Correct me if I’m wrong, but “They are probably making some implicit metaphysical claims about what it means for some object(A) to be a simulation of some other object(B).” and “They are probably making some implicit claims about what it means for some object(A) to be a simulation of some other object(B)” mean exactly the same thing.
They do happen to mean the same thing. This is because the question “What does it mean for some y to be an x?” is a metaphysical question.
“They are probably making some aesthetic claim about why object(A) is more beautiful than object(B)” and “They are probably making some claim about why object(A) is more beautiful than object(B)” also mean the same thing.
Come to that, they both probably mean the same thing as “They are probably making some implicit claims about how some object(B) differs from some other object (A) it simulates,” which eliminates the reference to meaning as well.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but “They are probably making some implicit metaphysical claims about what it means for some object(A) to be a simulation of some other object(B).” and “They are probably making some implicit claims about what it means for some object(A) to be a simulation of some other object(B)” mean exactly the same thing.
They do happen to mean the same thing. This is because the question “What does it mean for some y to be an x?” is a metaphysical question.
“They are probably making some aesthetic claim about why object(A) is more beautiful than object(B)” and “They are probably making some claim about why object(A) is more beautiful than object(B)” also mean the same thing.
Come to that, they both probably mean the same thing as “They are probably making some implicit claims about how some object(B) differs from some other object (A) it simulates,” which eliminates the reference to meaning as well.