So if I take the ship completely apart, replacing each part as I go, but keep the name plate, whilst reassembling the original, without it, what is which?bilal_._haiderrr wrote: ↑Fri May 30, 2025 4:11 pm The classic question is: if you replace every single plank, nail, and part of a ship, is it still the same ship?
My answer is simple and bold: The real ship of Theseus is the one named “Theseus.” The parts don’t matter.
Let me explain. I’m Bilal, and I have a hand. That hand belongs to me. But I don’t belong to that hand. The hand is part of me, but my identity is not tied to just that hand alone. People say “This is Bilal’s hand,” not “This is the hand’s Bilal.” The hand is property; I am the person.
Similarly, if I buy a laptop and call it “Champ” — my favorite name — and then replace every piece inside that laptop over time, it remains my “Champ.” The parts are like belongings or inheritances; they’re not the “parents” of the thing’s identity.
Now take a country like name it "AsiaTop". "AsiaTop" is not "AsiaTop" because of its current people or buildings. Even if someone conquers it, replaces every person with new inhabitants, and rebuilds everything, it is still called "AsiaTop". People say "AsiaTop has been conquered,” not "AsiaTop is now homeless.” The name and the concept of AsiaTop persist regardless of the physical changes.
So, the paradox dissolves if you understand that identity comes from the name and continuity, not the physical components. The ship is the ship because we call it that, not because of its parts.
If another ship is created with its parts, then it could be named as that maker of that ship wants, doesnot mean that it will also named as Ship of Theseus
And the country analogy doesn't work. What did the aborigines of the Americas, Australasia, Siberia, Greenland, et al, call their lands?
Apart from that I agree.