in this example — Janus
Vulnerable means, in my book, to be deprived of all means of escape/relief - there's nothing you can do (amor fati) and so :grin: and bear it!
— TheMadFool
That expression is at odds with Nietzsche saying life keeps happening despite the entropy. The cups keep getting filled over. We have no idea why.
And what do you make of all the language surrounding freedom from bad science and sick thoughts? He does not replace all that with sunshine. That absence is part of his proposition, if you could make it a sentence, the sentence would have been written. — Paine
Leaving aside my reading of Pascal in the context of Christian expression, what text of Nietzsche exemplifies the grin and bear it quality you hear? — Paine
Nietzsche is asking for one to put oneself in a vulnerable position by choice. — Paine
Space is also inherently continuous (inside), just as it captures all reality in its hands (outside). The community of all points forms finite spatial objects but space itself is only continuous by being differentiated by its points, which are nothing. Space and continuous mean the same thing to me. All space is infinitely dense, so maybe space naturally expands — Gregory
OP, you're absolutely right.
— TheMadFool
Really? More like a middle-class muma's boy romanticising stuff with which he has little familiarity.
Read Tobias's reply. — Banno
Martin Rees is wrong (or just joking). "We make good estimates ..." far more often parochiallly with ad hoc heuristics (i.e. trial and error correlations) than we do generally with algorithmic calculi (i.e. soundly inferred causal relationships), the latter of which "Newton's laws" – physical laws being nothing more than invariant properties of fallible (defeasible) theoretical models which explain physical regularities – consist. — 180 Proof
your analogy of "people moving houses" doesn't work, Fool, because minding is a property and not a separate entity like people who exist without, or separate from, houses (which implies 'minding separate from a brain' or 'walking without legs' ... :roll:). — 180 Proof
It is indeed a puzzle and I imagine that 180 Proof may have something to say if he is not sick and tired of this underlying question in philosophy. I wonder to what extent it can ever be explored sufficiently or whether many of us could spend our entire lives wondering about the nature of consciousness, especially how it is bound up with the nature of matter, as the underlying basis of it, as one of the central philosophy conundrums — Jack Cummins
. Satan/The Devil/Lucifer/The Deceiver as the arch-villain.According to Guinness World Records as of 1995, the Bible is the best-selling book of all time with an estimated 5 billion copies sold and distributed. — Wikiepedia
Lord Voldemort/Tom Marvolo Riddle/He who must not be named/in my dictionary, asshole of the millennium (actually I like him, he's got style).Having sold more than 500 million copies worldwide, Harry Potter by J. K. Rowling is the best-selling book series in history. — Wikpedia
Our senses evolved really for one purpose, survival, but survival and the true nature of reality are two different subjects. — Brian Greene (Theoretical physicist, mathematician, string theorist)
Is Putin a politician or a gangster. Or both? Kim? I — Tom Storm
When you put it that way, the 'now' sounds like a description of a Bed and Breakfast one reports visiting without enthusiasm. It was okay for the night but not anything to celebrate. — Paine
Nietzsche is asking for one to put oneself in a vulnerable position by choice. The bird he held in his hand is free to fly away. He seeks a verification that may not happen. That is why he keeps talking about being courageous.
On Pascal's side, the risk being taken on by his interlocutors has already been accepted. These people have deferred the sufferings for their sins upon some kind of existence they have already abandoned. They are numb and suspicious. Pascal proposes a period of accommodation rather than call for people to fall on their knees in fright. Those cards have already been played — Paine
Nonsense. In any enterprise corruption equates to its degradation.
Gangsters are gangsters. Politicians are politicians. Feel free to make a joke about that, but in all seriousness there is a danger in equating them as identical in every respect. You can have noble and principled gangsters just as you can have noble and principled politicians - the ‘bad’ lives in every nook and cranny of humanity. — I like sushi
You should read Philosophical Investigations. — Michael
The standard, common sense understanding. — Michael
According to what you mean by "justified". But that's not the meaning of "justified" as used by those who argue(d) that knowledge is justified true belief, and so not the meaning of "justified" as used by Gettier. — Michael