From: Brian Holtz [brian@holtz.org] Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2002 8:07 AM To: alt.atheism.moderated Subject: Re: Infinity (was: You' have to be God....ATTN: PH) Jim Humphries wrote > > > with the present example [ an idea of 6 *today*, > > > and an idea of 6 *yesterday*] every property > > > of the one does not belong to the other! > > > With the present example - an idea of 6 *today*, > and an idea of 6 *yesterday*-every property > of the one does *not* belong to the other. Since this is simply a word-for-word repetition of a point that was plainly refuted by the part of my posting that you dared not to quote, it suffices to repeat that part: Individual events or acts of contemplation can of course be distinguished. However, the abstraction or concept of "six-ness" or "six-hood" -- that which is in common to all such six-ish acts of contemplation -- cannot be distinguished as being different across those acts. Indeed, this is true by the very definitions of "abstraction" and "common". I defy you to complete this sentence: "that which is common to all six-ish acts of contemplation can be distinguished across those acts because ...". > when you say that there is 'something which the events have > in common' you are going beyond conceptualism. Conceptualism is hardly incompatible with identifying that which is in common across individual events of contemplation. Just what in conceptualism do you think a concept *is*, if not this? > you are , covertly, smuggling in Platonism through > the back door. Platonism is the notion that ideas have ontological existence independent of the minds that contemplate them and the entities that instantiate them. Nothing I've said implies Platonism. > That there is 'something which the > events have in common' has not been explained > by you here- just asserted on 'common sense' > grounds. I indeed consider it obvious that there is something that "an idea of 6 today and an idea of 6 yesterday" have in common. I'll give you a hint: it's precisely that which led you to say '6' both times rather than saying '7' or '525923'. > But you have said that there is 'something which the > events have in common' [..] How do you know that ? Because I see that you used the symbol '6' for both events. > I'm suggesting that yours is a covert Platonism. Again: nothing I've said implies Platonism. -- brian@holtz.org http://humanknowledge.net