Re: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Georges Quenot
Hal Ruhl wrote: Hi George: Hi Hal, At 09:13 PM 11/16/2004, you wrote: Hal Ruhl wrote: My use of these words is convenience only but my point is why should existence be so anemic as to prohibit the simultaneous presence of an All and a Nothing. The prohibition does not come from an anemia of

Re: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread John Collins
There do exist consistent approaches to set theory where you do have a universal set and can therefore consider taking complements to be a sinle-argument operation. to bypass the obvious paradox (that any set can be used to make a necessarily larger powerset) you need to concoct a map from the

Re: Fw: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Hal Ruhl
All members of [is,is not] definitional pairs including the [All, Nothing] pair have a conceptual foundation within the All. Why would the [All, Nothing} pair be the only one denied a mutual and concurrent physical expression? Hal

Re: Fw: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Georges Quenot
Hal Ruhl wrote: All members of [is,is not] definitional pairs including the [All, Nothing] pair have a conceptual foundation within the All. Why would the [All, Nothing} pair be the only one denied a mutual and concurrent physical expression? Well... It seems that we do not share the same

Re: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Georges Quenot
rmiller wrote: This is starting to sound like discussion Hume must have had with himself. Might be. And was Hume finally able to conclude something ? Georges.

Re: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Georges Quenot
John Collins wrote: There do exist consistent approaches to set theory where you do have a universal set and can therefore consider taking complements to be a sinle-argument operation. to bypass the obvious paradox (that any set can be used to make a necessarily larger powerset) you need to

Re: An All/Nothing multiverse model

2004-11-17 Thread Hal Ruhl
In my [is, is not] definitional pair the is not component is the All minus the is component. Thus the is not member is not simply unwinged horses or the like. In most of these pairs I suspect the is not component has no apparent usefulness [to most SAS [if they exist]]. Be that as it may