Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
A professor once told me the first thing to look for in an argument that doesn't make sense to you is the word "obvious".
And old professor once told me that a person who avoids an obvious argument against their position is just trying to save face and has nothing of actual substance to bring to the debate. He said to ignore and enjoy that you have won the debate.
Oh, and he said not to text while driving. He hated that.
Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
Do you accept that there are impossible actions?
Define "impossible". Define "actions". Define "accept."
Then I can answer your question, philosophically.
If you want a lay answer, yes, there are impossible actions. But you are obviously not wanting a temporal, mortal human based answer. So, from there, you must set your definitions and boundaries before I can legitimately answer your question.
Superficially, it seems like a word game. But a close inspection of your actual question requires absurd amount of explanation. Your question is very similar to, philosophically, to "Is there a God?"
BUT! To directly answer your question, yes, there are impossible actions. For instance, I cannot, at this very moment, jump 100 meters into the air. I cannot be absolutely certain of this, of course, but I am almost positive that I cannot do that. For me, it seems like an impossible action at this very moment.
What if 50 years down the road I become an augment and can perform such feats with ease? I cannot assert that or the negation of that.
Translate that to the topic. 😉
Now enjoy the fact that you had your answer from me before you even asked it. 🙂
Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
For example: If you have an infinite plane that only contains circles even if you search forever you cannot find a triangle. That kind of thing.
Wrong: you can make triangles with circles. This is a definition game, not an actual question. Word games have no place in this type of discussion. That's amateur philosophy, not an actual substantive approach.
Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
I only assert the obvious 😬Can your immortal make square circles? Do you feel that is a fair comparison? If the metaphysical can be altered then this immortal can alter logic and truth (actually I think you are literally arguing that it can alter truth).
You're trying to draw a philosophical parallel of a clear unknown to a negative truism.
So, basically, your arguments boil down to linguistic paradoxes that you'd run into in highschool. Cool.
To answer your question, I would have to have an quite an intelligent mind. A mind that would seem omniscient to someone like you and I. I cannot know nor can I deduce with my limited intellect that an immortal being, who had mastered entropy and can live forever, can make square circles at some point in an infinite life-span. It is quite obvious that such a being would be able to do whatever you can think of: including executing paradoxes. If you assert the opposite, justify why. I only assert that it is possible with an infinite number of possibilities in front of us.