You are confused. Causality works forwards rather than backwards. — Devans99
So you have to work from the oldest first - the more recent elements depend on the oldest element. If the oldest element is missing, more recent elements are not defined: — Devans99
An infinite regress does not have a first element. — Devans99
A regress needs a first element. — Devans99
What is it? Which 'philosophy of idealism'? Just the one? It's meaningless. — StreetlightX
But, 'the philosophy of idealism' is a placeholder: it names, at best, a space or place where such a motivation might be found. Like: "it's East of here". — StreetlightX
Yes but working from the other direction - there is no start - so none of the years are defined. And that is the correct direction to work from - time does not run backwards - the future does not define the past. An analogy of how it works is here:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/277817 — Devans99
And he called me unclear.
— S
But that's what we do. — Banno
There is a motivation there. It's just a reactive, rather than creative one. It's taking something that's already there and using it, in order to define oneself against some clearly demarcated, monolithic tradition of Hocus Pocus.
I feel like that is a type of philosophy. It's not OLP, tho. It's whatever New Atheism is, in essence. More charitably, I guess you could call it Voltairism. — csalisbury
Non-answers, both paragraphs. — StreetlightX
But I didn't ask you to spell everything out. I asked you quite specifically about what force of necessity the distinction you've drawn has. What motivates it? Why this distinction, and not any other of the rather fanciful ones I came up with? What presuppositions are at work such that this distinction is significant? What is the drawing of this distinction meant to say - imply - about how the world is, such that it has this significance? What makes this distinction non-arbitrary? The very drawing of this distinction - and not another - has something to say. But what? — StreetlightX
Another way this might be put: as it stands, the whole question of 'objectivity' as you've set it out is merely nominal. 'Objectivity', as you use it, simply names a particular (let's call it) state of affairs, which may or may not be the case. And what is being wrangled over is nothing but the applicability of a name ("turns out, the existence of Jupiter is (what we call) an objective fact! Wow!); But again, why this distinction and not another? It is simply arbitrary that this relation (between 'us' and Jupiter) is called 'objective'? Or is the significance of this distinction - from whence it draws the force of its necessity - being guided by a certain set of (as yet un-spelled-out) presuppositions? If you're doing any kind of philosophy worthy of the name, then of course it is. If. — StreetlightX
...and then I would say "what the fuck does than mean..." — Banno
Could we all agree at least on this? — Banno
Without a start, neither exist. — Devans99
But you cannot start in 2018 - 2018 does not exist until 2017 has happened. 2017 defines 2018. You have to choose the start as the oldest item - and there is no oldest item in an infinite regress.
Because there is no start, none of the years are defined. — Devans99
But if its infinite, it can't be a regress — Devans99
...the first event defines the second, the second the third, and so on down the chain. — Devans99
I do not 'assume an infinite regress has no start' - if it had a start it would not be infinite. — Devans99
I'm not in the mood to work through all the stuff done over the last few days. I was going to address replies specific to me.
Is there anything specific you or anyone else here now would like to address? For maybe an hour or so? — Banno
So what now? — Banno
You might be weaker or stronger in other ways, and vice versa. Why does it have to be a broad stroke of “they are weak, I am strong”? — DingoJones
Sorta like someone saying, "How can there be a creation without a creator?"
— Frank Apisa
It is impossible to have a creation without a creator. — Devans99
Where does it break down? — Devans99
I do not assume a start; I assume that an infinite regress has no start. — Devans99
You have either not read or not understood my argument. — Devans99
We already discussed this. By ancient logic, the universe is discrete is the point. — Devans99
Frank and S have presented pages of waffle not containing any actual criticism of my arguments. — Devans99
And it is clear that you occupy the position described by Wayfarer:
...the assumed stance of naturalism, which assumes the perspective of the subject, attempting to arrive at as objective a view as possible, through eliminating everything other than what can be quantified
Or alternatively explaied, but identical in meaning
...views the subject-object quantitatively, as occupying the extreme ends of a gradient, which in turn represents the varying degrees of subjectivity and objectivity. Truth is found in objectivity, so the less subjective one becomes, the closer he is to obtaing truth
— Merkwurdichliebe — Merkwurdichliebe
That's just it, you haven't made it clear, and you saying you "made it clear" doesn't mean you have done so. And that is why you find everyone challenging you here. — Merkwurdichliebe
The problem: your definitions of subject and object are whack, lame, played-out doo doo. They have only confused things. — Merkwurdichliebe
So your really just talking about weakness/strength concerning a few specific traits, the god belief traits such as fear of death? — DingoJones
Is it that they are weak, or possess certain traits such as a need for spiritual meaning? — DingoJones
But your definitions are weak and shoddy, and most people here appear to find them unacceptable for an edifying philosophical discourse. So they been attempting to clean up your mess. — Merkwurdichliebe
So there are no people who believe in god that are brave, resilient and self - sufficient? — DingoJones
What do you have in mind in how you are using “weak” and “strong”? What attributes define those words? — DingoJones
Alright, well what is useful about including science and history in a definition of philosophy? Perhaps there is some purpose that I don't see.
For my part, a definition which excludes science and history allows one to give an accurate description of academic philosophy, and that may well be needed to explain to non-philosophers what it is that an academic philosopher spends his time doing. — PossibleAaran
I am not going to guess at your motivation, but you will find that the more you play games, the less interested people will be in having a conversation with you. Your loss. There are some members here who know quite a bit about philosophy, but given your behavior I doubt that any of them will bother with you for long. — Fooloso4