Iacchus said:Yes, the finite is but a subset of the infinite.
The temporal is but a subset of the Eternal.
And the material is but a subset of the immaterial.
This is how the material universe was established.
I disagree. The immaterial and the material are mutually exclusive.Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:I think the immaterial is a subset of the material. Otherwise, we're in full agreement.
~~ Paul
new drkitten said:I dunno. For millions of years in the history of the Earth, it was populated only by bacteria and other single-celled creatures. These are, not to put too fine a point on it, not noted for their ability to comprehend things. And yet, uncomprehending and incapable of comprehending, they still existed.
I see no reason that we should expect to have a better comprehension of the universe than bacteria do -- it's not like the universe is obliged to be here for our personal convenience.
Iacchus said:Oh I can, it's the total absence of something.
No such luck as chance.
Yes, your question is unanswerable without a God. It's as simple as that.
As I have already said, your proof exists in your demand for a "meaningful" answer.
Mercutio said:I disagree. The immaterial and the material are mutually exclusive.
The finite is a subset of the infinite, within mathematics, for some definitions of "infinite". For others, the infinite may well be a subset of the finite (for the finite distance from 1 to 2, there are an infinite number of points between the two).
The temporal we know--the eternal we cannot. If there was no beginning to time, then (logically) there is an eternity before we come to exist. But if there is an eternity before we come to exist, we cannot have yet passed through this eternity to come to exist yet...The concept of some form of time before time-space began is logically indefensible. Whether time has an endpoint or not we do not know, but it has a beginning. So, logically, does eternity. So I would think (I'd love to hear alternate arguments) that the temporal is identical to the eternal. There is no time outside of time-space.
Has string existed forever?Iacchus said:Does string have the tendency to manifest itself out of nothing?
c4ts said:Look at the second example. Would the composition of the wool string change if it were observed (but not acted upon) by different people?
I am not saying all properties are external. For example, if I had a wool string, and I took out a nylon one, and asked you which was the wool string, it would be the same answer no matter what the other string was made out of. Therefore, composition is a property internal to the object.
That's true if both exist. I was suggesting that the immaterial is the empty subset of the material.Mercutio said:
I disagree. The immaterial and the material are mutually exclusive.
Wow...that's deep. I am trying to picture the Venn Diagram for that. I was thinking separate circles, but you are thinking just one circle, with a circle of area=0 within it?Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:That's true if both exist. I was suggesting that the immaterial is the empty subset of the material.
~~ Paul