O
Oreoracle
Guest
How is asking for clarification an evasion, exactly? Oh wait, this question’s probably an evasion too!Evasion still… sigh :manvspc:
Well usually when someone does something silly like capitalizing a noun that isn’t proper in the middle of a sentence, we assume they mean something slightly different than usual. For example, Plato’s “Forms” are different than regular “forms” and Rand’s “Objectivism” is different than regular “objectivism.” It would be exceedingly difficult to read the works of these authors if we understood the terms they have created with their normal, lower-cased definitions. Since you were using the regular version of “harmony” and not some twisted, fancified religious version, it was incorrect of you to capitalize “harmony” in your sentence.I would say that my definition fits (3) quite well. Why did you presume otherwise?
That being said, my answer is still “no.” No arrangement of properties can prevent change, including death, forever. If you meant something else by your sentence then please say so. Otherwise, my answer is the same. An item, whatever it be, will fall out of “harmony” in the same way that Adam and Eve supposedly fell from perfection.
A conclusion without premises is an assertion, hence the comment. If I just said “no” that wouldn’t make for much of an argument. You wouldn’t expect a defendant to walk into court with “I’m innocent” as his only argument, would you?Yeah!! He ***finally ***answered a question (had to comment *FIRST *of course, but at least answered).
How is this relevant?What stops someone from trying if they insist? Themselves or something else?
So the statement should have been, “A thing can die whether or not it tries, but it should try.” Why didn’t you just say that?The statement isn’t about whether you can succeed eternally regardless of all things but the trying. The statement is one of whether you give up and fail because of yourself, or because Reality gave you no choice and thus stopped you from continuing to try. “Do not seek, and you are not likely to find.”
Okay, we’re going to go through this step-by-step:The statement is logically true regardless of your presumptions and fatalism. I’m guessing that logic isn’t your forte. :dts::yukonjoe:
“Nothing can die until it fails to try” is a conditional statement. Conditional statements contain subjects and predicates, where the subject is the condition and the predicate is what must be the case if the condition is fulfilled. We can rephrase it to make this relationship more obvious: “If something has died, then it has failed to try [to live].” In this statement, “something has died” is the subject and “it has failed to try [to live]” is the predicate. Let the subject be “A” and the predicate be “B.”
So now we’re left with a standard conditional statement: “If A, then B.” This means that for every instance that A is the case, B is also the case. So we know that you’re saying every instance where someone has died they have also failed to try [to live]. However, we know that sometimes people die while they have also always tried [to live], Therefore, there are some instances where A is the case but B is not the case, so your conditional statement is false.
Did you keep up with that?