What is Nothing vs Absolutely Nothing?

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AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the philosophical and scientific interpretations of "nothing" and "absolutely nothing." It emphasizes that "nothing" is defined as the absence of anything, while "absolutely nothing" suggests a deeper state devoid of any implications or properties. The conversation critiques the common conflation of nothingness with the physical vacuum state, which still contains potential for existence. Participants explore the relationship between matter and space, arguing that both concepts are interdependent and cannot exist in isolation. Ultimately, the dialogue reflects on the complexities of defining nothingness and its implications in both philosophy and physics.
  • #151
Erck said:
I know I haven't... I could, but I haven't...and I think I should apologize. As I'm putting this thing together I've come to this forum to put a bit of it out there and get feedback and learn something about what I need to speak to. I'm not a math or science guy... it's been helpful for me to do this... and I can only hope it's been helpful to others.

No need to apologise.

What are you putting together, an essay? What's it about?
 
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  • #152
Thanks for understanding. This whole back and forth with you tonight has been nice.

I'm putting together book that has a TOE/GUT as one third of it.

The other two sections are about if "reality" works in a certain way... what does it tell us about how we could function as individuals and as a global society.
 
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  • #153
Erck said:
Thanks for understanding. This whole back and forth with you tonight has been nice.

I'm putting together book that has a TOE/GUT as one third of it.

What is GUT?
 
  • #154
Grand Unified Theory.. there's also Unified Field Theory... let's see... or my made up version... Grand Unifed Field Theory of Everything.
 
  • #155
Erck said:
Grand Unified Theory.. there's also Unified Field Theory... let's see... or my made up version... Grand Unifed Field Theory of Everything.

Thanks.

And how do you see the concept of "nothing" involved in your book?
 
  • #156
There are two nothings.

One of them is no-thing and it is part of a relative pair... so it seems to exist, but being relative it doesn't actaully get there.
 
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  • #157
What is the other element of the pair? In what way does it seem to exist?
 
  • #158
I'd have to say at this point to give it some thought.

The reason any of it seems to exist, is for the most part, because we occur at the same level of "reality" as it does.
 
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  • #159
Erck said:
I'd have to say at this point to give it some thought.

The reason any of it seems to exist, is for the most part, because we occur at the same level of "reality."

Indeed. We only can observe and measure with what we or our sensoring and measuring tools resonate with. Form that we make conclusions. That's one part of the game.
The other part is how we experience that reality. The individual emotions or awe for a sunset, a piece of art, a landmark, a religious experience, ... the sensation of just drinking wine ... can never be measured or caught by math or science. Still those feelings exist. Also here resonance is happening but on other (individual) value levels.
 
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  • #160
Erck said:
I'd have to say at this point to give it some thought.

The reason any of it seems to exist, is for the most part, because we occur at the same level of "reality" as it does.

Which is why I believe that the universe forms our epistemological boundary.
 
  • #161
Beyond Einstein

Mad_Gouki said:
it may have started from nothing, and i don't believe that it is possible to determine how the universe began

because even if it were recorded, it would be destroyed when the universe became nothing.

the universe is supposidly in a state of expansion... that is, the KNOWN universe.

but back to answering that question from that article... the reason the universe is still around is because the universe is still changing.

Friedmann equation, Omega and the ideas of critical density speak to the dynamical nature happening in the universe. As a whole( can we conceptualize this) and given these equations do we accept nothing as a foundatin or shall we give it a flat space discription?

So zero is given a calibration point, and this move to dynamcal situations explained to us, by those like Saccheri, Gauss and Reinmann.

To see this dynamical nature, such leading points of consideration and the length meaure has become a issue in how we might see the early univese and in this energy considration suprsymmetical points as a dynamical in relation to these flows Supegravity.

One has to make an assumption then, as to how you define these changes, whose basis is, and must become a geometrical defintion?
 
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  • #162
do we accept nothing as a foundation or shall we give it a flat space description?

So zero is given a calibration point...
(supersymmetical points as a dynamical in relation to these flows Supergravity.)

One has to make an assumption then, and [it] must become a geometrical definition?
What Sol said is actually what physicists think. They make up their own calibration point then make everyhing fit their definition. It works it label something then define it according to the labels you have given it. It tells you how it works. You can predict what it will do; but that doesn't tell us what we really want to know at this point in physics discovery.

What we really want to know is, what does it actually look like?

Since physicists start with nothing, then add their own reference points, it's good to ask this.
What is the other element of the pair? In what way does it seem to exist?
The "nothing" concept is made of two ideas: No Thing. To have No Thing, you must have Thing. So Thing is what can exist on its own, not Nothing. We start off assuming nothing can exist on its own; then give Nothing reference points, and call that math or geometry.

What if we start out with Matter, not with empty space?
 
  • #163
nothing is the absence of Energy distance and time

If you have nothing, you have zero energy if energy equals zero then
D=0(t)
Distance is zero and time is non existant

That is hard to imagine, but in nothing, you couldn't even have a ruler to measure anything, not only because the ruler couldn't exist but also because the distance to measure doesn't exist. Because SOMETHING(energy) is all that makes measuring anything possible.

Distance itself is what we live in. This could be akin to the so called ether physicists long ago imagined.
 
  • #164
Distance itself is what we live in. This could be akin to the so-called ether physicists long ago imagined.
That is right!

What are the qualities of a non-dimensional point? A basic quality is, if another point occupies the same place, it is the same point. Therefore, there must be some distance between all non-dimensional points.

What is a basic quality of matter? Two pieces of matter can't occupy the same place. And two points can't occupy the same place. Matter and points are very similar.

If we think of matter and points as the same thing, then we have a space made of points. The distance between points is space itself, but the distance is created by separating a nearly infinite number of non-dimensional points that once occupied the same place (and thus were one point), separating them by first creating two points.

When you separate two points into into something that does no exist (since points are all that exist) there must be a resistance that pushes the two points back together. This resistance from separating two points into nothing is where all energy comes from.

If we have a universe made of a myriad of points separated across a distance and under tension we have the perfect medium for a wave, that is, we have the ether.
 
  • #165
I'm having difficulty understanding you, however if your agreeing with the validity of that equation I'm happy to talk about it, because I only came up with it last week and I'm still trying to comprehend some of it's meanings.

If your saying space gets energy from the space between the points, I'm going to have to disagree , we just defined nothing, so by default there is nothing between no distance, no energy.

However I believe the initial energy came from a parent universe, our universe is just a black hole in another. To support the point theory however, each point of space with enough energy to cause a black hole would be E=D=T All equaling one. Those points together makes a three dimensional universe.

The reason a black hole is black is because T=1 . Therefor time stands still. When time stands still energy does not move, Therefor we do not see things coming from the black hole.

Before anyone tells me about black body radiation, I know, and can explain that too
 
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  • #166
nothing is mystery, just as mystery is no-thing
 
  • #167
a mystery isn't nothing, it is something, something which we don't understand. Maybe nothing is a mystery to you, but not to me
 
  • #168
PRyckman said:
a mystery isn't nothing, it is something, something which we don't understand. Maybe nothing is a mystery to you, but not to me

we are on the same page, nothing too is a mystery ( a something) that niether I nor you understand.

We cannot find 'nothing' other than in the realm of idea or concept. There is no way to even register 'nothing' other than as a concept or idea.

as as a concept or idea, nothing and mystery are inseperable. Mystery is the place that cannot be defined, and any interpretation is a thing, yes, but a false thing, the mystery is, objectivly, no-thing until the mind is applied to it and can distinguish between true and false, and even when this occurs, mystery still remains.
 
  • #169
P-man is saying another universe provided the background for this universe to work in, like, we are standing on the other universe. But what if you have to provide your own background from one concept? That concept is "what exists". We try to start with nothing, but nothing is two concepts. What exists is one concept. Outside of what exists is nothing, so nothing requires existence. Existence doesn't require nothing.

The idea "it is" defines inertia. It is, therefore it takes energy to become something else; or, it can't become something else. It has inertia. Existence has inertia. Inertia is what caused repelling forces. A particle of matter hits something and knocks it away because of inertia. It takes time for the particle to reach the thing, and then it knocks it away. But a particle cannot take time to reach something, then draw it to it. Gravity doesn’t take time but acts instantaneously all over the universe. So maybe all attractive forces are different. It is not a repulsive force caused by inertia or existence. It is an attractive force, caused by what?

If the repulsive force comes from inertia, and inertia comes from the definition of existence, the best candidate for the attractive force is the opposite of existence: nothing.

We can't agree that particles make up and define all of space, as I think, but we can agree that particles make up and define all molecules and atoms. We have the idea that the strong force is some attractive force inherent to particles, like a charge. But charges get weaker with distance. I believe the strong force is really a particle trying to separate into nothing, like pushing against the walls of something that doesn't have any more space. That analogy makes sense when you know the further they try to separate, the harder it becomes, like they are trying to get out of an inner tube.

And strings, which have attractive tension are defined as tubes. A string is two particles trying to separate. Particles are existence. When they separate within the world of an atom, they are separating into nothingness, and the fact that nothingness has no space to separate into is the strong force.

There is no such thing as empty space. Having the concept of empty space would mean that something else, another universe had to create the empty space, as you said. Since it didn't, we have a space made of point particles, which has six underlying spatial dimensions since you can't arrange real points in any 3D pattern that has more than 12 directions total, six directions back and forth, six dimensions. This idea that space is made of strings under tension allows attractive forces to happen. Magnetism is a complex set of spatial strings that form in loops, creating an attractive force. Snowflakes form on the strings of space itself.

If you take literal strings or short sticks, like toothpicks, and glue them together to create a real 3D space, the toothpicks line up in six directions, with every angle 60 degrees. Every angle in a snowflake is 60 degrees.
 
  • #170
Moonrat said:
we are on the same page, nothing too is a mystery ( a something) that niether I nor you understand.

We cannot find 'nothing' other than in the realm of idea or concept. There is no way to even register 'nothing' other than as a concept or idea.

as as a concept or idea, nothing and mystery are inseperable. Mystery is the place that cannot be defined, and any interpretation is a thing, yes, but a false thing, the mystery is, objectivly, no-thing until the mind is applied to it and can distinguish between true and false, and even when this occurs, mystery still remains.

Lets for the sake of kick starting the openess to what contitutes ideas from nothing:) As soon as you entertain this notion you are nothing:) So from this point forward?

Lets pretent the "nothing" is a cloudchamber? Or dark energy? Does this change the situation from zeropoint consideration? Is this not logical?
 
  • #171
John said:
And strings, which have attractive tension are defined as tubes. A string is two particles trying to separate. Particles are existence. When they separate within the world of an atom, they are separating into nothingness, and the fact that nothingness has no space to separate into is the strong force.

QUOTE]

John,

A string is a one dimensional discription of a particle. The ole Quark to Quark measure revealed the nature of the metric field, but we have to be consistent in our explanation from this geometical consideration.

Even here I am open to corrections
 
  • #172
The idea of a string explains the fact that rules don't work when the particles approach 0 distance from each other. But an accurate definition of a point doesn't allow two points to be 0 distance from each other. If they are, they are the same point! So, all points must have distance between them.

If points are little strings, then this line
___________

and this line
____

have a different number of points. They don't both have an infinite number of points.

It is impossible for empty, totally open and free space to exist. Space must be made of real points that must have distance between them, even logically. Points must have distance between them; and if logical points must have distance between them, then space has nine actual spatial dimensions, just like string theory predicts!
 
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  • #173
John said:
The idea of a string explains the fact that rules don't work when the particles approach 0 distance from each other. But an accurate definition of a point doesn't allow two points to be 0 distance from each other. If they are, they are the same point! So, all points must have distance between them.

If the distance is consistent, then this line
___________

and this line
____

have a different number of points. They don't both have an infinite number of points.

It is impossible for empty, totally open and free space to exist. Space must be made of real points that must have distance between them, even logically. Points must have distance between them; and if logical points must have distance between them, then space has nine actual spatial dimensions, just like string theory predicts!

John it is a energy determination?

We have supplanted particle discription for something else? That's part of accepting the paradigmal change of strings/M-theory. We know at the basis of these explanation there are metric points to consider, and becomes much more dynamcial when it hits supergravity( think of plasmatic consideration here and the early universe in a ever supersymmetrical state of recogntion).


Hhaving reached Planck length, there is a problem. :)

again I am defintiely open to corrections
 
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  • #174
John said:
P-man is saying another universe provided the background for this universe to work in, like, we are standing on the other universe. But what if you have to provide your own background from one concept? That concept is "what exists".

yes, but only as a concept, right?

If I say only mystery existed before the big bang, that can include nothingness or another universe, either way , it's mystery until a better understanding of infinity can be approached.

Look, forgive me too, for I am the layman writer, and do not have some of the saavy that many of you possess, but to say that one can understand mystery or nothingness seems to be a bit of a stretch, because if it was understood, it would no longer be mystery, and mystery seems more appropiate to the circumstance than mere 'nothingness'

I'm also tired! Yikes, maybe say different thing in morning!
 
  • #175
sol2 said:
Lets for the sake of kick starting the openess to what contitutes ideas from nothing:) As soon as you entertain this notion you are nothing:) So from this point forward?

Ideas from nothing or ideas from mystery? Different perspective, same co-ordinate.

Ideas come from mystery in the form of true ideas or false ideas.

We don't know what they mystery is, every new law of physics reveals only more mystery underneath.



Lets pretent the "nothing" is a cloudchamber? Or dark energy? Does this change the situation from zeropoint consideration? Is this not logical?

IF nothing is a cloud chamber than it is no longer nothing but a cloud chamber, distinguished by all that which is not cloud chamber.

See, the 'concept' stays mystery, mystery is always here, so perhaps it should be more included in models and presentations of universe. after all, if a model can not contain mystery (nothingness) then it does not completely represent universe...

?

mystery may be the working constant! The thing that is nothing...To me this seems logical

Moonrat
 
  • #176
John said:
It is impossible for empty, totally open and free space to exist. Space must be made of real points that must have distance between them, even logically. Points must have distance between them; and if logical points must have distance between them, then space has nine actual spatial dimensions, just like string theory predicts!

I like that
:biggrin:
 
  • #177
It's wrong. John's "accurate definition of a point" is contradicted by self-consistent measure theory. Actual spacetime may be continuous or discrete, but not because either state is logically inconsistent. It's an empirical question.
 
  • #178
selfAdjoint said:
It's wrong. John's "accurate definition of a point" is contradicted by self-consistent measure theory. Actual spacetime may be continuous or discrete, but not because either state is logically inconsistent. It's an empirical question.

Ah thank you.

It's not always clear what I want to say, but from such a stanpoint then you have to assume a position. In the case of the universe there is something that underlies its existence. Here i might say the spacetime is flat and use zeropoint to demonstrate the vitality of this universe in its movement?

In this case we might say superstringtheory/M theory and the dynamics of the universe arise from these interpretations. Would this be correct?
 
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  • #179
Moonrat said:
we are on the same page, nothing too is a mystery ( a something) that niether I nor you understand.

I'm saying I understand what nothing is. So it is not a mystery to me.

John said:
P-man is saying another universe provided the background for this universe to work in, like, we are standing on the other universe.
Correct, but that is not the nothing I'm talking about.

John said:
Gravity doesn’t take time but acts instantaneously all over the universe.

I'm pretty sure E=mc^2 proves that gravity only propegates at roughly light speed.

selfAdjoint said:
It's wrong. John's "accurate definition of a point" is contradicted by self-consistent measure theory

Though your vocabulary exceeds mine, I believe you are saying, that if there is no distance, then there's no distance, plain and simple. Which I agree with

Cmon guys what all with these crazy theories about nothing. NOTHING IS NOTHING. There is no theory better than that sentence. Theres no quarks there's no time, there's no points or dimension, there's no energy there's no superstrings, there's no gravity light or anything at all. Nothing is nonexistant. To put any type of thought into it is a waste of time.

If you guys don't believe I understand the concept of nothing then look at this equation.
Lets say Energy equals zero, nevermind anything else
D=E(t)
if energy equals zero then so does distance. Time can be whatever the hell you want because it doesn't matter. But it must be either infinite or zero.
 
  • #180
PRycman, nothing is no-thing..yes

No-thing is mystery, for only no-thing can describe it..

you define nothing as 'nothingness'

you know that it cannot be defined any other way or be quantified or understood by any other thing other than 'nothing'

it is not distinquisable inside of itself

you know this, but you can't see how this 'no-thing' is a mystery?

we are debating semantics, for if you understand nothing to be nothing, that does not mean you disregard it...nothing 'is' it is not 'absense' but the thing that is nothingness itself...

you cannot show me a 'nothing' I cannot show you a 'nothing' for 'nothing' cannot be represented...
 
  • #181
Moonrat said:
PRycman, nothing is no-thing..yes

No-thing is mystery, for only no-thing can describe it..

you define nothing as 'nothingness'

you know that it cannot be defined any other way or be quantified or understood by any other thing other than 'nothing'

it is not distinquisable inside of itself

you know this, but you can't see how this 'no-thing' is a mystery?

we are debating semantics, for if you understand nothing to be nothing, that does not mean you disregard it...nothing 'is' it is not 'absense' but the thing that is nothingness itself...

you cannot show me a 'nothing' I cannot show you a 'nothing' for 'nothing' cannot be represented...
Brad !
To me,
Nothing is actually everything, everything also means nothing
things come into existence when humans can 'see', 'feel',...'sense' them. but if we can't sense, see, etc them, that doesNOT mean they are not existing, or they are nothing, if they are not NOTHING, they are THINGS, since they ARE THINGS, and it will depend on each person's viewpoints about THINGS, we have a scale for THINGS and generally speaking, we have EVERYTHING.


As a side note, i know you posted right over here to draw some one attention, right ?
I am trying to help you...
If you want to use people's tone, you should read their posts a little more, Brad !
Like what i have explained, if you should go and learn more about religions rather than abuse people like that...
If I don't see face by face or any signs that can tell me it is true, that guy is just a follow-up monkey.

BTW, philosophy is a good subject, learning it more can help you be a better person.

See you around right on your board, I will come and make many questions...:-p

[i]FIONA[/color][/i]

[edit]So sorry, I forgot to include my signature[edit]
 
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  • #182
toloXXX said:
Brad !

umm, I'm not Brad!


To me,
Nothing is actually everything, everything also means nothing
things come into existence when humans can 'see', 'feel',...'sense' them. but if we can't sense, see, etc them, that doesNOT mean they are not existing, or they are nothing, if they are not NOTHING, they are THINGS, since they ARE THINGS, and it will depend on each person's viewpoints about THINGS, we have a scale for THINGS and generally speaking, we have EVERYTHING.

Now they we cleared up that confusion about who I am, yes, everything also can be no-thing or mystery until we define it and distinguish it from ourselves (objective-subjective)

nothing is the thing that is no-thing!

I do hope Brad agrees!

there is subjective nothingness and objective nothingness, and I think, although I may be mistaken, that this thread is about 'objective nothingness'


tootles! say hi to Brad for me!

Moonrat
 
  • #183
Moonrat said:
you know this, but you can't see how this 'no-thing' is a mystery?

I don't see how something that we just agreed on explaining is a mystery.

Mystery: "One that is not fully understood or that baffles or eludes the understanding; an enigma"------ http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=mystery

It is not a mystery because I understand the concept of nothing.
 
  • #184
Moonrat said:
umm, I'm not Brad![/color]

Now they we cleared up that confusion about who I am, yes, everything also can be no-thing or mystery until we define it and distinguish it from ourselves (objective-subjective)

nothing is the thing that is no-thing!

I do hope Brad agrees!

there is subjective nothingness and objective nothingness, and I think, although I may be mistaken, that this thread is about 'objective nothingness'

tootles! say hi to Brad for me!

Moonrat

Brad, you know why I colored red the word above, in the quote ? [/color]
Only Brad will put an exclamation mark at the end of his name ? You rewrote what I wrote but you still put it up over there...Wanna show off. If you are not Brad, you won't put it right there right next to 'd' whereas I was deliberately gave it a space...:p
You know I don't like you at all, because you are not lovely.

BTW, tell Jeffrey Richter to stop using so many usernames to make people misunderstand each other...
Give you another hint, if Mick wants to use a smiley, he would use it immediately, not using stuff like :-D, :-) :pipsrioueotdskhgk:oudgo[/color] and his tone would sound 100% different.

I should have known about this place sooner, this is a great place for civilized people, academic students...
You, out of place, old monkey !. I have registered some other usernames there at your sites, please be happy to help Nina, okay ? :-p

-Hometown-Fiona, :-p[/color]

Back to OP, as I already said, nothing is everything, everything is nothing, an example you can see right here is that, this moonrat said he isnot Brad, BUT what if he is Brad!, who knows ?
I know, and we now all know...THIS MEANS, from NOTHING to EVERYTHING or vice a versa, there is actually no boundary at all.

:smile:
 
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  • #185
I think you guys are out of it, nothing doesn't exist by definition. You shouldn't even have to be told that.
 
  • #186
PRyckman said:
I think you guys are out of it, nothing doesn't exist by definition. You shouldn't even have to be told that.
Pryckman :smile:, I know please understand, just want to give him a lesson, this is not his place, we are safe...

Please everybody stop posting for a week in this thread...only a week
I would like all the people who joined this forum, to read this Moonrat-Bradley L jones, or (avi), :-p if you keep posting, this thread will get to another page and no one can read him then.
 
  • #187
toloXXX said:
Brad, you know why I colored red the word above, in the quote ? [/color]
Only Brad will put an exclamation mark at the end of his name ? You rewrote what I wrote but you still put it up over there...Wanna show off. If you are not Brad, you won't put it right there right next to 'd' whereas I was deliberately gave it a space...:p
You know I don't like you at all, because you are not lovely.


:smile:

lady, I don't know what the hell your talkin' 'bout and I aint no Brad...

dig?

Moonrat
 
  • #188
PRyckman said:
I think you guys are out of it, nothing doesn't exist by definition. You shouldn't even have to be told that.

My friend, this is a difficult concept to grasp, because, well, words don't really do the concept much justice, not nearly as much justice as experience has.

When we move into areas such as 'nothing', it is hard not to stumble upon paradox after paradox...

So let's be clear. There is the 'non-existant', which cannot even exist as idea or concept...if this is which you define as 'nothing' then so be it, I can see that concept too, and there are roads shall part.

If, however, you are defining a co-ordinate of universe, and have a point, center, circumfrence, or vector that includes 'nothing' in each equation, I can assure you that mystery fulfills that end of the bargain far greater than the above 'nothing'

What you are referring to is only a subjective co-ordinate based only in conceptual representation (thus almost contradicting itself right there, but hey, paradox is unavoidable)

You cannot distinguish 'nothing' from outside of yourself, using the above definition..

Now, there is always a factor infinite and unknown, x. Therefore, there is a perspective in which one can see that 'all one cannot see' is the mysterious 'no-thing' that could and exceed any and all possiblities that one may have in their thinking about it.

Indeed, any Grand Unified Theory of Everything must contain a working co-ordinate for this 'no-thing' or mystery.


If it doesnt, than it is impossible, I suggest, for it to hold up to scrutiny after serious thought.

Who was it, Von Nueman, who said a computer cannot model itself because information cannot be accurate of itself in a closed system or something like that..I dunno, I ferget, same thing though..

Or, perhaps I myself may have a false idea, but if I do, I request you explain where in my co-ordinates I have made an error.

Keep it simple too because I'm slow.

Thank You !

Moonrat
 
  • #189
Moonrat said:
There is the 'non-existant', which cannot even exist as idea or concept...if this is which you define as 'nothing' then so be it, I can see that concept too
Yea that's what I define it as, glad you understand.
It needs no further explanation.
Simple things are always better.
 
  • #190
How can something not even exist as idea or concept?
 
  • #191
It can exist in your mind, which is why your trying to prove it exists.
But it can never exist in reality, again by definition.
 
  • #192
PRyckman said:
It can exist in your mind, which is why your trying to prove it exists.
But it can never exist in reality, again by definition.

Why can't existence be a contingent property of objects, in general?

For instance Pegasus doesn't exist physically, but isn't it also an object in a different sense, as a mythological creation?
 
  • #193
yes mythological meaning not real

And yes existence is a contingent property of objects, but nothing isn't an object
 
  • #194
PRyckman said:
yes mythological meaning not real

And yes existence is a contingent property of objects, but nothing isn't an object

Why isn't nothing an object?
 
  • #195
an apple is an object, an absence of an apple is not an object.
 
  • #196
PRyckman said:
an apple is an object, an absence of an apple is not an object.

Ok, so let A be the proposition: There is an apple.

Then, ~A would be the proposition: It is not the case that there is an apple.

If we allow for A to be a proposition which has an objectual reference, why do we not allow for ~A to be a proposition which has an objectual reference?
 
  • #197
your putting too much thought into it, no matter what definition we could possibly get from this it is irrelevant because it doesn't exist.
if you want to represent it mathmatically i'd say here we have an apple 1
and here we do not 0
 
  • #198
But you are assuming that empirical things are the only things which we can legitimately call objects, which is precisely what I am questioning.
 
  • #199
no I am saying that in nothing there is not even space time or dimension itself
 
  • #200
So how does that entail that nothing is not an object?
 

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