Political economy and political philosophy are different fields. — Jamal
It’s becoming obvious now that you don’t know right from wrong, or maybe you’re just arguing for the sake of it. — invicta
A lot of questions there Vera Mont, — invicta
You’re walking down the road one day and a stranger snatches your phone or handbag.
Good or bad, or neither? — invicta
It seems to me by your answers so far that you’re either unsure or just in denial as to what is good or bad. — invicta
The intent itself is to kill.
Is killing another human being at this mall good or bad ? — invicta
say you’re in a mall and someone starts shooting randomly because of some mental derangement and you get shot in the foot, you wouldn’t say you’ve had a good day would you — invicta
would the person though be bad person doing that or would just the action be bad in itself — invicta
I think it’s as simple as that, would the person though be bad person doing that or would just the action be bad in itself ? — invicta
See OP again, in terms of WW2 history, the allies the good guys triumphed. Although it’s not as black and white as that — invicta
You got lost in the detail and missed the wood for the trees so to speak and are no closer to giving the answer to the question in the thread. — invicta
Since humans invented both concepts, and humans describe and define the world and everything in it as a reflection of themselves, humans must possess the characteristics they designate as good and bad. What's confusing is that they individually disagree at any given time on which is which, and the majority opinion shifts over time.
If you want this proposition to be taken seriously, you might look to the language you employ.The apex of creation was followed by “evolutionary scale” if you two bothered to read that paragraph properly. No theological assumptions granted there. — invicta
Now, sure, human history is indeed a bloody one, but you also get good deeds there too. — invicta
Sure there's wars, genocides, crusades and jihads, killing of our own species on a massive scale, but we're so superior to other animals that we also kill one another for killing one another.Whatever the many reasons for man wanting to kill another man may be, we do know that moral frameworks, makes this a punishable offence and a crime. Thus man rises above his animal nature and instinct there by fact of making laws, that guide if not deter such actions. — invicta
"gets corrupted somewhere along the line" .... By what means, whose agency?Man a creature of rational intent whereby better socialisation can turn that intent to good side rather than bad, wants to inherently do good I believe but gets corrupted, turns to hate somewhere along the line and does bad stupid shit, hating his fellow man in the process to the extremes of wanting to kill him, because of petty differences or simply because he slept with his wife. — invicta
the role of man as the apex of creation, — invicta
To rise above the animal nature is to understand that man need not kill man. — invicta
Yet these two facets of human beings raise question as to man’s nature are we inherently bad or good ? Or perhaps we are both ? — invicta
1). Let's assume that reality is ordered - consistent. Governed by laws and constants. (objective). — Benj96
2). Lets also assume that the mind can perceive reality, receive data or input from it and store that data. — Benj96
3). Finally, let's assume that the mind can store said data in any number of relationships/associations with one another. — Benj96
It can create an internal structure or "operative paradigm" to any "nth degree" of accordance or discordance with reality as it actually is — Benj96
in that sentence. I see normally functioning minds at any level of complexity creating internal models of reality according to which they make decision regarding situations, phenomena and other entities they encounter - if that's what is meant by "operative paradigm". I can also see that the more closely that internal model accords with objective reality, the more effectively that organism is likely to function.(ie degree of subjectivity or "bias" ) — Benj96
I don't quite follow predictive value. In some situations, accurate prediction is the path to survival, which would give accuracy - and alignment with objective reality - a very high value. But there are also situation in the social life of highly complex, imaginative animals, where some kinds of bias, some emotional factor or even illusion would serve their interest better. (Pascal seemed to think so, anyway.)Proof of such a case is in predictive value — Benj96
For one, psychopathology or psychiatric illness would likely be the result of disordered mental paradigm. A failing to correctly place associations and relationships into logical (true or "realistic" ) order - likely due to previous trauma the consequent irrational emotional influence on subsequent beliefs and finally the paradigm they create. And therefore delusions (untruths) prevail. — Benj96
It would also mean that these could be "cured" with re-education, or rational psychotherapy. Reformulation of one's perception of reality. — Benj96
Very little. There are already many other therapies in the field.What would this mean for the current pharmaceutical approach to psychiatric illness? — Benj96
You held that equal treatment according to a certain category is What justice and fairness meant. — Tobias
It is not 'anything goes'. That is why philosophy of law is a mature philosophical subject. — Tobias
My question works equally well with an omnibenevolent machine. — RogueAI
As far as intelligence there should be less redundancy, but I fear one big intell agency without any groups that can investigate them as a safe guard. — TiredThinker
electric companies and things that literally are ridiculous to have redundancy — TiredThinker
Another thing that complicates the industry is the fact that there are regulated and deregulated markets. Each state has particular laws relating to the energy market and whether it is regulated or deregulated. So the state you operate in will have a significant effect on what options you have.
Yes, but there is always some kind of arbitrariness in group classification. — Tobias
Is it than fair that those 17 yos cannot vote? — Tobias
Even people in the same legal category get treated in different ways. — Tobias
Would you think that criminal law is fair or just? — Tobias
Treating everyone as equals is not possible, over disagreements of what equal means in such respect. Even if that difficulty could be overcome, it might not be socially efficient to do so and sometimes efficiency concerns trump concerns of justice. — Tobias
I worry concern over size is driven by paranoia over being watched like China watches its citizens, or at least AI does. — TiredThinker
If the government programs get things done more efficiently than individuals can than all the better. — TiredThinker
Truth is you and I do not make any laws, and since we are a part of society, society does not make laws. — NOS4A2
I suppose it is hard know the exact benefit of certain government investments in the shorter term. — TiredThinker
So? It is not in our nature to agree on everything. That’s why I afford them the right to disagree. — NOS4A2
It doesn't. That is a word, and nothing more. If you have a solid (when frozen) definition of ocean, it provides an object or image to place into a senetence, which can then become a communication, which has a context.How does the word ocean give context ? — invicta
The statement can be easily modified to say
Oceans are made of liquid. — invicta
The oceans on Titan are methane. — Banno
Which of the above statements would you like to dispute and get anal with? — invicta
The sun emits light.
Cows don’t make eggs
Chickens have feathers until you pluck them.
The heart pumps blood around the body. — invicta
Triangles have 3 sides. — invicta
The ocean is made of water. — invicta
The earth is round. — invicta
While the Earth appears to be round when viewed from the vantage point of space, it is actually closer to an ellipsoid. However, even an ellipsoid does not adequately describe the Earth’s unique and ever-changing shape.
One needn’t examine a law to discover that man ought to have a right to life, for example. He can do that by considering his own nature and that of others. — NOS4A2
Children recognize unfairness at a very young age. — NOS4A2
In rejection of this, the state should be concerned with securing the natural rights of human beings and making justice accessible. Beyond that it should not go. — NOS4A2
It’s no wonder that beneath its self-aggrandizement the government is simply a mechanism for taking money from one person’s pockets and putting it in another. — NOS4A2
I don’t think there is any turning back. — NOS4A2
Would you then say that truth is relative in this given scenario.
The temperature is high right now
(at 40Celsius)
Or would such a statement have no relevance to truth relatively or absolutely? — invicta
Supposing then the farmer utters this sentence in the middle of summer.
Today is a hot day.
The thermometer would agree reading 40Celsius. — invicta
And as the truthfulness of such a statement depends on mutual agreement between two or more subjects then it’s no longer subjective (context dependent) but objective (context independent) — invicta
Again this is incoherent — invicta
Isn’t that the same thing as untrue, uncertain etc…I think you’re just using different words … — invicta
You are missing the point. Your failure in seeing the relevance of a celestial star map to the cider brewer is about connecting the dots from revenue generation via brewing cider to their ambition to go to space. — invicta
But as a general principle and the point of this thread is that decontextualising some statements can alter its truth value from true, too uncertain to completely untrue — invicta
Why are you wasting your time complaining on an internet forum? — Tzeentch
