I could go on responding to every little detail...but it is entirely unnecessary. Why?...because it would distract from the obvious.daniel j lavender wrote: ↑Tue Aug 12, 2025 8:10 pmThe ontology establishes parameters for substantiation. It isn’t merely a test. However the parameters do function in that way.Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 12, 2025 6:43 pmIf you are deriving truth from testability than the framework determines the answers and truth becomes mere rhetorical assertion. Tests do not necessarily determine the truth of reality, they are expressions of how we percieve reality as the test is a framework of interpretation.
You claim this is merely rhetorical assertion. The terms are grounded in concrete examples dispelling such claims of rhetorical assertion. Is observing a tree rhetorical assertion? Is touching a leaf rhetorical assertion? Is hearing a bird rhetorical assertion?
The definition serves to link the philosophically abstract to the obvious and the tangible.
What is a better definition?
What alternative definitions enable substantiation of existence?
The definition provided allows substantiation and identification of existence. It makes existence real for lack of better terms. Alternative definitions do not.
Existence is not limited. Existence is not limited to part or to the whole. Existence is both part and whole, limited and unlimited.
The tree is the tree, it is limited. It is [part of] existence. However existence is not limited to the tree. Existence is not limited to any particular. Existence is the tree and all other things. This example illustrates both the limitedness (tree, one thing) and the unlimitedness (all things) of existence.
That which is perceived or interacted with indicates existence. A thing is, by definition, existence.
Existence does not “contain” the parts, existence is the parts.
What is obvious?
Things exist as things because of limits.
You claim existence is unlimited and limited.
As limited it is a thing.
As unlimited it is not a thing, if not a thing then it is nothing.
Existence is both thing and nothing...a paradox.
Please do continue trying to avoid the obvious paradox.