Shankity Stick said:
I dare anyone to disprove ANYTHING, if you factor in magic, other planets, and alternate dimensions. My logic is that we can't prove that something definitely doesn't exist/ happen somewhere out there. That is the one thing that is impossible. But by all means, try to disprove something to me.
P.S. anyone trying to disprove something visual I?m sick of repeating my self so here goes, maybe x is happening, you just don't realize it.
This seems to be a self-refuting argument.
If I am reading this correctly, you posit that the only thing that is inherently impossible is the concept of something being impossible?
In trying to give the OT some measure of good-faith, this entire discussion reeks of the philosophical debate on objectivity versus subjectivity. It's an intellectual stalemate at its core, and the resolution of the conflict (which is impossible) would essentially mean nothing.
I.E. there are no axioms we have to work with, besides those we create in the context of the debate (except that magic, other planets, and alternate dimensions all *might* exist), and any we posit can/could be immediately refuted.
I.G. I might say, "Given that 2+2=4, 2+2 =/= 5."
To which you might say, "Your assertion that 2+2 = 4 isn't clear since it's possible, through magic, that 2 + 2 = 5."
Or, "In some other dimension, the laws of mathematics might be such that addition doesn't yield unique results. Therefore, it's possible that 2+2=4 & 2+2=5! Huzzah!"
or hell, "It's possible that an omnipotent presence made us all erroneously believe that 2+2=4, which could be wrong. In reality, it *could* be true that 2+2=5."
In fact, with the framework you've given us, I acknowledge that it's impossible to 'disprove' something. My last argument above (and its many variations; see: we might not truly be perceiving the world, everything is a computer simulation, etc) could be used to support the idea that anything is possible. Since it's impossible to prove it 100% wrong, you win.
TL;DR
You're right, it's impossible to 'disprove' something, given the framework you set up.
So what?