On 2/18/20 2:49 PM, Kerim Aydin via agora-discussion wrote:
>
> On 2/18/2020 11:43 AM, James Cook via agora-discussion wrote:
>> On Tue, 18 Feb 2020 at 19:04, Kerim Aydin via agora-discussion
>> <agora-discussion@agoranomic.org> wrote:
>>> On 2/18/2020 10:45 AM, James Cook via agora-discussion wrote:
>>>>       For the purpose of such a auction, to transfer a zombie to a
>>>>       player is to set that zombie's master switch to that player, and
>>>>       Agora CAN transfer zombies by willing it to be done.
>>> Did I miss a new definition of "willing" something to be done?  Agora has
>>> no will (kind of like "consent", that's reserved for natural persons, by a
>>> couple of precedents) and even if it had a "will" it's got no mechanism
>>> for communicating its will?
>> I intended the text to do two things: first, make it so that Agora
>> "CAN transfer the items in that lot to that winner at will" so that
>> R2551 triggers properly, and also, to satisfy R2125's stipulation that
>> actions only be performed using mechanisms supplied by the rules
>> (otherwise R2551 might fail to actually cause Agora to transfer the
>> zombie).
>>
>> Not sure if it actually works.
> I think there's a deep-ish question here - if the rules say that an entity
> CAN do something by a physically impossible (not rules-impossible) method,
> does it qualify as an appropriate CAN?
>
> E.g. If the rules say "a player CAN transfer a Slice of Pi by announcing
> the final digit of pi" does that mean e CAN auction a Pi Slice if e's got
> one?  (I mean, that's a method, it's just an impossible-to-do one).
>
> -G.


Perhaps relevant: CFJ 3762 [0], which concluded both that a person CAN
perform a certain action and that that action is IMPOSSIBLE.

[0]: https://faculty.washington.edu/kerim/nomic/cases/?3762

-- 
Jason Cobb

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