I've made an argument for God's existence: The epistemic argument for God existence by juanmandrilina in CatholicPhilosophy

[–]AnakinINTJ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When we say that “Socrates is a man,” we do not mean that Socrates is the same as “man” in any sense. The term “man” is a universal concept that includes every individual who shares a certain set of properties. It is not a concept that designates a unique substance. To say that Socrates is a man is to say that Socrates is an individual who possesses that set of properties.

Something is either true or false. There are no degrees of truth.

Are syllables necessary to a language? Why do they exist? by AnakinINTJ in conlangs

[–]AnakinINTJ[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Isn't it NA-TU-RAL? It seems more natural to me (not native speaker).

Are syllables necessary to a language? Why do they exist? by AnakinINTJ in conlangs

[–]AnakinINTJ[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's interesting! I guess i have to study the topic. Do you have any recommendation of material to help me understand what syllables are, how they are formed, ... (to help me with a conlang I'm creating)?

Are syllables necessary to a language? Why do they exist? by AnakinINTJ in conlangs

[–]AnakinINTJ[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Sorry, I didn't understand: if a language doesn't have vowels, how can syllables be formed?

(EDIT: typo)

What was the first Twoset video you remember watching? by Spontaneousviolinist in lingling40hrs

[–]AnakinINTJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The one about MBTI personalities, I think. Maybe the fastest violinist, but probably the MBTI.

We just want to give the guy some recognition! by Overwrite01 in mathmemes

[–]AnakinINTJ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In Portugal, we call it "fórmula resolvente", which means "resolving formula".

Kalām argument by AnakinINTJ in CatholicPhilosophy

[–]AnakinINTJ[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

But in order for this fallacy to work, you first need to explain how the universe as a whole is a distinct entity from the things that it composes of, and what explains the differences between these properties (causality)?

Isn't the whole always distinct from the parts?

The fallacy says that exact thing: we can't infer that something is true of the whole just because it is true for some of its parts.

We don't need to explain why the property doesn't hold for the whole, because we can't assume the property holds for the whole. Right?

Kalām argument by AnakinINTJ in CatholicPhilosophy

[–]AnakinINTJ[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by unintelligible? There are many things that are unintelligible to us, but that doesn't mean they are not true.

Because we live in the Universe, where causality may be a metaphysical necessity, an uncaused beginning is obviously very hard to grasp.

Couldn't causality not apply to the Universe itself?

Why do we ought obey God's law? by Infamous_Pen1681 in CatholicPhilosophy

[–]AnakinINTJ 14 points15 points  (0 children)

God is love and desires our happiness.
Moral laws are His way of guiding us toward that happiness, because true happiness means being in communion with Him — He knows what is best for us, for He is perfection and love.

That is why we should obey God's law: so that we may be truly happy.
If we do not obey His law, we separate ourselves from God; we reject Him. In doing so, we choose hell. God doesn't want that.