What you do matters. — Pantagruel
Our brains clearly can't match up to the task at hand — Agent Smith
For me, certainty in a rational sense should leave no room for doubt (like a properly constructed logical argument for instance) and since we have two possibilities it might not be true, I wouldn't commit to it. — Benkei
However, I do not think relations are strictly fundamental in the sense that they depend on variety while the opposite I think is not logical — Daniel
Which is relative... — noAxioms
The political parties of the USA are not united for the benefit of the USA. The wheels on my car are not united since they turn at different rates sometimes.
OK, neither of these examples seems to meet your definition, which seems to have to do with both objects affected by the other.
A couple better examples then: The iceberg that sank the Titanic was not affected by me, but I was affected by it.
Similarly, the fairly distant galaxy EGSY8p7 can be seen from Earth, but Earth cannot be seen by it. No light or other signal sent from Earth at any time will ever reach EGSY8p7 regardless of the time you give it to get there. — noAxioms
Not sure who 'we'; is here, but the science community has a pretty good idea about what it is, and it isn't something that moves, at least per the only classic theory of the universe (relativity) that has made any decent predictions. We don't know if the postulates of the theory are correct of course, but there has been no alternative proposed that I know of in the 20th century. — noAxioms
but there has been no alternative proposed that I know of in the 20th century. — noAxioms
It strikes me that what Descartes wrote in 1640 has a lot in common with what Lao Tzu wrote 2,000 years earlier — T Clark
Reality is composed of relationships. That is to say, things exist in relation to other things, but the "things" are not fundamental necessarily, only the relations — Jerry
. I exist in a reality, hence other things exist too. I know this because the experiences I feel are the relationship that unite me with other things. — Jerry
This universe is in motion but there could be others. — magritte
All is physically connected but in a limited way. — magritte
Without artificial things simple dialectic is worthless. — magritte
Why would anything have identity or a name? — magritte
If we're part of the universe, there is no "external world." There's just the world, — Ciceronianus
If you seek absolute truths which aren't "human-ish" then you will have to find another world. — Ciceronianus
and if that means there is no "absolute truth" so be it (so IS it, in fact). — Ciceronianus
We cannot know it and have no reason to know it. — Ciceronianus
I am not saying that everything does not exist. I am saying we can't be sure about that. Big difference. — god must be atheist
I am stepping out. I don't care to argue about this — god must be atheist
I would have bet ahead of time that you don't. — god must be atheist
I am sorry. Everything is not proven to exist. Nothing is proven to exist, except the mind that thinks. — god must be atheist
as you can't name any time in the past that had not been preceeded by five minutes, and can't name any time in the future that won't be followed by five minutes. — god must be atheist
Time is infinite in the past and into the future. — god must be atheist
Whats pedantic is focusing on the word “absolute” instead of the clear intention of the OP. — DingoJones
Its just as obvious thats not how the OP was using the term, even offering examples to further clarify. — DingoJones
It’s not pedantry, it is just philosophy. In philosophy the word “absolute” means really “absolute”, does not mean “approximately absolute — Angelo Cannata
My view is that 'truth' is the product of human cognition and imagination; — Tom Storm
, I generally hold that methodological naturalism is our most reliable pathway to useful knowledge.
8mReplyOptions — Tom Storm
If they're yours, then they're not absolute. — noAxioms
This suggests you have different definitions of 'universe' and 'cosmos' that you feel the need to say both these things. — noAxioms
If it's not true in a different universe, then it hardly qualifies as an absolute truth, no? I see 180 has listed some things that seem true in this universe. — noAxioms
What does this mean? I can think of countless things that are not, so again, you're using a definition that hasn't been given. — noAxioms
Einstein's relativity theory suggests that time isn't something that is in motion, so this assertion is certainly subject to reasonable doubt. — noAxioms
In short, it seems that, when you say “absolute”, you actually mean something like “absolute, but not too much”, “absolute, but not too absolute, not absolutely absolute” — Angelo Cannata
By "absolute truths" I understand irrational – contradictory – to doubt or deny. — 180 Proof
They are all contradictions between the concept of “absolute” and the dependence from us. — Angelo Cannata
you wrote in the title “absolute”, but then you wrote “that you think”: if they are things that we think, then they depend on our thinking, so they are not absolute. — Angelo Cannata
if they are yours, they are depending on you, so they are not absolute — Angelo Cannata
“their universal truths” is like an oxymoron: “their” means depending on them, “universal truths” means not depending on them. — Angelo Cannata
The question you put is just an impossible question — Angelo Cannata
I just object to the notion that humans aren't part of the universe, — Ciceronianus
the belief that we can't really know the universe (sometimes referred to as "the external world"), and so can't really know what's really true about the universe. — Ciceronianus
Try to remove the "human-ish" from that. — Ciceronianus
Humans are as much a part of the universe as everything else. How's that for an "absolute truth"? — Ciceronianus
But that a person will be subject to a great many harms in a lifetime is true beyond a reasonable doubt. Of course, recognizing that requires that one be reasonable, which you clearly aren' — Bartricks
. Note too that death is a harm, so your example is terrible. — Bartricks
First, it is grotesquely implausible to suppose that someone will live without suffering any harm whatsoever until 14 — Bartricks
And then there's death, which you seem to think doesn't constitute a harm even though it is probably the biggest harm of all. Innocent people deserve to die, do they? — Bartricks
You have failed. — Bartricks
This world clearly does not offer such a life to anyone. We all know this. — Bartricks
So much may come down to ideas of what is considered normal or 'messed up'. — Jack Cummins
Why would I want to do that exactly? — praxis
no they only think that it brings them some form of enlightenment is all it does is impress them kind of like a kid on a roller coaster ride — MAYAEL
and the reason I confidently say this is because you can reach the same knowledge and the same enlightenment without any narcotics — MAYAEL
the downside is though is that a real Tower builder can't convey to these regular non-tower building people what is necessary in order to spot authenticity from fake because unfortunately the only way to know is to become a tower builder by building your own tower hence why real Tower builders don't have pamphlets — MAYAEL
I don't know what you mean by "prediction." Leibniz said nothing in the form of a prediction. — Jackson
And he was correct — Jackson
No one would believe a philosopher in a scientific field. Leibniz made a prediction indeed but back then didn't actually proved anything. — dimosthenis9
Why? Leibniz conceived the relativity of space and time about 200 years before Einstein showed the math. — Jackson
Just because Kant might have thought it through 300 years ago, that doesn't mean I don't have to walk the path too. — Clarky