mumblethrax
Species traitor
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2004
- Messages
- 4,991
There's no innate distinction between positive claims and negative claims.You can't make a single claim, and the reason is because it conflates both a negative claim and a positive claim. It's only by breaking a claim into the smallest possible units that any logical conclusions can be drawn from it. Compound claims are much more complicated.
"There is a duck" in this case is non-specific, and "breaking the claim down" in this way leads to incorrect assumptions about how to evaluate the claim. If I can establish that birds don't exist, the claim is false, and there's no need for further evaluation. These are conjoint conditions."There is a duck that is not green." First, you have to establish that a duck exists. That's the positive claim. Only having first established that can you discuss what colour the duck might or might not be.
The claim is non-specific. If you were to somehow establish that God exists in the only universe available to us, "There is a universe with no God" would remain unproven.In the case of the original claim, I think "a universe exists" is trivially easy to prove, leaving only the negative claim that the universe has no god, which cannot be proved.
But it's notable that it's the difficulty of proving the claim that is the stumbling block, and not whether or not it is phrased as a negative. "There's an empty car in my driveway" is not even slightly difficult to prove or disprove. If there's no car in my driveway, it's false. If there is a car in my driveway, and it's empty, it's true. If there's a car in my driveway and it's not empty, it's false. Nothing about any of this would make the assumption that there is not an empty car in my driveway reasonable.
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