Hmm, the description of David Hume's philosophy of miracles and the like in Sophie's World? Hume, being one of the most arrogant philosophers ever as regards miracles (a lot more so than the book implies) would have on that criterion probably have dismissed the existence of the duck billed platypus or the okapi using those criteria. After all, if we didn't actually have these animals in captivity, they would be a lot easier to explain as fairy tales then living creatures. In music, for example (coming from my underground music bias), the key is creating a unique combination of already existing elements and themes drawing on some tradition or other.Puguni wrote:I read Sophie's World, and they had a blurb about this which interested me hugely. It's a philosophy book, so it's a philosophical answer.
Anything ever imagined always stemmed from something we've experienced or seen. We can't make truly fantastical creatures from our mind] ? Perhaps there are infinite possibilities of combinations or different views, but you can't simply pull a totally new, nobody-has-thought-of-it-but-you idea out of your brain.
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
sldr4Christ1985 wrote:As I've been working on my photography and a little bit of graphic design, I've been wondering this question: Is there really anything original? Nothing that hasn't been done before by someone else? I know, for example, that when God first created the world and people they were inventing new things all the time - music, agriculture, etc. So I guess it is possible to make totally new things (Just thought of that this second, actually xD). Do you think everything new has been used up? I've also heard since God is infinate, there must be infinate possibilities. I was just wondering everyone's opinions on this.
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