My mistake (and I seek forgiveness for it) that I hadn't indicated that. — god must be atheist
Small damages are forgiven, large ones are punished... that's how it should be, and generally speaking, that's how it is done in the society I live in. — god must be atheist
Without forgiveness and redemption, hatred will accumulate until people kill each other. — god must be atheist
Without judgment social structure would crumble. I do keep to the law, because I fear the punishment after breaking it. — god must be atheist
Cancel culture is emotionally loaded censorship or even emotional terrorism. — Andrew4Handel
In fact, I think "cancel culture" is about public accountability. — Benkei
I think he took a look again at it, and realized he missed something important, because the questions as they are have no logic which shows what the first and last letter must be. I believe he was embarrassed and pulled the questions. — Philosophim
I've refused to solve it, so I've solved it, just like everyone else who hasn't participated.
I've typed no characters to solve this, there are therefore zero characters I've type in response to it, and there wasn't a first character in my non-response.
To those who say my refusal to respond is a response, I say I'm not responding, but I'm just talking about stuff that I'm thinking about and not trying to solve this puzzle.
Mine is a good response, but not the response anyone was looking for, so there's that problem of course. — Hanover
The glaringly bizarre thing about this thread is these people are asserting this whole "ethics is for benefit of others" — Garrett Travers
every single code of ethics developed over the past few thousand years has been predicated first and primarily on the well-being and flourishing of the individual, and to the benefit of others a secondary; — Garrett Travers
What everyone here seems to be arguing, is that ethics are exclusively the domain of interpersonal relations. Whereas I am and have been arguing, that that isn't true. Ethics is primarily an individual pursuit; how could it not be? You can't be ethical to others if you aren't an ethical person privately — Garrett Travers
Yes, you ought do as you ought, to whomever you meet. — Banno
Atheism" : only nature : — 180 Proof
Are most people not very philosophical in their thinking and talking? I find it difficult to engage people in large topics that may not yield rewarding conclusions. — TiredThinker
But the truth is that these unselfish acts invariably protect not the self, true, but the tribe, the family, the nation, the species. In other words, the derivatives of one's own DNA. And the beneficiary is invariably is also a protector of the person who sacrifices for the community.
This is sort of a scenario that plays out this way: "I pay a sacrifice to the community to help the community survive, so then they can protect me and help me survive too." — god must be atheist
Viruses are like some necessary ingredient for the whole spectrum of life (to which it belongs too). — Raymond
So, viruses are alive! Naked. Without a naked body. In between the naked nudidity of the virus and the free naked human beauty, live dressed organisms like bacteria, — Raymond
Your refusal or inability to do this speaks volumes. — Kenosha Kid
Gives a whole new meaning to the word "errors" doesn't it? — Agent Smith
I've asked you twice to back up the false claim of a scientific consensus that viruses are alive, not according to what one guy thinks the definition should be, — Kenosha Kid
With an article that I think you didn't read. The pro argument isn't saying viruses are alive according to current definition of life. — Kenosha Kid
Okay, this is a bit like:
ME: What time is it?
YOU: Eight o'clock.
ME: Shit, I'm late! Hang on, the clock says 3!
YOU: I never said it was eight o'clock in this country.
I.e. there's no obvious distinction between being wrong and being tricky. I kinda have a feel for the answer though. — Kenosha Kid
I have to prove that it's wrong? — T Clark
I think it is intellectually lazy at least to accept science when it reinforces your fantasies and reject it when it doesn't — T Clark
T Clark didn't describe them as just DNA errors, he described them as random DNA errors. Random, in this case, means they don't have any particular direction or goal. Again, you use what supports your vague vision and ignore what doesn't. — T Clark
DNA is set up the way it is. It's set up in such a way that it allows evolution to proceed — T Clark
That's irrelevant to the present discussion. How life began is a different question than how evolution works. Darwin was explicit about that in "Origin of Species." — T Clark
If you, Wayfarer, @javra, and Teilhard want to turn evolution into a hugs and kisses spiritual love fest where rocks are conscious and everyone will eventually join with God, knock yourselves out. You guys just want to pick and choose those aspects of science that jibe with your magic-realistic world view and reject those that don't. That's intellectually lazy at best, intellectually dishonest at worst. — T Clark
Please back this up. The article you cite is a debate between a person saying that viruses don't adhere to the definition of the word "life" and another person who agrees but thinks the word should be redefined to include viruses. From the latter: — Kenosha Kid
. I asked you about whether viruses are alive or not, not whether we should redefine what we mean by "life". — Kenosha Kid
In response counter to an argument that computers can optimise like evolution does. I.e. it was a counterargument. If you're abandoning it, fine (and good) — Kenosha Kid
Yeah but a computer is manufactured by a living creature. Humans. Virus is already alive. Though from the Hanover's article I see that many doubt that is alive from the very beginning. — dimosthenis9
Well no it is not will. But still I could never accept these comparisons with computers. Computers are children of the human mind. An alive creature and its mind manufactured them. But computers aren't alive.
I got what you mean and the analogy you use here. But though there are many similarities sometimes I can't accept them working exactly the same. — dimosthenis9
Lots of questions to be addressed in such perspectives (with or without my interpretations of them), and clearly they will fall under the category of mysticism for most. But if you are interested in further exploring such notions regarding evolution’s purpose, these two thinkers’ perspectives might be of help. (Sorry, didn't have the time to find better references for them.) — javra