and location in space.
Let B be another apple TOGETHER with its location in time and location in space.
Let A and B be identical in every regard except for their locations in time and locations in space.
Are they identical? THEY AREN'T. They are merely APPROXIMATELY identical.
But here's the catch . . .
Let A' be A but without its location in time and its location in space. That would make it a subset of A.
And let B' be B but without its location in time and its location in space. That would make it a subset of B.
A and A' are 2 different portions of reality that are not identical ( but merely super close to being identical. )
The same applies to B and B'.
But A' and B'
are identical. Completely. Not merely approximately. They are exactly the same. No difference. Zero difference. They are equal, same, identical in every regard.
The lesson?
WE CHOOSE WHAT WE'RE COMPARNIG.