it's not possible to present his ideas in a packaged form but you will to power and other concepts do have a some relation to his stance on slavery. — Wittgenstein
In other words, what our our reasons for trusting reason? — Paulm12
I see that. I don't see it as a particularly important point. So I'm not really interested in continuing the exchange. Take care. :smile: — ZzzoneiroCosm
It was just the example I used. You're free to substitute an example more in line with your view of the world. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Nothing, but he is destroying my integrity and honor. — javi2541997
morals and ethics are centered on our relationships with other people. — ZzzoneiroCosm
some individual records me not helping a homeless man in the train. — javi2541997
But the society or the masses would impose you that if you do not do so, — javi2541997
You don't. But the notion is at the heart of morality and ethics. — ZzzoneiroCosm
But considering that the time you spend just sitting there could be invested in helping other persons i — ZzzoneiroCosm
Is there such a thing as amorality? — ZzzoneiroCosm
I've seen numerous examples of toxic masculinity over the years. — Tom Storm
The elite class of society should enjoy greater rights and be allowed to get around the law as the culture is in greater need of them. A nation is defined and distinguished from others by its culture. — Wittgenstein
The elite artists should fashion the taste of art in society and the common people should not be able to dictate the direction of art to the artist. — Wittgenstein
If someone had stolen his Treatise manuscript and published it as their own he would have suddenly remembered who Hume was and he would not have forgotten in a hurry or allowed anyone else to claim that his personal identity is an illusion. Also, he knew this. He was not happy with his own theory. — Cuthbert
Individual identity is a fuzzy concept. — Relativist
How do art aficionados/experts identify the provenance of a painting? — Agent Smith
For deeply religious people, their beliefs form a core part of their identity - to admit some deeply held belief is wrong is not something that comes easy. — EricH
You either accept a claim or you don't...there isn't a middle ground. You either live in Paris or you don't. — Nickolasgaspar
Atheism rejects all known god claims because they have failed to meet their burden...that's all. — Nickolasgaspar
The Kalam argument never lifted off the ground. There is no evidence for any kind of unique existence of a "personal powerful being"; so the first premise is already false because there would evidence via 'cause' to point to the existence of a powerful being being 'caused to exist'. — Cobra
If only that were true, but sadly theists have never been content to keep their willful delusions to themselves. As long as theists insist on bringing theism with them to courtrooms, institutions and in the actions of elected leaders then an atheist has no choice but to engage. — DingoJones
Atheism by definition has no indication of morality. — whollyrolling
In a sense, true, atheism is invalid because it commits the argumentum ad ignorantiam fallacy (theists can't prove God; "thus" God doesn't exist). — Agent Smith
It's okay. What I mean is that what is considered real today can be the delusion of tomorrow. — Hillary
Atheism is not exclusive to the left, it's just an easy default for them because it is amoral and imposes no accountability. — whollyrolling
So horses can fly. If Pegasus was a horse with wings, what else can we conclude? It's a thin line though between psychosis and sanity. — Hillary
Meinong, an Austrian philosopher active at the turn of the 20th century, believed that since non-existent things could apparently be referred to, they must have some sort of being, which he termed sosein ("being so") — Gnomon
Do you know what has taken the place of the left-right conflict? Is there a conflict that's well formed enough to be named? — frank
Defining "the left" and "the far left" is like using a cheap microscope. — Bitter Crank
"Whatever begins to exist has a cause" — Magnus