Although ancient Roman law had declared people with intellectual disability to be incapable of the deliberate intent to harm that was necessary for a person to commit a crime, during the 1920s, Western society believed they were morally degenerate. — Wikipedia
Innocence is a lack of guilt, with respect to any kind of crime, or wrongdoing. In a legal context, innocence is to the lack of legal guilt of an individual, with respect to a crime. In other contexts, it is a lack of experience. — Wikipedia
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity — Robert J. Hanlon
No one knowingly does evil. — Socrates
It'd be difficult to maintain both the world is amoral and that the world is immoral.
One or the other. Not both. — Banno
I could entertain the concept that two alien realities once collided, resulting in sound and movement, but I don't see opposites per se — theRiddler
Great scene, great cast, great movie. My little brother and I had nightmares all summer long after seeing Jaws at Long Island drive-in with my (crazy) uncle when it first came out. :monkey: :up: — 180 Proof
By the way, very Buddhist (anattā).
??? No idea what this reply has to do with my previous post. — 180 Proof
At least when the flesh is healthy (which ignorance makes more difficult.) — hanaH
Where have you seen a similar perplexed perspective? — Gnomon
What I mean by 'atavistic ... metacognitive bottleneck of self-awareness' is an intelligent system which develops a "theory of mind" as humans do based on a binary "self-other" model wherein classes of non-selves are otherized to varying degrees (re: 'self-serving' (i.e. confabulation-of-the-gaps) biases, prejudices, ... tribalism, etc). — 180 Proof
metacognitive bottleneck "self-awareness" — 180 Proof
So that it is made up makes it not truth-apt? But "1+1=2" is true; and so is "The bishop stays on the same colour squares" and "slavery is unjust".
But it might be worth considering further. Let's look at Anscombe's shopping list. If it is a list of all the things she bought, it will be true if it lists all and only the things she bought. If it is a list of the things she is intending to buy, is it still true if it lists all and only the things she intends to buy...? I'm wiling to consider alternatives. — Banno
If philosophy is not about conceptual clarification, then it is nothing.
Hence if supposed discussion muddies things further, requesting further explication is good practice.
So it would be wrong, as you say, to reject outright a discussion that is unclear. But it would be worse to accept it. Demanding clarification is then the best response.
If clarification is not forthcoming, or if the reply is equally obscure, then it is reasonable to move on; indeed, in not pursuing an obscure line of discussion, one is not rejecting anything, since nothing has been presented. — Banno
Perhaps the reason people have false beliefs is related to a wish to fantasise and fabricate 'the truth' because reality can be so grim and painful. There are all kinds of false beliefs, including ones about oneself. Of course, there may be false ideas which are believed fully or partially, and, at some point, an individual may need to face up to the false nature of beliefs, but as so many aspects of life are ambiguous it is possible to hold onto all kinds of fantastic ideas, even to the point of delusional ideas, or even 'psychotic' departures from accepted ways of thinking. The imagination can play all kinds of tricks, as a defense mechanism against the brutality of painful experience of facts. — Jack Cummins
Just an observation: electrons are not really 'particles' but rather localized excitations in the electron field. — Photios
A rhetorical question, but let's spell it out, nonetheless. The ammeter, not possessing a brain, and so without a mind, can have neither intellectual nor emotional response to the electric current running through it. — Michael Zwingli
Yeah, you can see this if you challenge the morality of humans continuing to survive. They you can't use the argument that justice is good for society, since the existence of society is now under question, morally speaking. Which some environmentalists and anti-natalists do on grounds of hedonism or concern for other living species. What possible fact about the world would settle that dispute?
It's just for humans to survive. Is that statement truth-apt? — Marchesk
The hullabaloo is about how to interpret the math, not the math itself. Many Worlds is closest to treating a superposition as a conjunction with the caveat that the opposite spin states are indexed to different worlds: thus no contradiction. — Andrew M
No, the math doesn't imply a contradiction. Here's an example of a superposition in Dirac (Ket) notation:
|ψ>=0.6|up>+ 0.8|down>
The '+' in Dirac notation is not a logical 'and'. To link the formalism to observation, square the coefficient for a state to calculate the probability that that spin state will be observed (e.g., 0.6*0.6=36% probability of observing spin-up).
You would need additional assumptions to derive a contradiction. See, for example, Bell's Theorem. — Andrew M
I think Banno means if we have a concept of justice, then we can make a truth-apt statement about slavery regarding it's lack of justice, based on whether slavery meets the criteria for something being just. — Marchesk
That doesn't say anything about whether justice is some objective feature of the world. My concern would begin with whether justice was real or just a social construct. I suspect the latter, but tend to live life as if the former were true. — Marchesk
This would seem to suggest that there is more than objective facts about color. Which is why we can't say what a bat experiences when using sonar, but we can describe the physics of sonar just fine, and carry out investigations of bat physiology. — Marchesk
I wonder how the Mary thought experiment would have gone down if brown had been used in instead of red, since brown is a related color and only seen in the presence of lighter colors, so you you can't just associate with 600nm of wavelength. — Marchesk
I also wonder if the thought experiment is modified so that right before leaving the room, Mary's brain is stimulated to induce a hallucination of seeing something red. Does that change things at all? Or what if Mary is exposed to an optical illusion so that she sees a color that isn't there? — Marchesk
At any rate, we do end up with the uncomfortable conclusion for physicalists that there is some experience of color not captured in the physical description of color perception. — Marchesk
Slavery is unjust' is not a True statement as far as I can tell.
— I like sushi
Why not?
'Slavery is unjust' is true IFF slavery is unjust.
Slave: A person who is the legal property of anther and forced to obey them
Justice: Being fair and reasonable
One person being the legal property of anther, especially after an act of kidnap, is not fair and reasonable.
All this before looking to see if one ought be fair and reasonable. — Banno
The issue is only that something was lost in the translation from math to English. Paraphrasing SMBC, "Quantum superposition... It doesn't mean spin-up and spin-down at the same time. At least, not the way you think.
...
It means a complex linear superposition of a spin-up state and a spin-down state. You should think of it as a new ontological category: a way of combining things that doesn't really map onto any classical concept." — Andrew M
No — Andrew M
I'm not discussing a moral theory. I mean implications here as like Wittgenstein's grammar. Not that we are considering the consequences in making a decision before taking action, but that there are categorical ways in which we must take action for it to be such a thing. When we make a claim such as this, we commit ourselves, etc. That is what it means, what is implied, in the doing of it, being said to have done it. This is the structure I am discussing — Antony Nickles
Our senses evolved really for one purpose - survival - but survival and the true nature of reality are two different subjects. — Brian Greene (physicist)