| | Ed: "The human purpose of logic is to successfully deal with reality. If something is unreal, then it is unimportant (other than a mental exercise). Logic serves US, not we IT." No argument. True enough, fer sure. But...(you must've known, given my posts, that THAT was coming)...'exercise,' whether mental (logic-conundrums or any 'puzzles') or physical (weight-lifting, soccer-kicking, gymnastics, maybe even Tiddly-Winks), is ALWAYS good in and of itself (and, is sometimes inadvertantly productive, such as discovering a new 'angle' [literally or metaphorically]); except, of course, when it transplants/replaces otherwise obviously (especially necessary-to-do) 'productive' time. --- Apart from the latter, I'm a bit with Richard Feynman re the attitude of 'play.' ('Course, he was able to professionally combine the two re his orientations and profession. Ntl...) Uh-h...my previous questions still stand, however...and...they are not in the least facetiously meant. Indeed, they're asking for an Identification re what IS the 'real' (meaningful/useful) re the 'null-set' (or NO 'null-set') vs what's NOT 'real'. --- I hinted that my view of the whole idea of 'sets' as (supposedly) 'defined' in Philosophy-of-Logic writings is itself a 'null-set,' (ie: un-real, with logical consequences IN logic-analysing); but no one's arguing for...or against...this view. Ergo, it's still de facto (like religious prophets of old) accepted as 'real'/useful.
MTFBWY J-D
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