The Law of Identity
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Magnus Anderson
- Posts: 1078
- Joined: Mon Apr 20, 2015 3:26 am
Re: The Law of Identity
It doesn't really matter, Skeppie. It's pretty clear to me it would be very hard for you to grasp the fact that 1 = 0 is a closed statement. So let's put it aside and try something simpler instead.
I am waiting for you to show us a thing that exists in 2 different states at the same time.
Don't give me your usual, "Are you identical to yourself from a moment ago?" That's a question that has nothing to do with the Law of Identity, let alone with the above.
Try something else.
I am waiting for you to show us a thing that exists in 2 different states at the same time.
Don't give me your usual, "Are you identical to yourself from a moment ago?" That's a question that has nothing to do with the Law of Identity, let alone with the above.
Try something else.
Re: The Law of Identity
Do you understand that the statement "1 = 0 is a closed statement" is itself an open statement unless you provide the VALUE of the expression in the closure domain.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:31 am It doesn't really matter, Skeppie. It's pretty clear to me it would be very hard for you to grasp the fact that 1 = 0 is a closed statement.
Is it closed in R (which axiomatization?!?) with value 0?
is it closed in R with value 1?
Is it closed in R with value 0.5?
Is it closed in N with value 0?
Is it closed in N with value 1?
For closure it is absolutely necessary but insufficient to say "it's closed in X with value Y."
Sure thing. A qubit.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:31 am I am waiting for you to show us a thing that exists in 2 different states at the same time.
Last edited by Skepdick on Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:42 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Magnus Anderson
- Posts: 1078
- Joined: Mon Apr 20, 2015 3:26 am
Re: The Law of Identity
As I said, Skeppie, you're beyond help. So why are you pushing it?Skepdick wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:36 am Do you understand that the statement "1 = 0 is a closed statement" is itself an open statement unless you provide the VALUE of the expression in the closure domain.
Is it closed in R and the value is 0?
is it closed in R and the value is 1?
Is it closed in R and the value is 0.5?
Is it closed in N and the value is 0?
Is it closed in N and the value is 1?
A quibit does not exist in 2 different states at the same time.
Try again.
Re: The Law of Identity
Why are you lying?Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:42 am A quibit does not exist in 2 different states at the same time.
Try again.
Re: The Law of Identity
Naturally. Anyone who doesn't need help is "beyond help".Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:42 am As I said, Skeppie, you're beyond help. So why are you pushing it?
That's why I am helping you.
At least one of us knows that the other is exploiting Cunningham's law.
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Scott Mayers
- Posts: 2485
- Joined: Wed Jul 08, 2015 1:53 am
Re: The Law of Identity
I think you are probably just trolling these issues for some unknown reason.Skepdick wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 6:51 amThat is the only sensible thing you've said. For somebody who pretends to value time you are temporally blind in your formalisms.Scott Mayers wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 11:47 pm I cannot convince you of anything and won't waste any further time, still no offense to you personally.
x=x doesn't ALWAYS hold.
When you stop trying to convince me that I am wrong and you start convincing yourself that you are wrong; only then can the dialogue resume.
I recognized, studied, and even created logics that are muli-variable and these are BUILT on those common laws as well as combining distinct variable logics into larger systems. You just may need to express them indirectly in alternate forms within your own system and possibly add more postulates. Your pretense of favoring some 'alternative' laws requires you do the work to prove it. You are not only denying those laws are minimum, you are denying that ANY such laws proposed are true at all. So you're just playing here or you'd have to be very dense.
Re: The Law of Identity
BINGO!Scott Mayers wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 3:15 am you are denying that ANY such laws proposed are true at all.
Laws have no truth-values. They are operational constructs. They either hold; or they don't; or somewhere in between.
You can operationalize that as true (when it holds); and false (when it doesn't); and maybe (when you don't know).
"x = x is true" isn't a discovery about the nature of reality, it's a design choice about how we define the equality operator in classical logic
When we say "the law of gravity holds," we're not making a truth claim about the universe, we're describing how our model behaves under certain conditions.
You are confused because you are doing metaphysics. There are just different operational choices with different consequences. Some might be more useful for certain purposes, but that's pragmatic, not metaphysical.
Re: The Law of Identity
Facepalm...Skepdick wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 7:20 amBINGO!Scott Mayers wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 3:15 am you are denying that ANY such laws proposed are true at all.
Laws have no truth-values. They are operational constructs. They either hold; or they don't; or somewhere in between.
You can operationalize that as true (when it holds); and false (when it doesn't); and maybe (when you don't know).
"x = x is true" isn't a discovery about the nature of reality, it's a design choice about how we define the equality operator in classical logic
When we say "the law of gravity holds," we're not making a truth claim about the universe, we're describing how our model behaves under certain conditions.
You are confused because you are doing metaphysics. There are just different operational choices with different consequences. Some might be more useful for certain purposes, but that's pragmatic, not metaphysical.
Saying "laws are operational constructs" cannot be true if there are no truth values. What you argue, by your own standards, cannot by true.
Re: The Law of Identity
Misunderstanding of readers is relative to the inability of an author to properly portray a point.
I don't think you understand the implications of your own point.
If laws are equivalent to operational constructs than anything by nature of being operative is an operational constructs and by default anything that exists can be said to be a law by virtue of operating. Law becomes a meaningless word. Operational construct becomes a meaningless word.
Everything you argue cannot even be true let alone non-false as the slippery slope of definition is inevitable the moment you assigned meaning to the words you premised your argument on.
Re: The Law of Identity
Look at it vomiting tokens!Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:25 amMisunderstanding of readers is relative to the inability of an author to properly portray a point.
I don't think you understand the implications of your own point.
If laws are equivalent to operational constructs than anything by nature of being operative is an operational constructs and by default anything that exists can be said to be a law by virtue of operating. Law becomes a meaningless word. Operational construct becomes a meaningless word.
Everything you argue cannot even be true let alone non-false as the slippery slope of definition is inevitable the moment you assigned meaning to the words you premised your argument on.
What do they even mean?
Re: The Law of Identity
Why do you desire meaning and what is this meaning you seek?Skepdick wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:26 amLook at it vomiting tokens!Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:25 amMisunderstanding of readers is relative to the inability of an author to properly portray a point.
I don't think you understand the implications of your own point.
If laws are equivalent to operational constructs than anything by nature of being operative is an operational constructs and by default anything that exists can be said to be a law by virtue of operating. Law becomes a meaningless word. Operational construct becomes a meaningless word.
Everything you argue cannot even be true let alone non-false as the slippery slope of definition is inevitable the moment you assigned meaning to the words you premised your argument on.
What do they even mean?
Re: The Law of Identity
Wow! It vomited a question!Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:34 amWhy do you desire meaning and what is this meaning you seek?Skepdick wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:26 amLook at it vomiting tokens!Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:25 am
Misunderstanding of readers is relative to the inability of an author to properly portray a point.
I don't think you understand the implications of your own point.
If laws are equivalent to operational constructs than anything by nature of being operative is an operational constructs and by default anything that exists can be said to be a law by virtue of operating. Law becomes a meaningless word. Operational construct becomes a meaningless word.
Everything you argue cannot even be true let alone non-false as the slippery slope of definition is inevitable the moment you assigned meaning to the words you premised your argument on.
What do they even mean?
Is it becoming conscious?!?
Re: The Law of Identity
Oh look, it repeats the word "vomit" like a broken record and then argues everything is assymetric...is this thing stuck in self-contradicting feedback loop? Do you even have a coherent definition of "vomit" that does not differ in meaning infinitely every time you use it?
Re: The Law of Identity
Wow! It's even beginning to spot meta-paterns!Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:39 amOh look, it repeats the word "vomit" like a broken record and then argues everything is assymetric...is this thing stuck in self-contradicting feedback loop? Do you even have a coherent definition of "vomit" that does not differ in meaning infinitely every time you use it?
Quick! Call the AI police to unplug it!