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Post by xxxxxxxxx on Sept 8, 2022 22:26:48 GMT
1. Everything is infinite.
2. This is a finite statement.
1. Everything is finite.
2. This is an infinite statement.
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Sept 10, 2022 16:00:49 GMT
What is infinite statement? Can you define it?
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Post by xxxxxxxxx on Sept 10, 2022 22:29:14 GMT
What is infinite statement? Can you define it? Something with indefinite or never ending meanings. An example of this is the statement "something is" which can have Neverending meanings.
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Sept 11, 2022 9:31:39 GMT
What is infinite statement? Can you define it? Something with indefinite or never ending meanings. An example of this is the statement "something is" which can have Neverending meanings. If you cannot define whether or not the statement is meaningful, you cannot define it as a statement. Statement is not just a number of words, it is a meaning that has a form of symbols or vowels. Let's check it out these sentences: a) apples eat a tree b) an asking noun digits fame as a chair c) something has always been The first may have a metaphorical meaning, and in this case apples eating a tree is a way to reveal that the apples soak the juices from trees. The second is just a sequence of words. It doesn't make any sense, because it's impossible to happen for those deities to act like this. (Or else, you should allow just a mess, where everything does anything, and so on.) How would you interpret (c)? If "something is" is the widest, then what about "something has always been"? The same or what?
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Post by xxxxxxxxx on Sept 11, 2022 22:19:35 GMT
Something with indefinite or never ending meanings. An example of this is the statement "something is" which can have Neverending meanings. If you cannot define whether or not the statement is meaningful, you cannot define it as a statement. Statement is not just a number of words, it is a meaning that has a form of symbols or vowels. Let's check it out these sentences: a) apples eat a tree b) an asking noun digits fame as a chair c) something has always been The first may have a metaphorical meaning, and in this case apples eating a tree is a way to reveal that the apples soak the juices from trees. The second is just a sequence of words. It doesn't make any sense, because it's impossible to happen for those deities to act like this. (Or else, you should allow just a mess, where everything does anything, and so on.) How would you interpret (c)? If "something is" is the widest, then what about "something has always been"? The same or what? A statement which means nothing reflects any and everything. Considering previous posts, stating nothing equals everything, from this it can be derived the paradox that that which is meaningless is the most meaningful.
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