Formalism, as a strategy (and I don't think it's a strategy with you as much as it is a personality quirk), is designed to jettison arguments and limit discussion. It's somewhat (note the use of the British understatement here) less than a generous approach because it purposefully avoids identifying the merits of the other person's argument by instead offering criticism as to form. — Hanover
While your tough love approach is heartwarming, I've heard tale of a different approach, where the strengths of the other person's arguments are pointed out and responded to, as opposed to a focus on the errors. There are so many ways to skin a horse aren't there? — Hanover
As an aside, I offer you these (actual) words of inspiration from Psalms 137:9 "Blessed is he who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks." — Hanover
The base debate at the creation of the US was the role/power of the the Central government in relation to the power of the individual states. The creation of the electoral college was in relation to this. The less populated states feared that the heavily populated states could dominate a popular election and thereby impose undo power on the less populated states. The electoral college was a way to mitigate that imbalance. — Rank Amateur
Oh but we can. FGM is indeed erroneous... — VagabondSpectre
"WHY are you leaving the lights on, Akanthinos?" — Akanthinos
...suggests a significant failure of the system. — tim wood
The idea is the same as "You can't have a perception without it being a perception (obviously), but the perception can be of something that's not itself a perception." The mistake that's often made there is one of the things that leads to general, overarching idealism.
So obviously you have to be imagining things, it has to be from your perspective, etc., but what you imagine can be a world without people imagining things, and having perspectives, and so on. — Terrapin Station
I'll offer you an observation. You seem to require a formalism that others are not nearly as married to and it's a constant source of exasperation for you. It exhibits itself in your demands for proper grammar and spelling down to a wish that everyone be educated in every logical fallacy so that discussion can proceed in a certain orderly and predictable way. — Hanover
I'd submit that a good part of philosophical debate consists of making the many errors you point out and in debating the significance of those errors to the overall discussion, as opposed to making them the focus of the debate. — Hanover
I'd also say that definitions are not brittle, so it's understandable that some will assume differing descriptions of horses and cats than others. Demanding an absolute meaning to the terms is not the starting point, but likely the ending point after the debate is over and such distinctions are made. To the extent you claim some call horses cats, I think that is obvious hyperbole, but usually the equivocation of terms is more subtle and obscured and has to be brought to light. — Hanover
Note: Suddenly found myself wearing my “silly” hat ... I’ll take it off now :/ — I like sushi
It doesn't matter in the sense that morality would be no less important. The problem is getting the other side to see it that way. I see the same errors repeated over and again. They seem to see preference as some kind of affront... It's a quite ridiculous and unproductive way to react. — S
Will this truth stand against the destructive tendencies of relativism? I do not think so, but neither will anything else. — tim wood
It's OK, I'll translate.
Religions all disagree with each other, and with science, that doesn't look too good for the modern theist, so let's make up some shit about 'archetypes' to make it all sound a bit more united. Oh... and we'd better make it on some 'special level' to prevent anyone actually checking whether it's real or not. — Isaac
First, and this takes us back towards science, I'm wondering if you are familiar with the drug DMT? Here's an introductory documentary of a research study which you might find interesting:
I bring it up here because the test subjects in this study reported visiting another realm which felt even more real to them than our everyday experience, and they attempted to describe this incomprehensible realm as being saturated with a profound indescribable love. — Jake
But I also accept archetypal psychology - that religious and spiritual beings and symbols are representations of, or instantiations of, archetypal realities that exist on the level of the collective psyche. — Wayfarer
I suggest you click on my avatar. Click on comments, and take a bit of your precious time to learn about what you are arguing against. It would very foolish of you to assume I've not already done everything you've said ought be done, and more...
Help yourself.
We could always take this to the appropriate place. I mean, if you want a real debate, I'm down. — creativesoul
I'm proposing that any and all texts written in language that is completely and totally devoid of users is utterly meaningless. — creativesoul
Lol, sometimes thats what people need. Slap the PC right outta them. — DingoJones
I think they learn by observing that's how everything works. I think that's the basis of it. It's fundamental to reality and is observable. — DingoJones
I think etiquette is a safeguard against people who are too stupid to get along. Like how you are not supposed to talk about religion and politics. Its because people are too stupid to be trusted to have those conversations...even though they are two of the main things people SHOULD be talking about. — DingoJones
many people acting in conjunction with each other to a particular end, and that's what I'm referring to by "mob mentality."
— Terrapin Station
Under that definition, a group of Amish collaborating to raise a barn is an instance of mob mentality. — andrewk
Stepping on some toes without always saying whose. Sorry in advance. — MindForged
Why are you stating the obvious by saying if we cannot find meaning in something it has no meaning to us? If you’re suggesting that because we cannot find any meaning in something there isn’t any possible meaning that is no more than a mere assumption.
What “false dichotomy”? You appeared not to know the difference between “history” and “pre-history” so I told you. It is something anyone who knows a reasonable amount anout history and archeology should know. Understand you’re saying something equivalent to the differentiation between “the bronze age” and “the iron age” is a false dichotomy.
Still waiting for what your “argument” is. Hope is dwindling fast so maybe your time would be better spent replying to the other guys here. I’ll take a back seat. — I like sushi
You are imagining a scenario without humans, but when you are then trying to look at that which remains, you are looking at it from a human view
— Echarmion
Finally. Tacit understanding it is absolutely impossible to do otherwise, and only the rationally inept will attempt it. — Mww
I didn't intend to suggest voluntarism in my definition. — Terrapin Station
That sort of thinking will impede you. Definitions can be wrong. There is a difference between 'just asserting' a definition and arguing for one. Apparently, you do no see the relevance of justificatory strength either, and all that that involves...
Put down the axe. There are no proper grinding stones around here. — creativesoul
The general point is that an ancient totally unfamiliar text is meaningless if all it's users have perished. As a result, there is no ability to decipher one if that's all that is had. — creativesoul
So you don't think that if there's a standard, it has to be something, it has to have become the standard through some particular means, etc.? It's just unanalyzably present? — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying this is necessarily what's going on, but it's not uncommon for people to look at "belonging to a religion" as being akin to ethnicity. One is "born into" the religion in question, due to one's family, one may have undergone various rituals under that religion as an infant or child--christening/baptism, bar/bat mitzvahs, etc., but one might not consider oneself religious despite this because one doesn't actually have any religious beliefs. Some people even do this while still going to church/temple/etc. occasionally--it's more of a social thing for them. They might choose to get married in a church/temple setting, and they might even sociale their kids into the religion in a similar way, despite a lack of religious belief, just because it's seen as a part of their family's tradition. — Terrapin Station
lol at the idea that it has to remain a mystery and it's somehow off-limits to investigate it. — Terrapin Station
Well true, it is a claim anyone can make. Like being reasonable. There is a fact of the matter of whether or not its actually true in both cases.
You asked me “what now” at the end of your case example. The answer is “apply reason to see which person is correct.”. That doesnt require an address of where the standard comes from, not in the case of reason, because reason is our most basic function of making sense of things. If you do not accept it, if logical fallicies seem fine to you for example, then no sensible or worthwhile discussion can be had. Conversation over. (“You” is intended in a general sense here, not “you” as in Terrapin). — DingoJones
So the standard isn't established by any consensus. What's it established by?
(Note that I'm not arguing pro consensuses or anything like that. The aim here is to get folks to think more about just what they're claiming re how this stuff works.) — Terrapin Station
Hardly surprising. For example in my country 3/4 of the people belong to a church (vast majority of them to the Lutheran State Church), yet only 27% of the people view themselves as religious.
Besides, today 'a religious person' might be defined a bit differently than before: a fundamentalist, a zealot or a person that believes that the Bible (the Koran etc.) is to be taken literally and anything other is heresy. — ssu
I argue for my position. — creativesoul
...the original meaning does not persist, it cannot persist because of the nature of meaning. — Possibility
yea so what are the other positions beyond doxastic voluntarism, the status quo(?). — Nasir Shuja
Why don't you try to state what's wrong with my definition (the full one, not your cherry-picked version) without an appeal to definition (especially one that doesn't contradict my position)? — Txastopher
So the guy who is contradicting himself says that he is being reasonable. You and almost everyone else says he is not, and says that he's not following "the" standard.
So once again, the question is whether "the" standard is determined by consensus. — Terrapin Station
They are both applying reason, though. — Terrapin Station
Re a standard--so some consensus? (Hence my initial question.) — Terrapin Station
Are you saying that it's an established fact that it's not? — Txastopher
So a question might be, is there anything about morality that is true? To which the substance of any answer is, there had better be! — tim wood
Evolved thought is merely movement of thinking through time, presumably and seemingly to some determinate end. — tim wood
Someone above objected to my use of "mere" as loaded language. — tim wood
Mere means only, being nothing more than. — tim wood
