Round or roundish? — Yohan
what motivates people to believe in this type of “Alternative” philosophy — SteveMinjares
every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. — H. L. Mencken
You think a monk in his cell is 'escaping reality', then you have a serious problem of understanding. — Wayfarer
If we are super exact, it is neither flat nor round. Just look at it closely. It only appears flat or round from a distance. Distance blurs the fine details, giving the illusion of a simple shape. — Yohan
Interesting. Flat-earthers claim is earth is flat. Is it? What do we mean by earth?
— TheMadFool
All definitions break down when we exercise rigorous precision. There is no meaning that is not vague. — Yohan
Which point of view is more objective.
The microscopic or macroscopic.
Far enough a way the earth looks like a shapeless blip
Closer, like a sphere
Closer, flat
Closer, neither flat nor curved exactly
How can you escape subjectivity? If there is no observer, which of the above perspectives would be true? — Yohan
Path of least cognitive effort and easiest dopamine kick / social "belonging" — 180 Proof
fear ofreality (onto/vera-phobia) — 180 Proof
My understanding of quantum mechanics is its not an observer that causes outcomes, its active measurement. — Philosophim
we can also posit that God is able to know what is happening on a quantum level without altering the outcome of that quantum pathing — Philosophim
So he just made an obvious mistake? I'm somewhat skeptical of that, but it's possible nonetheless.
The statement “nothing exists” is either false or meaningless (neither true nor false), but obviously not both false and meaningless. — Amalac
Ok, but what I'm wondering about is: How can Kolakowski know that the statement “nothing exists” is false if he doesn't understand what the statement means? — Amalac
false, but also unintelligible and absurd. — Amalac
But apparently the proposition "The proposition "life is good" needs an argument" doesn't and can simply be asserted without one. — Isaac
Evil has benefits in the short term. Drawbacks in the long term. — hope
Take more spacetime into account and being good has more benefits most of the time. — hope
Taking more spacetime into account requires more intelligence and experience. — hope
But why do we need benefits? Because we are needy. — hope
Well there is benefits and drawbacks to cooperation and competition.
Society now considerers slavery to have more drawbacks then benefits. — hope
For once! :grin: — Alkis Piskas
Sure, but it was at a very high cost to ourselves. — hope
What could 'life is Good' possibly mean without people to think it? How could anything just have the property of being 'good' absent of the minds in which that judgement resides? — Isaac
Indeed. Can "most people" be mistaken about how good something is? I brought up the idea of an exploited worker who cheerfully overlooks being exploited. He doesn't perceive the exploitation, but he is exploited. I also brought up notions of having generally negative experiences but then saying, "Life is good" or "Glad to be born" if asked the question. There is more than just what people want you to hear going on. Psychological mechanisms can distort ones ability to evaluate something (not wanting to get oneself depressed, always looking on the bright side, Pollyannaism, adapting to lowered ideals, etc). Certainly culturally ingrained ideas can do this as well (superstition, don't look a "gift horse" in the mouth, religion, not looking negative to others, etc.). All this worry and coping and dealing with, and then suck it up because that's life.. but "that's life" is not inevitable!! — schopenhauer1
... So can a silent magician! :smile:
... So could Charlie Chaplin in the era of silent movies! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
True, I guess this argument has turned into two:
1) Does a majority of people mean it is permissible to do something that a minority views as wrong? Hence, "Should/is ethics be democratic"? (Notice I didn't say politics or law which is related, but not the same as ethical guidelines..For example, it might be "wrong" to eat animals or refuse to move away from oil, but perhaps shouldn't be illegal). — schopenhauer1
The other topic that is being currently discussed:
2) Can a majority of people be wrong about their view, and thus should not be a consideration for evaluating ethical claims?"
So for example, let's say Nazis won the war, and killed off their enemies.. Does a majority of Nazis who are the only ones left to evaluate right and wrong, mean they are right? Of course not. This is an extreme example of course, but to show the point. — schopenhauer1
Did you see the Jill Bolte Taylor video some years ago, ‘My Stroke of Insight’? That is about this. — Wayfarer
There's another principle in Buddhist philosophy, that of 'prapanca', meaning 'conceptual proliferation'. It is literally 'becoming entangled in thought.' — Wayfarer
Deep and difficult point: what is a concept? It might be, as Descartes said, a ‘clear and distinct idea’. It might be an idea that is not peculiar to a single mind, but that anyone can observe, like geometric principles or Newton’s laws of motion. The Western mindset is such that concepts and ideas come naturally to it. Conceptual thought is one of the hallmarks of Western thought and one of the main factors behind the astonishing success of scientific method. But śūnyatā is not a concept. It is not an idea. It is an observation about the nature of experience. It is not something that the Buddha ‘thought’, in that sense. — Wayfarer
There is an expression in Buddhism, 'this precious human life'. Your assignment: discover why they say this. — Wayfarer
Better = That which gives more pleasure overall, taking into account space and time. — hope
If robots become too human then we will be forced to treat them morally for our own sakes. — hope
It's impossible to conceive of death, nothingness, or unconsciousness. The mind tends to visualize them as total blackness or total whiteness. Neither of which are them — hope
He looks exclusively to logic and the necessary conditions it imposes on knowledge. This will not allow the world to "speak" and mostly, he is right about this. Do you know the color yellow? If you do, then you can say so, like knowing what a bank teller is. But no saying so, no knowing. Wittgenstein and Derrida are close here, in the way logic and language have no application in basic questions about actuality. But in the end, and Wittgenstien knew this well, it is Hamlet who wins the day, for "There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." — Constance
.What I know I can tell. — Socrates
In Mahāyāna Buddhism, śūnyatā refers to the tenet that "all things are empty of intrinsic existence and nature (svabhava) — Wikipedia
The concept of śūnyatā as "emptiness" is related to the concept of anatta (non-self) in early Buddhism. — Wikipedia
According to Shi Huifeng, the terms "void" (rittaka), "hollow" (tucchaka), and "coreless" (asāraka) are also used in the early texts to refer to words and things which are deceptive, false, vain, and worthless. This sense of worthlessness and vacuousness is also found in other uses of the term māyā — Wikipedia
Well, the significant word there is "entertain." As an entertainment or as a matter of whimsy we might wonder if some demon is having a bit of fun with us, but it's not a true doubt. — Ciceronianus the White
Here is my question as it relates to ethics:
Is it permissible to do something on someone else's behalf because one has a notion that "most people" would "want this"?
If not, then antinatalism is much more strongly defended.
If so BECAUSE you hate antinatalism, simply prejudicial thinking.
If so because you legitimately believe acts can be done to someone or on their behalf because "most people" think its okay with disregard for those who don't think so, is ethics then simply based on the current preferences of a particular group? Are ethics voted in by majority rule?
I'd also like to note that the sphere of politics (majority rule) can be (and perhaps should be) separated from normative ethical principles — schopenhauer1