I'm puzzled to think that this is true, regardless as to whether this was once thought as true.
Why would you think that, that is true? Is that a hallmark of narcissism? — Shawn
No it hasn't. At least not in a way any of us here can dispute. Let's say for the sake of argument that the vaccine is 100% effective. Does that now mean I ought to take it? You've left out any argument that we ought to take things that are 100% effective at doing what they claim to do. Fact's don't simply result in moral oughts (though see Srap Tasmaner's rather clever way of achieving this in the other coronavirus thread). — Isaac
I see no evidence of that. I've provided more citations from properly qualified experts than any other poster and most contrary responses have been half-arsed clichés of reactionary defensiveness or outright spittle-flecked invective. How is that representative of a community in search of truth? — Isaac
Have you read the articles of association for the pharmaceutical companies? — Isaac
these circumstances, there is no basis to make a reasonable decision. What is needed, and what is lacking, is trust. Trust is the liquidity of the knowledge economy, and of society in general. — unenlightened
I believe, as simply as I can, Narcissus lived an unremarkable life in ancient times, fell in love with himself, and by psychologists got called a narcissist (the causality is clear), and this we remember him to this day?
This all strikes me as strange, or telling of our times. What do you think about all this, as stated, or am I missing something here?
The only person comparable who enjoyed such a life, would be, to myself, Nero(?) — Shawn
I claimed that they don't understand negation. The "no" command is not an example of that. — frank
And how do they go about doing that? Is it 'true' that abortion is unacceptable after six weeks, or is it 'false'? What on earth would true and false mean in this context and how would we go about pinning down only one version of it? — Isaac
It doesn't have to admit it. Advertisers have a good deal of success getting people to wear believe Nike trainers are better than any other brand. Did they need to appeal to universal truth to do that? Or did they need to get a few famous sports celebrities to wear Nike? — Isaac
Really? So the 'power seekers' are the ones spreading the anti-vax message among otherwise sensible scientists, while the poor powerless government and pharmaceutical industry just want everyone to be happy? Who are these devils? Name names man, they need to be held to account. — Isaac
Freedom of the will is a necessary precondition of some human understanding, but not any human understanding consistent with pure intuitions. That which takes the place of pure intuitions operating under speculative empirical conditions, are the so-called hypothetical or categorical imperatives, which legislate in the same manner but under practical moral conditions alone. The former has to do with what is, the latter what ought to be. — Mww
Which claim?
I don't know what an "empirical claim" is. There are claims. Justifications can be empirical. It's kind of rare for a claim to be justified entirely empirically. We usually like some logic in the mix. — frank
Whether you agree or not, the basic idea is old and has little to do with who's best at reading a dog's mind.
Being stands out against non-being.
It's the the answer to the question you asked. — frank
thought: no, your dog does not understand "no". Understanding what another says means there is agreement between both parties, and a dog's received meaning has no conceptual contextualization. — Constance
Our beliefs are objective only if arrived at through reason.
2. If our beliefs are caused then they are not arrived at through reason.
Therefore
3. If our beliefs are caused, then they are not objective.
Is that the argument? I mean, (2) is clearly true, but what's the justification for (1)? Why isn't (1) something more like "Our beliefs are only objective if supported by reason"? or — Srap Tasmaner
One's opinion will be formed, in large part, by the opinion which is used as a membership token for the social groups to which one wishes to belong, or the social roles one plays. — Isaac
Apparently, all land on Earth is now some form of private property of "the nation states". — Michael Zwingli
course, there have been cultures, such as certain "Native American" cultures, wherein the concept of the private ownership of land would have been considered absurd — Michael Zwingli
So I'm inclined to pass by the whole question as ill-formed, and I'm not at all inclined to throw in with either side. There's plenty of other stuff to think about. — Srap Tasmaner
In a free world we’d build roads together in common enterprise. But since we live in a statist world we cannot. So your property is declared eminent domain, the state’s property, and a road goes through your property without your say in the matter. — NOS4A2
the dog thinks, "I shouldn't stay in the road." then it would appear that the dog is using language. — frank
I'm right that dogs can't understand the significance of "not", and I think I am, can you see why that would limit its ability to form complex thoughts? — frank
The "fixed" part is just empirically false, but can't I believe that my beliefs are fully determined by my state and my environment, rather than a matter of free choice, and just note that what I read, the arguments people make to me, and so on, are also part of my environment, and go into modifying my state? — Srap Tasmaner
Maybe. The non-linguistic modeling Isaac talked about might explain how that's possible. — frank
First, even if our reasons are rationalizations, they can be "good" or "bad": not all stories make sense. — Srap Tasmaner
What you're proposing is modeling without any sort of symbolism? Or at least that's the intriguing notion I'm taking from you. — frank
How do you remember that "the dogs cornered me when I went over to feed them" without language — frank
Well, you have touched on the very point: Kant was wrong to make this prohibitive distinction. The noumenal is the most inclusive concept imaginable, and this present moment of p henomenological plenum is inherently noumenal; we just don't see it this way because we are too, well, busy — Constance
don't have any theory that must hold sway. I was asking sincerely how one would remember things without language. I'm not sure how that would happen. Like muscle memory? Like the memory of an aroma where you literally smell it again by the magic if cranial nerves? — frank
Man created god in his own image? — unenlightened
It would be such a nice explanation, even if it isn’t. — Ennui Elucidator
It certainly isn't irrelevant to the women whose lives are continually ruined by these laws. But sure, treat it as a cute little academic debate while taking the word of fundamentalist misogynists for granted. — StreetlightX
There is no debate about regulating abortion, and especially not in the US. Abortion is irrelevant to these people. The only relevant debate is how much these people want to punish women for being independent and pleasure-seeking. Again, the onus is on anyone who wants to take these people at their word. They care about children? Prove it. Because every action of theirs has one goal only: to punish women. Prove otherwise. — StreetlightX
Not my fault that you take these Mullahs of American Christianity seriously. — StreetlightX
I think you're making assumptions. It's not from observation, that was my point. — frank
Nah, this kinda stuff has nothing to do with the life of children. It's just punishment for women who have sex. That's it. It's pretty straightforward misogyny. Anyone who thinks these people have any concern for children has not looked paid any attention to how they treat children. Except "I fucking hate women and hope they are miserable forever if they enjoy themselves even slightly" is a harder sell than "I like unborn children". — StreetlightX
Also of course this is entirely untrue. Or at least, you just need to substitute one woman hating religion for another. Everything else is cosmetic. — StreetlightX
So why aren't clouds intelligent? Don't your observations show that they are? They don't dilly dally running in circles when they come to a low pressure zone. They go straight to raining as your goats go to the barn — frank
The elephant in t he room is this "presence" that is noumenal that is right there IN the empirical event unfolding before my eyes and mind. — Constance
We assume goats are doing something extra, that involves some sense of self even if mostly unanalyzed. — frank
