Re: Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete

2012-08-18 Thread Roger
Leibniz would say, If there's no God, we'd have to invent him so everything could function. - Receiving the following content - From: meekerdb Receiver: everything-list Time: 2012-08-17, 14:38:08 Subject: Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete On 8/17/2012 8:30 AM, Roger

Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete

2012-08-18 Thread Bruno Marchal
no God, we'd have to invent him so everything could function. - Receiving the following content - From: meekerdb Receiver: everything-list Time: 2012-08-17, 14:38:08 Subject: Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete On 8/17/2012 8:30 AM, Roger wrote: Hi Jason Resch   One

Re: Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete

2012-08-18 Thread Roger
, If there's no God, we'd have to invent him so everything could function. - Receiving the following content - From: Bruno Marchal Receiver: everything-list Time: 2012-08-18, 09:46:24 Subject: Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete On 18 Aug 2012, at 13:59, Roger wrote: Hi

The difference betrween abstract and concrete

2012-08-17 Thread Roger
Hi Jason Resch One -- especially a computer -- cannot experience abstractions. One (ie only living entities) can only experience the concrete. ab穝tract adjective 1. thought of apart from concrete realities, specific objects, or actual instances: an abstract idea. Roger ,

Re: The difference betrween abstract and concrete

2012-08-17 Thread meekerdb
On 8/17/2012 8:30 AM, Roger wrote: Hi Jason Resch One -- especially a computer -- cannot experience abstractions. One (ie only living entities) can only experience the concrete. Except physics tells us that concrete is mostly empty space and a ray in an enormous Hilbert space. Brent Riddle: