I pointed this out to a Catholic once, and she was deeply offended and called me immature and disrespectful. There appears to be an unwritten agreement that the biblical account is not to be taken literally. — baker
Thus a reasonable person must intend to drink the toxin by the first (1) argument, yet if that person intends to drink the toxin, he is being irrational by the second argument (2). — Wikipedia
Philosophers talk about (understanding) ideas and possibilities and scientists talk about (knowing) facts and probabilities, no? — 180 Proof
Yes I was explaining this to another poster. What if "most people" want something that isn't good for them? You just automatically give them this? What if work, maintenance, and even entertainment are actually quite harmful to that person when compared to never existing? — schopenhauer1
And so your point in reference to my position which you've quoted is what? — 180 Proof
Push these presuppositions back far enough — tim wood
To my mind, a philosophical expression amounts to a supposition – 'Suppose X, then possibly Y' – that is, a proposal for reflective consideration (e.g. dialectics, gedankenexperiment, daily (fitness / therapeutic) praxis, etc) tested only by its comparatively rational adequacy for some reflective task, and not a proposition asserting what is or not a fact of the matter. — 180 Proof
What? — 180 Proof
And your point? — 180 Proof
To my mind, a philosophical expression amounts to a supposition – 'Suppose X, then possibly Y' – that is, a proposal for reflective consideration (e.g. dialectics, gedankenexperiment, daily (fitness / therapeutic) praxis, etc) tested only by its comparatively rational adequacy for some reflective task, and not a proposition asserting what is or not a fact of the matter — 180 Proof
1. Those we have asked and know the answer.
2. Those we have asked and do not know the answer.
3. Those we have never considered asking. — hypericin
Why is it a paradox? — Cuthbert
In the context of the Dialogue of that name, the idea of recollection was introduced, proposing we are able to understand new things because we already have a kind of understanding of them.
You seem intent upon separating the "paradox" from one of the possible solutions.
How does your approach relate to leaving the Platonic element out of — Valentinus
2. If one knows then inquiry is unnecessary. (premise) — TheMadFool
Meno is talking about the unknown unknowns, the subjects of which our ignorance is so profound that we can't even frame a question. — fishfry
Donald Rumsfeld — fishfry
Say all you like, you've created a muddle of apparent paradoxes for yourself again, Fool, this time based on a category error (and some historical anachronisms to boot). — 180 Proof
Maybe we as humans are to be the nociceptors and sex organs of the machine world. — Nils Loc
As a rule, the more bizarre a thing is, the less mysterious it proves to be. — Sherlock Holmes
A non-sentient robot is a tool. A sentient slave used like a non-sentient robot is not a tool but is, in effect, a torture victim, a slave. The latter is dehumanizing. So they are not comparable (i.e. category error); sentience, acknowledged or not, makes all the difference. — 180 Proof
Using a hammer appropriately does not reflect on the user's sentience (or lack thereof). Using another person in any way, however, does. I fail to see your point, Fool. — 180 Proof
Why not start the question with enslavement of humans (or animals) instead of robots. We treat classes of humans like shit which are much more likely to be sentient than whatever constitutes a "robot". — Nils Loc
We already do. It won't be bad for the robots, unless they develop the ability to suffer.
Bearing in mind we enslave animals for our taste pleasure, it would not be unreasonable to assume we would enslave sentient robots for our pleasure too. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. — DingoJones
science fiction — Jack Cummins
Jokes aside, that's why the moral rule that has the most appeal is the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would like others do unto you. Ethics isn't about what most people would want but about what you want. The underlying assumption though, ironically, is that other people are like you and Bob's your uncle!
Yet, it isn't that simple. It's not just about what most people want. We all know that! ( :wink: :wink: :wink: ) - the list of most popular and fastest growing websites will vouch for what I'm hinting at.
— TheMadFool
That's another point.. What if what most people want IS NOT GOOD, but they are not aware of this? — schopenhauer1
I find it fascinating that both X (Christ) and XXX (porn) turn us on! — TheMadFool
Don't reinvent the wheel, just realign it. — Anthony J. D'Angelo
My view is actually that both are not immoral. I don’t understand why we hate incest if we acknowledge that homosexuality is ok — TheHedoMinimalist
I think most fathers don’t necessarily like to think of their daughters as sexual beings to begin with. Regardless, I think you can desire someone to be sexually attractive to certain people while also not being sexually attracted to that same person. For example, I hope that my brother remains sexually attractive to his wife but I’m not sexually attracted to him. — TheHedoMinimalist
I see no reason to get god involved, and whether or not there is an infinite set of beliefs is also not relevant, which you would know if you had read the relevant posts. Please post things that are salient, or create a new thread. — ToothyMaw
From the bottom of my heart, I hope that your daughter-cum-granddaughter is not a total munter. — Kenosha Kid
Beauty relies on facial symmetry.
Incest causes high probability of facial assymetry.
The offspring of the man with his daughter is his daughter.
Ergo the man should not mate with his daughter. — Kenosha Kid
Are you implying that Ivanka knows something that we don't? :smile: — Apollodorus
I think perhaps you misunderstand the role of the 10th man, although that does explain a lot about some of your ideas. — T Clark
Si vis pacem, para bellum. — Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus
One argument that gets made against homosexuality is that there isn’t any meaningful difference between homosexuality and incest — TheHedoMinimalist
doesn't the moon continue to exist when nobody's looking at it? — Wayfarer
I bet they don't. A tenth man's day is not always honky-dory. BTW, I didn't use any facts or assumptions that you hadn't provided. But that's okay, I won't resent your bitterness — god must be atheist
Whoa... where is the tenth man? You are supposed to be OPPOSING all the points, not agree with them. — god must be atheist
But it has made you into being a liar. Where is the honesty and virtue in that? — god must be atheist
Now, who'd a thunk non-euclidean space could be useful... — Banno