I don’t think so, because it can’t do the things an iPhone can do. If you were to use the dead casing of the iPhone electronics for something on a deserted island it wouldn’t be as a phone. Deriving ontology from form has its limitations. But if you derive ontology from function, which we still sometimes do even in today’s world, you have much greater consistency and understanding across cultures.
What makes it an iPhone is its functionality and our ability to use it. Take away the electric power, the cellular network and the internet, then it reverts back to just a hunk of glass and metal.
This episode was 🤯🔥. Thank you Father Stephen for the sermon at the end. So true and so 🎯. God Bless the work that you both do. ☦️
He is love and he wants us to believe in him and have a relationship with him.
Then you have paintings with blue sky from how long ago,I smoke too but wow please share your sacraments.
No. Sorry. An iPhone dropped into an island and found by others is still an iPhone.
I don’t think so, because it can’t do the things an iPhone can do. If you were to use the dead casing of the iPhone electronics for something on a deserted island it wouldn’t be as a phone.
Deriving ontology from form has its limitations. But if you derive ontology from function, which we still sometimes do even in today’s world, you have much greater consistency and understanding across cultures.
What makes it an iPhone is its functionality and our ability to use it. Take away the electric power, the cellular network and the internet, then it reverts back to just a hunk of glass and metal.