Re: Circular Crackpot Identity

From: Ian Goddard (igoddard@erols.com)
Date: Sat Mar 14 1998 - 08:42:04 MST


I D'ohed:

> IDENTITY: X possesses an identity and
> can therefore be said to exist where
> X stands out as different from some
> state or quantity defined as not-X.
>
> NOT-IDENTITY: X posses no identity and
> cannot be said to exist where X is the
> same as not-X, for there is then nothing
> that is not-X, and thus no difference.

  IAN: Ooops. I included the term defined
  in the definition. No matter, it does
  not mark an error of essence, since
  the same definition can be stated
  more properly sans term:

IDENTITY: that which is possessed by X
which makes X different than not-X,
allowing it to be said that X exists.

NOT-IDENTITY: that which makes X the
same as not-X, which nullifies that
which allows X to be said to exit.

 Any other definitional suggestions?
 I like the "process" definitions above
 more, even though they include the term.

 A perfect example of the "not-identity"
 of "same as," and of the second "not"
 definition above, is an item X that
 appears one second -- and as such stands
 as different than not-X -- then disappears
 the next second, "poof"... in so doing it
 has become the same as not-X, and thus X
 ceases to exist. The prevailing definition
 of identity is "same as," and yet as we can
 see, that definition is most clearly false.

 Another example is identical, or "same as,"
 twins: seeing only one at a time, you cannot
 be sure which of the two your seeing, since
 each looses identity to the degree that the
 two are the "same as" each other. So we can
 clearly see that "same as" = "ANTI-identity."

 IDENTITY RULE: X gains identity by
 difference and looses it by similarity.

****************************************************************
VISIT Ian Williams Goddard ----> http://www.erols.com/igoddard
________________________________________________________________

REV. ROGER WILLIAMS ---> http://www.erols.com/igoddard/roger.htm
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