Page 1 of 1

In Defense of Plato

Posted: Sat Mar 01, 2025 11:37 am
by Phil8659
Many people use the word Platonism, however, I think one has to be completely illiterate to do so. Plato defined, and it is provably true, what a Philosopher believes in, learns and practices, which is not only in the metaphors of the Bible, but is derived from the definition of a thing, demonstrated by Euclid, and proven world wide by the computer today. One can say, nouns and verbs, relative and correlative, the one and the many, etc, or simply binary recursion, limits and the relative difference between limits. There are two, and only two concepts one has to master for information processing, and if you want to argue it, argue with your own computer. It is, and has for a long time, been known that a computer, using simple binary, can process all information.

I have not been back to this website for a long time, working on geometry the likes of which has never been seen before, show how easy it is to demonstrate, quite simply, all of mathematics using simple what is called Euclidean Geometry which uses a one to one correspondence with this binary using the hand. I have even demonstrated that there is no processing time in geometry, output is concurrent with input, meaning that is is even free from the relative difference of time, itself. It's answers are always exact. Binary recursion can only produce a binary result, as Aristotle noted, a result simply is, or is not which he learnt from Plato.

One of the most important ideas to come to understand about it, is that all a mind can do is use this binary recursion to construct the entire psychology of the mind, this ability is determined by the intelligence of an individual which, of course, depends upon our genetic foundation. We are still evolving to become linguistically functional, but those principles of language are the Universal Binary transformed in particular systems of grammar, expressed and understood to the limits of one's own intelligence.

I still work on my grammar project, and have posted a great deal of work to that end on the Archive since I last logged in a few years back.