Methane emitted by ruminants like cattle, sheep and goats is recycled into carbon in plants and soil, in a process known as the biogenic carbon cycle. It’s an important natural cycle that’s been happening since the beginning of life. — Agree to Disagree
beef cattle turn low-quality feed into lots of high-quality protein for human nutrition. — Agree to Disagree
I inject moral as a qualifier for obligation, because the topic is concerned with moral facts. — Mww
There's no need to tell me to stop doing something that I haven't done. — Quixodian
Not true. I pointed out that he adopts the pose that acknowledges climate change BUT then says that climate science and scientists have gotten it all wrong, and that nothing can be done about it, along with irrelevant and preposterous arguments to the effect that more people die from cold than from heat, that not everywhere on the planet is hot, etc. Plainly intent on muddying the waters. — Quixodian
Sorry. I should have split the sentences and started a new heading. Even better, make a separate post for a philosophical rant.
Saying anything about any scientific subject at least implies an expressed or unexpressed position by the speaker and further that there exists some sort of scientific support for that position.
Pro or con.
But normally, on popularized scientific topics only the pro positions are normally acceptable for fear that children might believe them. For example, If I now propose a hypothetically possible case against global warming or one for a rapidly approaching ice age, rather than being ignored it will raise eyebrows and I might be accused of ignorance or ill will. — magritte
That is all irrelevant to your argument. To show that there is or there is no global warming you have to find data that is global not local, — magritte
Sent to you — Agree to Disagree
For me World politics looks more and more like in the 19th Century. — ssu
You can defend yourself when someone wants to hurt you. But it should be quite clear that the person is really going to attack and hurt you. We know very well just how easy the wording "an existential threat" is used in politics even today and "pre-emption" is cherished. — ssu
From the largest trade routes to the smallest transactions, from the global to the local level, pretty much any move we make is regulated by a litany of state policy. Vast legal systems, treaties, trade agreements, jurisdictions, global financial institutions—these are the fetters of state and statist intervention, and their combined reach is global in scale. — NOS4A2
What is truth (and what isn't?)
Is truth everything objective? Or can subjective things such as memories be truth as well?
Does truth have to be factual or could it be (partially) fictional as well? — Kevin Tan
Does truth have to be factual or could it be (partially) fictional as well? — Kevin Tan
I wouldn't put Schopenhauer into the same "New Age" box, but I think his philosophy helps the move in that direction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I didn't say what I thought the data means. I just asked, "What do people think that this data means?". — Agree to Disagree
“….. For although education may furnish, and, as it were, engraft upon a limited understanding rules borrowed from other minds, yet the power of employing these rules correctly must belong to the pupil himself; and no rule which we can prescribe to him with this purpose is, in the absence or deficiency of this gift of nature, secure from misuse….”
(CPR) — Mww
I am more than happy to discuss Christianity if you find it relevant to the OP: can you tie it back to the OP so I understand where we are headed with this? — Bob Ross
Yes, it is almost totally meaningless. And it is totally negligible. Why should I limit my consumption for something that is totally negligible.
It also does not seem like "justice" that I make an effort when most other people don't. — Agree to Disagree
To make it clear (with no sarcasm), I believe that people need to take personal responsibility for their own carbon footprint.
If Mikie and other people like him won't take personal responsibility for their own carbon footprint, then why should I.
Oil companies just supply us with what we demand. We are "oil addicts" who are blaming the suppliers for giving us what we want. I blame supermarkets for making people fat. — Agree to Disagree
I am not sure what you mean by that Frank.
Please explain it to a foolish old man. — Agree to Disagree
It is Big Oil's fault, not mine.
— Agree to Disagree
Correct. — Mikie
:grin: I don't much care what he thought.
The simple point is that the world is often other than what one might have willed. — Banno
Yes, it's no first person. — Janus
the immediate first-person sense of being. — Quixodian
I agree that Christianity does advocate that we have the moral code written on our hearts, — Bob Ross
Also, I don’t think Christianity argues that we are innocent, as most Christians believe in innate sin. — Bob Ross
Trouble is, reality does not care what you will, — Banno
the immediate first-person sense of being. — Quixodian
What he really struggled with, is with the idea of how from one thing (will), many could arise. He used to be confident about this but appears later in life to become rather troubled by this issue. — Manuel
Without reference to the truthity of either, moral realism tends to be posited as better than anti-realism if it were true; for, in a moral realist world, there would be facts of the matter about morality that society could strive towards independently of tastes (i.e., non-facts). However, I have begun to be suspicious of the benefits of moral realism—to the point of outright claiming it is useless to the normative discussion even if it is true. Let me briefly explain why. — Bob Ross
It's important to keep in mind that for Schopenhauer, the will as thing in itself is the closest approximation to the thing in itself "unaltered" as it were, it's the closest approximation we have of it, but it's not the actual thing in itself - though he should be much more explicit than he was on this point, he does state this quite clearly in Volume 2, though the specific essay's title is currently eluding me.
The so called "referent" would be the simple act of will - energy in today's term - which can be felt all the time, made more explicit when, say, we move our arms or legs and focus on the act of moving it. Or if we attend to it by being observant of our breathing, and so on.
But, again, this is not exactly the thing in itself, just its closest approximation. — Manuel
