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J D
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What do we call Are there philosophical problems for which there's only a trivial solution?

reverted title to OP's original language; used scare quotes on theorem; added question about analogs.
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J D
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What do we call philosophical theoremsproblems for which there's only a trivial solution?

I can't really think of a philosophical example, but in mathematics, it would be something like find'find the x where f(x) = 0 given that f(x) = xx', and the solution would be x'x = 00', which is trivial. Is there any such theorem"theorem" in philosophy? What are the most popular ones? Is there even an analog?

What do we call philosophical theorems for which there's only a trivial solution?

I can't really think of a philosophical example, but in mathematics it would be something like find the x where f(x) = 0 given that f(x) = x, and the solution would be x = 0, which is trivial. Is there any such theorem in philosophy? What are the most popular ones?

What do we call philosophical problems for which there's only a trivial solution?

I can't really think of a philosophical example, but in mathematics, it would be something like 'find the x where f(x) = 0 given that f(x) = x', and the solution would be 'x = 0', which is trivial. Is there any such "theorem" in philosophy? What are the most popular ones? Is there even an analog?

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Mauro ALLEGRANZA
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Sayaman
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Sayaman
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