I totally agree, and we are not going to achieve that goal arguing about what a holy book says because all of them are mythology and not scientific thinking. The difference is an important matter of logic. This is about fast and slow thinking. About believing it is God's truth without question, or questioning everything and not being so sure of what we think we know. A moral as a matter of cause and effect is not religious thinking but along the line of scientific logic. That is how to know truth. — Athena
You've begged the question. It being the case that E is either true or false assumes that there are absolute eternal facts (ie E must be either true or false). Without that assumption you cannot have the premise that E must be either true or false, E might be true sometimes but false others. — Isaac
And in the eternal scheme of life these fictive aspects may be just as important as any real objective facts — Jack Cummins
It's rooted in either something that happened to you or a chemical imbalance. So figuring yourself on this is first key, and if that doesn't help and you feel stuck Zoloft or ketamine infusions can help. — Gregory
To put it another way, if you were forced to make a bet of three scenarios involving a die rolled three times. Which would you choose? A.) Each roll would be different. B.) Two rolls in a row would be the same. C.) All three rolls would be the same. — Outlander
depersonalization disorder — Gregory
As I said in my first comment, this is of no use with knowledge claims because we have no means of distinguishing premises from conclusions. We cannot say that our belief in A is justified by the deductive argument 'If B then A, B therefore A' because our belief that B might be what is at fault, or our belief that 'if B then A'.
The whole approach rests on the flawed assumption that we build up our beliefs one block at a time from some first principle like an inverted pyramid. There's scant evidence that we actually do this and abundant evidence that we don't — Isaac
Any insight as to how those cards are played, and which ones? — tim wood
Well that can easily be fixed by making it "Never say never or always except in this sentence". Pretty easy to resolve as far as paradoxes go — khaled
I mean, if you are born, you are being used most likely by society, as much as you are using society. — schopenhauer1
Purpose implies meaning, whereas use doesn't require it. — Hanover
Yes, that's all it is. The gap between power and wisdom is widening at an ever accelerating rate. Power races ahead while wisdom inches along at best. — Hippyhead
A key problem that is until we hit the chaos wall the knowledge explosion delivers a wonderful array of amazing goodies. — Hippyhead
That is somewhat helpful, but isn't it running the risk of cherry picking the premises and hinting toward pleading a special case (as you probably know chess is one thing, but the totality of what sort of mental gymnastics is likely much much more as in all things... so I'll leave that example out). — Mayor of Simpleton
As to mental age... I'm not too sure there is a consensus on a standard of measure for such a all encompassing determination. — Mayor of Simpleton
On a side note: Personally I only know 4 top level chess players... the oldest is 74 and the youngest is 23. Indeed this isn't a large sample size, but one thing they have in common is that none of them have very mature social skills. — Mayor of Simpleton
I started a thread a while back that basically dealt with this, but regarding belief instead of “want.” I would argue that “I don’t want anything” is not equal to “I want nothing.” To me, phrases like “I want X” imply an intent to possess/own something. Therefore, X must be an actual thing, and nothing is not a thing. — Pinprick
We use virtual reality to become armadillos? Seriously, I don't see a human based solution to excluding the act of wanting. Maybe some theorize they can, but even if so, way too rare to be relevant.
Dunno. Maybe I don't get your point and am not being helpful. — Hippyhead
You don't know what you want. Neither do I. — Hippyhead
Do we have reasons to satisfy requirements of rationality? In other words, is rationality normative, i.e. to do with reasons? — mrnormal5150
It's a bit more than that. Solipsism is the belief that you are the only thing that exists and that everything else is a piece of YOUR mind. It is a form of "all is mind" but moreover it is "all is one mind, mine" — khaled
Once the bullet leaves the gun, its trajectory is determined. But the moment the fool waving the gun around pulls the trigger is determined by chance. Not patternless? — Bitter Crank
I do — Bitter Crank
When people talk about philosophical stuff, each person comes in with a collection of assumptions — darthbarracuda
but which trajectory the bullet will follow depends on events which are not lawful (determined) — Bitter Crank
Are you arguing that the motion of small solid bodies in the solar system -- interacting with each other, the planets, and the sun -- are not subject to chance [unpredictable interactions], even while strictly obeying the laws of physics? Or are you proposing that "chance" is the result of inadequately observed causation? — Bitter Crank
"the greatest good" is where the halls of Hell are empty and Heaven is sprawling with infinite souls? :)
By and large, the universe doesn't care about us. Seems we're just dispersing energy entropically, made of stardust, riding on sunlight, like dinosaurs, covid-19, cancer and roses. Deities neither evident nor necessary.
Happy Thanksgiving. (y) — jorndoe
chance — kudos
probability — kudos
external to an individual — kudos