On Feb 8, 9:59 am, Mulligan <
t2judgm...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Feb 7, 3:14 pm, Mulligan <
yos...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > If you have books, if there is a dispute about what is in the book,
> > the book can be used as evidence.
Actually, it would be the contents of the book that may be used to
provide a written account of some evidence. All the books themselves
do is to provide a physical presentation medium for the contents
therein.
> > Now just because there are 2 books being considered, and one is a book
> > of fiction, and the other a book of religion, does not automatically
> > logically make both fiction.
For those who might be curious about which books were being
considered, they were:
1. Alice in Wonderland
2. The Holy Bible
The context was that both of these are works of fiction (story
books). There was a later clarification that The Holy Bible is
actually a collection of many stories, so it differs in that manner
from Alice in Wonderland (which is one story).
> Example so it is more clear.
>
> Here is an item.
>
> It is a tennis ball.
>
> The ball is yellow.
>
> Now allow someone to introduce another item.
>
> Here is a door.
>
> It is yellow.
>
> Therefore the door is round.
>
> Now this is example of the logic of the trolling tactic they tried.
Comparing a tennis ball with a door is very different from comparing a
book with a another book. The functional differences between tennis
balls and doors are very different. The functional differences
between books is essentially the same.
> While discussing an item, introduce another item to discuss, and then
> proclaim that by them introducing the item into discussion that that
> somehow magically confers a property not under discussion or
> characteristic not under discussion to the first item.
That's what you just did with your introduction of tennis balls and
doors.
> Again:
>
> A yellow tennis ball.
>
> A yellow door.
>
> Equates to door being round.
You didn't specify the shape of the door. Although doors are
typically an oblong shape, there are other options. For example, in
the movie The Lord Of The Rings, in a villiage known as The Shire, the
Hobbits have round doors on their homes -- these were real doors that
were built as part of the movie set for the actors to use while the
"cameras were rolling."
--
Fidem Turbare, the non-existent atheist goddess
"Every time a child says "I don't believe in fairies" there is a
little fairy somewhere that falls down dead."
-- Peter Pan