How do we tie this into different philosophical schools of thought? — Benj96
All nations are following the same example. And that's why a dollar crisis wouldn't be a crisis of the US, it would be a crisis for the West. — ssu
It would be good actually to see what economists and commentators said earlier. Reasons like why there wouldn't be any inflation because of the COVID stimulus packages and the huge increase in spending. There was even the Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) that was eagerly listened to. Even if the MMT did understand that somewhere inflation would be a problem, it wouldn't be now. Especially not for the US. — ssu
And thus I keep repeating on the absolutely massive Trump era COVID stimulus packages in addition to the out of control spending that the US has. — ssu
This equation between creation and persistence is what I am trying to wrap my head around. Is this to say that, unlike Aristotle's understanding of properties that can be predicated to a specific subject (which persists for some finite period), substance is a set of conditions which a 'distinction of reason' can view in a different light? — Paine
Chalmers is not hypostatizing, he is not imputing substance to consciousness. — hypericin
It seems significant his claim is not simply that God sustains us but must do so from moment to moment. — Fooloso4
That adds an interesting additional factor. — wonderer1
should have a detailed response either in this thread or a new thread. — Francis
there are many other things in them; and I tell you, between ourselves, that these
six Meditations contain all the foundations of my physics. But that must not be
spread abroad, i
Panpsychism is not the conclusion of the p-zombie argument.
— frank
You are talking nonsense — apokrisis
The conceivability argument is an epistemic argument against materialism, starting with an epistemological premise and proceeding to a metaphysical conclusiom.
No ontological conclusions are being drawn from it.
— frank
Panpsychism is an ontological claim. — apokrisis
The “evidence” is that standard physicalism or functionalism fail to explain consciousness - which is an epistemic claim. — apokrisis
The point of the argument is that if there were a creature that looked and acted like a human being, there would be no empirical way of telling whether they were subjects of experience or not.
— Wayfarer
But why spin this epistemological argument as if it were a ontological one? — apokrisis
We happily accept the idea of a physical quantity – a measure of "stuff" or substantial being, such as charge. — apokrisis
If Chalmers doesn't think consciousness is an object...then why does he speak about it like it is? — NOS4A2
Are you coming to a point here, frank? — NOS4A2
Thanks for the lesson, but I'm pretty sure I wrote "electrometer". — NOS4A2
I'm pretty sure you can directly measure electrical charge with an electrometer. — NOS4A2
Can we measure charge? — NOS4A2
According to David Chalmers* it is undeniable that “some organisms are subjects of experience”. He says it is “widely agreed that experience arises from a physical basis”. In order to develop a proper theory of experience, it might be better to “take experience itself as a fundamental feature of the world, alongside mass, charge, and space-time”.
The problem is: when we look around for what it is Chalmers is talking about we come up empty-handed. The language isn’t helpful when it comes to pointing to what it is in the world the word “experience” signifies. Despite the claims, nothing “arises”, nothing “emerges”, nothing “gives rise” to anything else. Rather than “something it is like”, there appears nothing it is like. — NOS4A2
A massive dumpster fire then that election. Something that I'm not keenly looking forward to. — ssu
St. Augustine also prayed to God to make him chaste -- but not yet. A similar statement was made by Martin Luther -- "sin boldly, but let your trust in Christ be stronger" (edited for brevity) — BC
I read about the ethics of love in a book on situational ethics (by Fletcher?). Yes, if one decides to get out of the box, to drop the 10 commandments, the list of laws in the Pentateuch, or Hammurabi's code, and let love be one's guide, one pretty much has to think out of the box, at least to get one bearings. — BC
The people like Dorothy Day whose life I find admirable and inspiring, may have been guided by simple Christian love, but they also dug deep into Christian tradition for more specific guidance, and found it. — BC
The first 4 sentences are coherent. The last, 5th sentence, doesn't follow. — BC
I don't either. — BC
What you find hateful [harmful], do not do to anyone.
Probably a direct result of growing up so poor... much easier to satisfy! — creativesoul
Inflation IS an increase in retail price/consumer cost. — creativesoul
The cause of inflation is the desire to maximize/increase profit. I personally like for the demand to be higher than I can meet. I do not raise my prices. I have people waiting in line. I could raise the prices. I don't. Does that make me a bad business owner? Some may say so. I'm content and satisfied with what I can make at the prices I have. — creativesoul
I'm denying that printing money causes inflation. — creativesoul
Printing money to provide stimulus in 2009 did not result in inflation(that's not the only counterexample either). Printing money in 2020 to provide stimulus purportedly did. — creativesoul
Don't forget the retirees on fixed income. — jgill
They think they're "owed" pussy. Having to buy it is humiliating — RogueAI
