Of course it’s technically possible that the territory will play a game of supernatural and support a fundamental object behaving according to a high-level concept in your mind. But this is improbable to an extent of being impossible, a priori, without need for further experiments to drive the certainty to absolute.
Not quite sure what you’re saying here. If you’re saying:
1)”Entities in the map will not magically jump into the territory,” Then I never disagreed with this. What I disagreed with is your labeling certain things as obviously in the map and others obviously in the territory. We can use whatever labels you like: I still don’t know why irreducible entities in the territory are “incredibly improbable prior to any empirical evidence.”
2)”The territory can’t support irreducible entities,” you still haven’t asserted why this is “incredibly improbable prior to any empirical evidence.”
Not quite sure what you’re saying here. If you’re saying:
1)”Entities in the map will not magically jump into the territory,” Then I never disagreed with this. What I disagreed with is your labeling certain things as obviously in the map and others obviously in the territory. We can use whatever labels you like: I still don’t know why irreducible entities in the territory are “incredibly improbable prior to any empirical evidence.”
2)”The territory can’t support irreducible entities,” you still haven’t asserted why this is “incredibly improbable prior to any empirical evidence.”