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Full Idea
If we aim to derive impossibility from inconceivability, we may either face a failure to conceive something, or arrive at a state of incoherence in conceiving.
Gist of Idea
Inconceivability (implying impossibility) may be failure to conceive, or incoherence
Source
Anand Vaidya (Understanding and Essence [2010], 'Application')
Book Ref
-: 'Philosophia' [-], p.831
A Reaction
[summary] Thus I can't manage to conceive a multi-dimensional hypercube, but I don't even try to conceive a circular square. In both cases, we must consider whether the inconceivability results from our own inadequacy, rather than from the facts.
14039 | Above and below us will never appear to be the same, because it is inconceivable [Epicurus] |
13172 | What we cannot imagine may still exist [Leibniz] |
3802 | Why pronounce impossible what you cannot imagine? [Dennett] |
3903 | The conceivable can't be a test of the possible, if there are things which are possible but inconceivable [Scruton] |
17958 | The apparently metaphysically possible may only be epistemically possible [Vetter] |
19268 | Inconceivability (implying impossibility) may be failure to conceive, or incoherence [Vaidya] |