E
eucharisteo
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I took a course in college many years ago. We discussed this topic for a week. Can you prove that a point exists.
I think therefore I am. There, that’s a point.I took a course in college many years ago. We discussed this topic for a week. Can you prove that a point exists.
What do you mean? Can you elaborate?I took a course in college many years ago. We discussed this topic for a week. Can you prove that a point exists.
If you wish to have a discussion that usually means that all parties are talking. You seem to be a little light on your thoughts.Topology
Proofs teach you how to think logicallyIf you wish to have a discussion that usually means that all parties are talking. You seem to be a little light on your thoughts.
As this Topology is a an area of mathematics, then no, one can not that a points exists as mathematice is an abstraction, as pointed out by Shredderbeam.
A geometric point exists by logical declaration.If you mean a geometrical point, then no. They are abstractions, not real entities.
It is impossible to philosophically prove the existence of an abstraction.Proofs teach you how to think logically
You can declare that X exists, but that doesn’t mean that X is an entity in objective reality. X might be a mental abstraction, though, if that’s what you mean.A geometric point exists by logical declaration.
Declaration for thought cannot be disputed. They are superior to axiom.
“A = A” is a logical declaration, not in need of proof nor presumption. It is to be accepted so as to continue thought within a framework. The framework is always a set of declarations.
The only proof you need is to say, “It exists because I declare it to be a part of my understanding. And in the physical universe, it exists because I distinguish it by its effect.”
The definition of a point is an axiom of geometry, is it not?You can declare that X exists, but that doesn’t mean that X is an entity in objective reality. X might be a mental abstraction, though, if that’s what you mean.
“A = A” is an axiom, but a point is not an axiom.
Not really.You can declare that X exists, but that doesn’t mean that X is an entity in objective reality. X might be a mental abstraction, though, if that’s what you mean.
“A = A” is an axiom, but a point is not an axiom.
People that are deaf dumb and blind know that trees exist. Hellen Keller knew, why limit existence to his declarations?The tree really only exists because you declared what you observed to be a tree.
You have “seen through deduction” that such things called points actually exist.
There is an elite and very finely technical difference between an axiom and a declaration.The definition of a point is an axiom of geometry, is it not?
Well, I have on idea what you are trying to say. Axioms or declarations seem to do exactly the same thing. They set the limits of intuition…There is an elite and very finely technical difference between an axiom and a declaration.
An axiom refers to some thought that is to be accepted before deductive argument begins. A declaration is very similar with one exception.
A declaration is not subject to belief. It is a statement that “in the following argument, this is to be true.” All labels, names, definitions, property assignments, and such are declarations, not axioms.
Every thinking thing MUST declare before it even accepts an axiom (else it wouldn’t even be able to comprehend any axiom proposed).
And without limits, you cannot construct anything including rational thought.Well, I have on idea what you are trying to say. Axioms or declarations seem to do exactly the same thing. They set the limits of intuition…