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Just the basics…

We are incapable of conceiving anything non-physical,
Pog is non-physical,
Pog cannot be conceived,

There can never be proof of something that cannot be conceived,
Pog cannot be conceived,
There can never be proof of Pog.

The most likely conclusion is the most probable one,
The most likely conclusion is the one with proof,
The conclusion with proof is the most probable one.

There can never be proof of Pog,
The conclusion with proof is the most probable one,
There is no Pog [ℓ].

Definitions:

Pog: A non-physical object or being.
[ℓ]: “Beyond reasonable doubt”.

2006-11-11 03:06:45 · 6 answers · asked by Daniel B 1 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

DO NOT confuse terms that are abstract as existent. Simply because:

An abstract term is dependent on a thing that is existent,
Therefore an abstract term cannot exist independently.

2006-11-11 03:47:46 · update #1

DO NOT assume that what is "metaphysical" is indepedent of that which is physical.

2006-11-11 04:14:10 · update #2

6 answers

Pog can be conceived and proved to be probable through cause and effect syndrome - if pog could cause a physical effect.

For example, headache caused by certain thoughts repeatedly, or emotional tears caused by imagined sorrow.

In general, our metaphysical mind (not the brain) does cause a lot of physical effects on our body, such as laughter, tears, quickening of heart-beats etc.

2006-11-11 04:09:21 · answer #1 · answered by small 7 · 0 0

I was thinking aloud ....What about conceiving a thought? An idea? A revelation? I was of the view that we can have proof of something like a thought that has been conceived. ( e.g. Daniel B is a troublesome guy .... a thought. . Proof? Look at the way he is fielding questions ununderstandable and confusing?" ) \

So, I think there can be a proof of Pog or whatever name you have given. So there is.

2006-11-11 11:19:58 · answer #2 · answered by YD 5 · 0 0

But we ARE capable of conceiving non-pysical entities. Beethoven wrote music, yet he was deaf. Many poets have written about love, which is non-physical.

If I can conceive of the answer to any mathematical operation, then I can conceive of soimething non-physical.

If a premise is wrong, then all the rest of your argument is also wrong.

2006-11-11 11:31:29 · answer #3 · answered by Richard E 4 · 0 0

What is the question, then?

2006-11-11 11:09:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the questions is?

2006-11-11 11:20:59 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ok, I'll believe you

2006-11-11 11:09:08 · answer #6 · answered by pepzi_bandit 2 6 · 0 0

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