Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Monday, July 2, 2007 - 11:52 pm |
According to the time-binding record, "A=A" is the Law of Identity, just one of the Laws of Thought. Although it is attributed to Aristotle, it is not what Aristotle ever said. |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Tuesday, July 3, 2007 - 03:49 pm |
In traditional philosophy "identity" speaks to what makes a thing such a thing, and this goes back to Platonic ideals and Aristotelian essences. If we are to try to express something like this in a language remotely consistent with general semantics, we might suggest that such an "essence" is a "highest" level abstraction such that nothing that is not always attributed to such a thing is included, and everything that is always attributed to such a thing is included. It has been argued that there is one and only one characteristic that fits this model, and that is, in clasical philosophical terms, its "essence". Examples of such abstractions include "chairness", "dogness", etc. With more than twenty-five centuries of common useage of this paradigm, that usage is still ubiquitous on the face of this planet, and it permeates our language. The law of identity then holds that everything has such a unique single characteristic, and that it is unchanging. It is pure, and no matter how abstracted, by whom it is arrived at, it will be the same. That which is is what it is. Whatever is, is. It also seems to me that a great many people confuse the "identity" relation, which is an equivalence class with one member for each member in a set, expressed by A=A, is quite different from saying that A is A. When we say A is A, we are going back to ancient forms which predicates a property on a subject. Subject A has property A. In this case the subect A names what is to be talked about, and the predicate A identifies the essential property that is unique to the named suject and only the named subject. But because we are talking about the "essence" or "essential" quality, we cannot use any other formulation, and there's the rub. We see "the same" symbol in two diferent places, but tend to forget that they indicate different meanings. |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Friday, August 10, 2007 - 11:30 pm |
If something has a "degree of differentiation", it has a number of component parts. |