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Debate Info

4
1
Yes No
Debate Score:5
Arguments:7
Total Votes:5
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Argument Ratio

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 Yes (4)
 
 No (1)

Debate Creator

TheThinker(1697) pic



I Dare You To Answer - Can an Inside Be an Outside?

Mind Debate @_@

 

Yes

Side Score: 4
VS.

No

Side Score: 1

Sure...just rip open someones torso....heheheh

Side: Yes

Double Posted, Ooopsies

Side: Yes

My chair is inside of my house, right outside of the kitchen.

The inside of a garment can become the outside when the garment is inverted, without ceasing to be the inside of the garment when varying definitions of the term inside are used.

Overall, Yes I would say.

Side: Yes
iNationGirl(28) Clarified
1 point

Let's clarify the meaning of the question - Can something that is inside also be outside at the same time - within the same context.

Sooooo for example - you can tell your son to go outside of your house - but your yard is an fenced off yard. So technically he is outside of the house, but inside of the yard. The two are separate, because he cannot be inside, and outside of the house. You could also argue that he could stay inside the doorway - with half of his body inside, and half of it outside. But it still doesn't count. Because there are parts of his body that are inside, but not outside, and outside, but not inside. SO NEVER! Opposites, are opposites for a reason.

Side: Yes
thousandin1(1931) Clarified
1 point

But your logic regarding the body is flawed; you refer to part of it being inside and part of it being outside, but if you draw a thick line between them there are some portions that are either entirely both or entirely neither. Draw a fine enough line, and it will inevitably bisect many individual organs. Individual cells. Some portion of the body would be both inside and outside regardless of how you define it- and if it is possible to be neither outside or in, it is certainly possible to be both.

Side: Yes
1 point

Of course an inside can be an outside. The TARDIS is like that all the time.

Side: Yes

If they are both equal, so why the fuck we have to words to distinguish two DIFFERENT things in the first place? - I doubt that this would apply to geometry without any procedure. - I read that someone said about one object being inside the living room and outside the kitchen. Obviously... but how it defines that inside is outside if referred to an object?

Side: No