Plato is the father of formal grammar, I do not take this coincidence lightly. Formal Grammar had only one source.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:34 amIt's just the extreme improbability of it. I doubt if anyone at all in the Greece of Plato's time spoke Sanskrit, and would have no way of learning it, even if they wanted to. Only a very short time later, with the conquests of Alexander, that would change, but not in Plato's day.
What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
I think you would need to provide other evidence, from his other writings, for example, or those of his biographers, to convince historians. We know he spent time in Syracuse, for example, and his life is reasonably well documented, as much as anyone's can be, from so long ago.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:35 amPlato is the father of formal grammar, I do not take this coincidence lightly. Formal Grammar had only one source.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:34 amIt's just the extreme improbability of it. I doubt if anyone at all in the Greece of Plato's time spoke Sanskrit, and would have no way of learning it, even if they wanted to. Only a very short time later, with the conquests of Alexander, that would change, but not in Plato's day.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
I am not interested in proving anything about the work. I do however, continue Plato's work, as it is factually and biologically based. And, it is proven worldwide today by your very own computer. Particulars are not important to universal facts. We often get the particulars wrong, but the Universal is never wrong. Our survival does depend on doing our own work.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:41 amI think you would need to provide other evidence, from his other writings, for example, or those of his biographers, to convince historians. We know he spent time in Syracuse, for example, and his life is reasonably well documented, as much as anyone's can be, from so long ago.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:35 amPlato is the father of formal grammar, I do not take this coincidence lightly. Formal Grammar had only one source.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:34 am
It's just the extreme improbability of it. I doubt if anyone at all in the Greece of Plato's time spoke Sanskrit, and would have no way of learning it, even if they wanted to. Only a very short time later, with the conquests of Alexander, that would change, but not in Plato's day.
I do not even care about particular people who shit can their own life, it is there choice. I do, however, care about them trying to infect other people with their own disability.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Didn't someone once say that the whole of Western philosophy is just a series of footnotes to Plato? A lot of people have been continuing his work.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:43 amI am not interested in proving anything about the work. I do however, continue Plato's work, as it is factually and biologically based. And, it is proven worldwide today by your very own computer. Particulars are not important to universal facts. We often get the particulars wrong, but the Universal is never wrong. Our survival does depend on doing our own work.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:41 amI think you would need to provide other evidence, from his other writings, for example, or those of his biographers, to convince historians. We know he spent time in Syracuse, for example, and his life is reasonably well documented, as much as anyone's can be, from so long ago.
I do not even care about particular people who shit can their own life, it is there choice. I do, however, care about them trying to infect other people with their own disability.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
You are mistaken. They use the name of Plato, but have never once comprehended him. If they did, they would of taken his advice, prove it with Geometry. It is a perfect binary grammar system. I am the only person in history to do that work. It is encyclopedic. I show from the first principles of arithmetic, to how to make computational machines with it.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:51 amDidn't someone once say that the whole of Western philosophy is just a series of footnotes to Plato? A lot of people have been continuing his work.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:43 amI am not interested in proving anything about the work. I do however, continue Plato's work, as it is factually and biologically based. And, it is proven worldwide today by your very own computer. Particulars are not important to universal facts. We often get the particulars wrong, but the Universal is never wrong. Our survival does depend on doing our own work.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 7:41 am
I think you would need to provide other evidence, from his other writings, for example, or those of his biographers, to convince historians. We know he spent time in Syracuse, for example, and his life is reasonably well documented, as much as anyone's can be, from so long ago.
I do not even care about particular people who shit can their own life, it is there choice. I do, however, care about them trying to infect other people with their own disability.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Today, we have the technology to even teach the blind how to actually feel geometry. They have tactile tables that actually raise the surface to do it with.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Are you talking about spatial awareness, shapes and things like that?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
I am talking about a grammar system which can teach you the whole of grammar. All of grammar is simply taking the material differences of the universe and learning how to parse them into things that maintain and promote life over the entire biosphere.
Or again, the standardization of information management by which we maintain and promote life.
That is the topic, making the whole of your life a memorable trip, is it not?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Yes, life should indeed be a memorable trip. If you're talking about spatial awareness, recognition of shapes and spaces, memory of them, and so on, then I'm pretty good at that, but purely from a practical standpoint.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:15 amI am talking about a grammar system which can teach you the whole of grammar. All of grammar is simply taking the material differences of the universe and learning how to parse them into things that maintain and promote life over the entire biosphere.
Or again, the standardization of information management by which we maintain and promote life.
That is the topic, making the whole of your life a memorable trip, is it not?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Really? what the hell do you mean by practical standpoint? Literacy is the only thing a mind is capable of achieving, so I cannot even put your words into any sensible context.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:26 amYes, life should indeed be a memorable trip. If you're talking about spatial awareness, recognition of shapes and spaces, memory of them, and so on, then I'm pretty good at that, but purely from a practical standpoint.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:15 amI am talking about a grammar system which can teach you the whole of grammar. All of grammar is simply taking the material differences of the universe and learning how to parse them into things that maintain and promote life over the entire biosphere.
Or again, the standardization of information management by which we maintain and promote life.
That is the topic, making the whole of your life a memorable trip, is it not?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
A mind is capable of achieving many things, and literacy is only one of them. Not even the most important, by a long way, as the vast majority of people in history have been illiterate, but still had a mind.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:29 amReally? what the hell do you mean by practical standpoint? Literacy is the only thing a mind is capable of achieving, so I cannot even put your words into any sensible context.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:26 amYes, life should indeed be a memorable trip. If you're talking about spatial awareness, recognition of shapes and spaces, memory of them, and so on, then I'm pretty good at that, but purely from a practical standpoint.Phil8659 wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:15 am
I am talking about a grammar system which can teach you the whole of grammar. All of grammar is simply taking the material differences of the universe and learning how to parse them into things that maintain and promote life over the entire biosphere.
Or again, the standardization of information management by which we maintain and promote life.
That is the topic, making the whole of your life a memorable trip, is it not?
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Okay, now you are either deliberately deflecting are simply cannot grasp the simple and it is time to end this conversation.Maia wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 8:39 amA mind is capable of achieving many things, and literacy is only one of them. Not even the most important, by a long way, as the vast majority of people in history have been illiterate, but still had a mind.
Re: What's your most memorable trip, and why?
Are you aware that the topic of our discussion was a Noun? Are you aware that you suddenly claimed that a Verb was now the topic? So, answer me this, is it possible, in any manner, that a member of a class can in anywise change the definition of the class of which it is a member? You pulled an old Sophist trick. Every member of a class is a member of that class in accordance with the definition of that class, therefore no member of a class is distinguishable from any other member of that class by definition, i.e., every class, no matter how constructed, is contiguous with the definition. Therefore, the Law of equality stands; what may be predicated of any thing is wholly determined by the definition of that thing. This is why no one has been able to figure out why they keep contradicting themselves when trying to write a consistent Set Theory, or Group Theory. They really are not aware of what they are doing.
A verb is a given in the universe, grammar is simply learning how to parse it correctly. There is no magic in it. As I said, I do not care that people make their own life a shit pile. I, try not to be deceived about it though.
Sun Tzu was an idiot. As a mind can only be or not be literate, the Art of War can only be practiced by the literate.