You're repeating yourself atp. Its built on necessity period. Not within its own framework. Logic isn't bound by experiential contingency
You say that, but asserting necessity “period” is still a claim that must be intelligible and applicable beyond its formal definitions if it’s meant to describe reality.
reason isnt derived from sense perception, it emerges from logic.
Even if reason “emerges from logic,” the expression and application of that logic is filtered through language, cognitive categories, and distinction-making, which are all shaped by experience. Logic might be formally pure, but its use is always mediated. The burden is on your side to show how pure logic leads to reliable ontology without smuggling in sensory or cognition-shaped scaffolding.
Sense perception is, not logic. Read my replies.
I have. But your argument treats logic as a self-contained access to reality, while dismissing perception. If perception is flawed and logic is shaped by faculties developed in relation to perception, then logic isn’t immune from scrutiny either. You’re separating them too cleanly, ignoring the interdependence that even Kant, Husserl, and others dealt with.
Those are just labels. You can call it what you want but being still remains necessary.. Abstraction doesn't preclude ontological or epistemic grounding. Everything at its fundamental level is abstract.
But again, abstraction without differentiation becomes vacuous. Saying “being is necessary” with no specification of how being appears or persists in a plural world is like defining reality as “that which exists.” That isn't wrong but it's philosophically shallow unless you connect it to a usable framework.
Not true. You can know you exist without reference to time or change. You're assuming knowledge grows. Parminedes is saying its static. To be is to know and vice versa.
But “to know” is not a static state unless you collapse all distinctions between having knowledge, acquiring knowledge, and expressing knowledge. Even in the “I think, therefore I am” sense, there is still a structure: subject, act, awareness. The moment we unpack “being is knowing,” we’re already presupposing distinctions that unfold over time or contrast. If not, then we reduce it to a metaphysical singularity which explains nothing and admits no alternative.
ive already refuted this. Vacuums aren't "nothing". They exist.
I didn’t claim vacuums are true nothing. I said that Parmenides’ concept of change assumes absolute negation, which modern metaphysics doesn’t require. Change can involve reconfiguration, emergence, or gradation.
even if it is, its ontological grounding and necessity arent negated. All you're arguments seem to cycle back to "but this is useless or impractical therefore it must be false"
What I am actually saying is: if your argument cannot be tested, conceived, or distinguished from formalism, then it cannot be ontologically persuasive. I’m not reducing everything to utility. I’m asking: what reason do we have to believe this model maps onto reality? If it doesn’t interact with or explain anything in the world, we’re mistaking consistency for truth.
It doesn't because it allows for epistemology to be built off the phenomenal world. Think of how scientific explanations and religious ones coexist because they operate in seperate domains. In parminides case, you have the real and illusory. One like the divine is unapproachable, the other isn't.
But there's a difference: religion often admits its appeal is faith-based, symbolic, or metaphoric. It doesn’t try to prove that its metaphysics are rationally necessary. Parmenides does. And when you introduce a binary like “real/illusory” but then operate entirely in the illusory without any epistemic bridge to the “real,” you’ve created a sealed-off system. The “real” becomes philosophically inert, so despite its existence, we can't speak meaningfully about it.
That there is the limit of knowledge and language. Wishing it were otherwise doesn't make it so.
True, but the burden is still on the one claiming logical necessity to show how the claim escapes circularity, inaccessibility, and performative contradiction. If nothing can be known, verified, or meaningfully interacted with, then to say “nothing ever happens” is no longer a logical conclusion.