Post Number:#31
August 30th, 2010, 9:49 pm
Scott wrote:As I use the term, an omnipotent being could not make 2 + 2 = 5.
Alun wrote:What an omnipotent being could do to the actual concepts of 2, +, =, and 5 is not the issue. It seems clear to me that any being who you or I would be willing to call "omnipotent" would, at the very least, be able to make you believe, and view as self-evident, that 2 + 2 = 5.
No, he couldn't. That's my point. So-called a priori knowledge is not actually knowledge of anything about the world; it's a reflection of meaning. The statement, "The bachelor is unmarried," is not really true in the sense a usual statement, by which I mean an a posteriori proposition, is true or false. An a priori statement contains no information that could be wrong or right; it has nothing to do with evidence or informational beliefs. We use the label '2 + 2' and the label '4' to both refer to the same concept. The concept 'unmarried bachelor' is the concept 'bachelor.' It's meaninglessly redundant in the way a non-concept 'married bachelor' is completely meaningless (by being the opposite of redundant). We literally cannot disbelieve a so-called a priori truth, as an a priori statement is so-called true (i.e. redundant) by the nature of the concepts (i.e. categorizations of percepts) we created and the meaning of the symbols (namely words) we use to label and reference those concepts. For the concepts to be concepts and have meaning; saying that they have meaning is simply different words for alleging the presence of logic and the so-called truth of a priori statements--as logic and so-called a priori truth are simply words for particular types of synonymousness that is there no matter how delusional or misinformed a person is or what a god does. A series of words may mean a true statement in English and mean a false statement in some other language, but changing the meaning of the words does not change the truth of what was originally meant. A god could make us speak a different language, but it's utter nonsense to suggest anything at all could make a priori statement be false. A priori statements and deductive logic refer to redundancies of meaning. An omnipotent being, as I use the term, cannot make one mean what one doesn't mean or do any non-things. If you are suggesting he can, then we do not disagree, we are simply having an illusion of disagreement resulting from a misunderstanding resulting from equivocation over the word 'god' and the word 'omnipotence.' I am using those words to refer to concepts not to pseudo-refer to non-concepts/non-things--e.g. the terms as I use them can't refer to something like 'unmarried bachelor' because the words 'unmarried bachelor' do not refer to a concept or thing and thus there is no 'thing' (i.e. that to which the words would refer) to have qualities like fictionality, existence, blue hair, being a wife-beater, etc.
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