Do You Claim the Power?
June 8th, 2008, search relatedRelated posts :: Do You Claim the Power? :: Do You Claim the Power? :: Do You Claim the Power? :: Do You Claim the Power?
Michael Eldred wrote:
> Joseph Polanik schrieb Sun, 25 May 2008 08:12:52 -0400:
>>do you claim the power to attribute predicates to nothing(ness) or do
>>you not?
>>ME: You certainly claim the power to predicate something of nothing,
>>for you have named it, and even predicated that something is distinct
>>from nothing.
saying that something is not nothing says something about something that
is not nothing; hence, it is a legitimate predication.
consider two statements concerning the nature of predication:
A: predication is saying something about something
B: predication is saying something about something that is not nothing.
I’ve previously expressed my view that [A] should be understood to mean
exactly what [B] appears to mean.
you’ve claimed that [B] is untenable; but, you never really gave an
example of a statement of predication that met [A] as you interpret it
without meeting [B] as I interpret it.
would you do that, now?
Joe
–
Philosophy is, after all, done ultimately in the first person for the
first person. — H-N Castaneda
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