There is a kind of 'religious underground' in Western thought - Descartes secretly a Rosicrucian, Newton with interests in alchemy and occult, Hegel an hermetic. — Wayfarer
Yep, I think you hit the nail on the head. So ↪Olivier5 is quite happy to bring intersubjectivity in to the discussion, not noticing how it is used by, for comparison, ↪Pfhorrest, ↪simeonz and ↪Mww.
So there's folk as for various reasons don't differentiate between what is true and what is believed - they suppose for example that nothing is true, just believed to a greater or lesser extent. They've various epistemological structures to reinforce this view, versions of coherentism or pragmatism, sometimes rejecting truth outright, sometimes redefining it in terms of a sort of popular vote or a final goal.
I'd just point out that being popular or being useful is not the very same as being true. I hope that's apparent.
But also I've no objection to the suggestion that some experiment that is repeated successfully should reinforce one's belief in the result; that's not at issue here, at least for me. — Banno
like a rooster taking credit for the sunrise — Wayfarer
highlight how superficial our knowledge might be. — Wayfarer
Life is absurd — Tom Storm
"Greed is good." — baker
Inertia, fear of conflict, minding one's own business, physical exhaustion due to overwork and stress.
I'm not convinced that people set out to try to "maintain peace". For that, they would actually have to know what brings about peace. Rather, I think peace is one of those states that are essentially byproducts of other things. — baker
get away with endangering and damaging it (property/lives). — baker
Yes, and this asymmetry has to somehow be considered good and moral, good. — baker
The ‘mutually hostile gods’ can just as easily be seen as our warring passions. — Wayfarer
You can see it like that if you want. — Wayfarer
I don’t mean I believe in the Greek gods. What I mean is, that imaginative realm is far richer than the picture in which human life is simply the outcome of the random collocations of atoms — Wayfarer
I don't think I can help — simeonz
It is not nearly so desolate and barren as atheism. — Wayfarer
We're to the goods as flies to wanton boys; they kill us for sport — Unknown
I'm not sure I get that. You riddle me too hard a riddle there, I'm afraid — simeonz
.no actual geometric model — simeonz
The whole point is that the 2D Cartesian coordinate system is not a picture. It is ascription of coordinates to some plane of points, which points correspond in pairs to vectors, which vectors individually correspond to lengths and in pairs correspond to angles. Ok, the points are angles-apples, but the remaining properties are not automatic. They are not provided by the Cartesian coordinate system for you, mathematically. They are provided by you, originally, so that you can justify the use of Cartesian coordinate system. Otherwise, what you have are just pairs of numbers corresponding to points, and the rest is as real as Tolkien's world — simeonz
Well, that’s a valid point. A Christian might say that the Buddha never denied ‘the God of Abraham’ because the two traditions were culturally remote. A Christian also should say, I think, that ‘God’ is not a God at all - not like Shiva or Vishnu or Baal or Zeus, or any of the other pantheist deities, but is of an entirely different order altogether. Although that is a distinction that atheists are probably not inclined to recognise.
(Also notice that the Indian ‘deva’ and the English ‘divine’ both spring from the same Indo-European root.)
If you ever encountered the writings of Thomas Merton or his successors, or the Jesuits like Raymondo Pannikar, (e.g. here)they have very interesting reflections on the relation of God and Buddhism, but it’s a pretty long way off the beaten track. — Wayfarer
In that book, Nietzsche was actually referring to Greek tragedy (plays, dithyrambs) and how it came to pass that the Greeks gave birth to such things in relation to music, hence the title "On the Birth of Tragedy out of the spirit of music." He was talking about tragedy as an art — Nagel
The square root of the square of the number of apples plus sixteen. An amazing breakthrough in marketing! — jgill
Nothing for something no more exists than does something for nothing.
Somebody is paying the freight.
Even if somebody gives you something for "free," it is not really free, not only literally, but in all the other ways that makes the recipients of free stuff dependent. — synthesis
Context counts for a lot. — Wayfarer
So you have V = r times whatever. As r goes to zero, V goes to zero.
And you have A = r times whatever. As r goes to zero, A goes to zero. — tim wood
Maybe not. There are tests of randomness but I don't think they are that useful, they can spot something that is deterministic if it makes no effort to use randomness from the results. Reasonably random results adhere to a distribution that can be detected using the Chi-square test for example.
But I don't think its that interesting to consider if you can be tricked or not. — Paul S