Then in that space of pure darkness, there's a black object, and therefore that space is not empty, right? — Amalac
You can't fix stupid. You have to wait until Nature fixes it. Like Covid. — James Riley
But if the visible shit, that light- brown rusty blur, has enveloped the planet, then you can bet the invisible shit has too. The lights at night, from space, are another example. Anyone who thinks the Earth is too big for little old us to trash just doesn't get it. — James Riley
Therefore, if this infinite space is the same as the empty space to which Kant is refering, then I can't imagine it being empty, in fact I can't even imagine it not being empty. — Amalac
But can you actually visualize, in your mind's eye, there just being darkness? When I try to do that, I can't help but also imagine space as having edges of another color. — Amalac
Name some and do they make predictions, have these been verified? — TheMadFool
Does your anus perfectly match predictions made about its throughput, or doesn't it? If if it doesn't, should we believe in your anus? — Olivier5
SO, what is accuracy? What makes one measurement more accurate than another? — Banno
I'll only believe in man-induced climate change if the observed global warming (rising temperatures) perfectly matches that predicted based on human-activity-related CO2 emissions. — TheMadFool
I can use my finger to point at my body, but I can't point the tip of my finger at itself. — Yohan
I suppose, studying Philosophy at university will prepare you for discussions like is this ism better than that? But otherwise, are there any good resources on how to learn to enjoy those word battles? I do follow them from time to time and feel like einstein when I understand what its all about, but I very seldom come to any a-has afterwards — Ansiktsburk
Equivocation! Interesting, explain please. — TheMadFool
:lol: Where's the evidence for climate change? — TheMadFool
↪SoftEdgedWonder An image, not a fact. Thanks for making my point. :smirk: — 180 Proof
So, yes, we may have a fragmented picture of reality but, interestingly, our bodies are, let's just say, in the thick of everything going on, not just in your immediate vicinity, but also in the entire universe itself. We should then, in principle, be able to sense everything that's happening in the cosmos. Do we need to evolve sense organs or is the mind/brain, by itself, adequate (ESP)? I dunno, you tell me. — TheMadFool
It's self-refuting, it amounts to saying: I exist AND I don't exist, a classic contradiction! — TheMadFool
You have zero reason to doubt climate change, other than the misinformation you've been fed. — Olivier5
Self-referential paradox: A person saying, "I don't exist."
— TheMadFool
How is this a paradox? — I love Chom-choms
I have my doubts. Firstly, is it real? Secondly, have we found its cause, are humans to blame? — TheMadFool
the cat is in a hat" is true iff the cat is in a hat.
That's the whole of it. — Banno
It is also the state of affairs set out by a true statement. — Banno
Basically, we don't know if climate change is real/not. — TheMadFool
If matter was somehow equivalent to information, what is meant by the common saying: wrong information — Mersi
Okay. We disagree. — 180 Proof
Path of least cognitive effort for a start – images are subject-dependent whereas facts are subject-invariant/resistant. Images easily flatter (or expedites) self importance, etc. — 180 Proof
Did Aldous Huxley take a page out of Indo-Aryan culture. What if, what Huxley predicts already happened, a failed social expermient lost to history? — TheMadFool
Thus, the appeal of self-flattering biases which prefer images to facts, believing to knowing, ideals to reals – "there must be more to existence than (this existence)" to "existence is gratuitous" – transcendence (the soul) to immanence (flesh), etc. — 180 Proof
Soma is a drug that is handed out for free to all the citizens of the World State. In small doses, soma makes people feel good. In large doses, it creates pleasant hallucinations and a sense of timelessness. — Brave New World, Q & A
The reason that rings true for me is that I’ve always detested the ‘blind watchmaker’ schtick of Dawkins et al but I also have no time for theistic creationism — Wayfarer
It's impossible to predict what the future holds. What now? — TheMadFool