Where have you been.. Western philosophy is basically semantics scaled up a bit and with beards.brainless_fps_player said:This is semantics, not really philosophy.
Actually, a house is a thing. It's a home that's a concept (since it's a place that is uniquely yours to live in, that makes you feel warm and safe and loved). A house is a building made for the purposes of living in that isn't sectioned off into apartments. For example, a mansion is a house, albeit a really fancy one, because it was made for the express purposes of one person/family (a 'household') to live in. As for your question, it's easy: the house has been destroyed. Broken down into all it's smaller parts, so it no longer exists. Sort of like how a digested banana gets broken down into all it's vitamins and minerals. It was a banana, now it's not. Doesn't mean the banana wasn't an existing thing, just means that it no longer is around.Shade184 said:You build a house out of Lego. Okay cool, you have a house.
Now take the Lego apart, and make something else? Where is the house? You have the bricks you made it with, but where did the actual house go?
= A house is not a thing, it is a concept.
first, in case you somehow don't know, it's Philosophical. Now, to answer your question, yes, it's just a broken one. It may no longer serve it's purpose, but neither does a wooden sword, or a sword in the hands of someone who doesn't know how to use it, or an unsharpened sword, or a sword sitting on display. None of these conditions change the item into something other than a sword, and so neither does breaking it.Sh1nobu said:Just a quick one for you guys.
Is a sword still a sword, after it has been broken (shattered in pieces or broken in two, doesnt matter)?
Does it matter?Sh1nobu said:Just a quick one for you guys.
Is a sword still a sword, after it has been broken (shattered in pieces or broken in two, doesnt matter)?
Invalid question. The person has no knowledge of the concept "sword", so he cannot ask the question. It is neither a sword nor not-a-sword to him. He simply doesn't know that word and concept. However, he could analyze that thing, and come to understand what its purpose is and how it works. He may not call it sword, but he will have understood it.Shymer said:Some questions:
If the only person observing the sword knows nothing of swords, is it still a sword?
What is the criterion for broken? How efficiently it achieves its purpose? In that case, we have a spectrum. Where YOU draw the line, is arbitrary, because there in truth is no "line".If the sword has an imperceptible hairline fracture in it, is it still a sword - or a broken sword? Is it a broken sword only when you know of the break? Clearly the sword is broken, but there's no-one to observe it in that state.
No, neither "perfection" nor "subjective" exists. Appealing to subjectivity or objectivity is simply a lame-ass way to cop-out of a difficult problem, instead of investing the effort necessary to understand what's going on.What you come to realise is that "sword" is a convenient and simple, but imperfect and subjective, description of a thing. Brokenness is similarly a convenient and simple, but imperfect and subjective, description of a state of a thing.
That is just words. Words obviously are arbitrary, just as you can use anything to symbolize something else. It is arbitrary, not because its "subjective", but because the symbol indeed does not matter - it is just a method to communicate what matters.The interesting part is when one person sees a sword, and another sees a plough and they talk about it.
Oh god..... good that you spelled the thread-topic "filosofical"... it aproximates the level of philosophical thinking at work here. What is this thread - simply a hook to promote the belief in the subject/object dichotomy?"Sword" is an opinion. "Broken" is an opinion. People with opinions go around bothering each other.
What if it was the blade?Archemetis said:If someone tried to kill me with a broken sword whilst exclaiming:
'I will kill you with my sword!'
I would have to let them know that it's not a sword...
'That's merely a handle...'
OP: Go back to your spelling homework before you start on philosophy please.PaulH said:No ... a broken sword would either just be a hilt, guard, grip and pommel or a combination thereof... or assuming there was fragments still attached to the haft and guard, a dagger if a double edged sword, or a knife if single edged.
Assuming if you were holding the sword by it's blade and all else had broken away, it would be an 'edge'.