Time exists, but not in the way the would-be time travellers think. :D — Corvus
If you established your own country or created your own world, then you could run it with that, suppose. — Corvus
I don’t see why this would be the case. We can induce what ‘the good’ is from its instances, just like how we induce what a triangle is from its instances; and we can use our current knowledge of ‘the good’ to make informed decisions about what can be classified as such. — Bob Ross
Non-moral intuitions are used to determine the category of ‘the good’, no different than how we non-morally intuit the concept or category of triangularity. — Bob Ross
Think of it this way, — Bob Ross
acts which care about life to the maximal extent possible; and 'the bad' as the negation of it. However, I freely admit that inductions are not necessarily true and that this method of inquiry is sort of scientific. — Bob Ross
This means, that this view affirms #2 only technically insofar as we are talking about non-normative moral judgments; which means that this view is a sort of hybrid between realism and anti-realism, whereof it does affirm that there are moral facts, but none of them are normative. I am not sure what to make of it yet: it definitely exposes my deep anti-realist sympathies. — Bob Ross
I wonder though, if they can’t use language….or if they don’t do what seems to be congruent with the use of language….what do they use? — Mww
I don't believe the States are united anymore, or should be — Vera Mont
In other wods, antinatalism as speculation or (voluntary) policy does not positively affect the quality of the lives of those who are suffering here and now.Thus, what's the point of opposing (human) reproduction (which can ony make most sufferers suffer even more (e.g. despair))? :mask: — 180 Proof
Choosing (as I inadvertantly have, btw) to defy one's biological drives, or genetic programming, in order not to breed ... — 180 Proof
↪AmadeusD You might like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAB21FAXCDE&ab_channel=TheoriesofEverythingwithCurtJaimungal — RogueAI
I get your point, but it can’t be a dialogue. It’s just the brain keeping you informed that it’s still working. — Mww
is pulling your leg. — Banno
Why can’t everyone do it? What’s the catch? — Mww
so I'll post a revised version for you to check out and poke at — Philosophim
The idea is that we don't know if there is an objective morality. If there is though, I find all moral questions boil down to needing the foundation of "Should existence be" or "Should nothing be"? — Philosophim
all other moral questions are moot — Philosophim
The excess of consciousness is the "Human".. So to me, it is about bad faith trying to constantly keep away from the existential implications of this.. that we need to deliberate our way into being "caught up", that we know of our own dissatisfaction and must find ways to cope with it. — schopenhauer1
Unlike other animals, we are self-reflective, ripped asunder from a mode of being that other animals have access to. We instead have as I said:
That is to say, unlike other animals, we are not "being" but having to make concerted efforts to "get caught up in being". It is not our natural mode, which is rather, a mode of deliberation. This is part of that ever-discussed "human condition"- the excess of consciousness.
— schopenhauer1 — schopenhauer1
Just emphasizing our unique isolated condition as opposed to the rest of nature. We developed self-reflection which puts an extra level of burden and responsibility upon us- one where we have to choose which mechanism to give us ballast. — schopenhauer1
Again, the "exile from Eden" imagery. — schopenhauer1
What would have to be done to live this new mode of being, cut off from being "in the moment", a fully existential being. Self-reflective, wholly different in kind, even if evolved from the same mechanism. — schopenhauer1
Older times, being a mode of being like how other animals live. — schopenhauer1
But this is magical thinking. You'd have to ask yourself the question: how, precisely, does the mere addition of more of the same pipes, valves and water, lead to the magical jump to conscious inner life? Unless you have an explicit and coherent answer to this question, you are merely engaging in hand waving, self-deception, and hiding behind vague complexity." — RogueAI
my own conclusion that 'anitnatalism is futile' — 180 Proof
I don't think Ligotti / Zapffe is suggesting it's not human. — schopenhauer1
The tragedy, following this theory, is that humans spend all their time trying not to be human.
The epoch had passed when the whole of their being was open to the world and nothing divided them from the rest of creation. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race
that which should not be — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race
The whole of their being was closed to the world, and they had been divided from the rest of creation. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race
what would have to be done — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race
This would not revive among them the way things had once been done in older times; it would only be the best they could do. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race
Zapffe's view is that humans are born with an overdeveloped skill (understanding, self-knowledge) which does not fit into nature's design. The human craving for justification on matters such as life and death cannot be satisfied, hence humanity has a need that nature cannot satisfy. The tragedy, following this theory, is that humans spend all their time trying not to be human. The human being, therefore, is a paradox.
6. Looking at existence, it cannot be destroyed. It simply “is”. There is no “ought” or “should”.
7. Looking at what is, we can come to a conclusion of what “ought” to be. Existence is good. — Philosophim
8. This conclusion is a choice, not forced. Existence could very well one day “not be”. But since existence “is”, and we are composed of what “is”, we act with the will of existence “to be”. — Philosophim
But can we take the idea that existence is better — Philosophim
You say year 2024 1990 ... but this is just some contingent contract of the human civilisations. It doesn't exist in the real world. It could be year 0 tomorrow if we all agreed. — Corvus
Does that take away from the plentiful evidence that the categories do exist? Certainly not. — Bob Ross
There being no formula of what is exactly wrong or right in any given situation does not make the categories empty. — Bob Ross
Are good looking people nicer than average looking people, or are good looking people less nice than average looking people? — Agree-to-Disagree
You can't justifiably believe there is such a rock, and you can't justifiably believe there isn't. — Relativist
Your wife could be a alien, but there's no evidence of it- so you should believe she's not an alien. — Relativist
But consider unicorns. — Relativist
If I can be agnostic as to economic theories, why can't I be agnostic as to the existence of an impersonal, non-interacting deity? — Relativist
If you're going to label me a "deist", based solely on the fact that I think it's worth considering,... — Relativist
My position is that worthwhile discussions depend on going much deeper than the meaning attached to labels. — Relativist
It's a fact that these terms are not understood consistently by everyone. — Relativist
It may also be motivated by the naive assumption we should only believe things that can be "proven". — Relativist
Our consciousness might be the most complex emergent property in nature, when only looking at it in comparison to others, but we're also just a last point in a gradient of intelligence among animals. — Christoffer
Anyone else you'd append for someone to explore?
— AmadeusD
Chapter five here is worth a read. Thanks, Ludwig V. — Banno
Looks like you are active here but relatively new — Mark Nyquist
Humpty-Dumptys are running around having words mean "just what I choose them to mean," all in order to bolster a position for the sake of polemics. — Leontiskos
No brain external information. — Mark Nyquist
We can't have knowledge of very many things, because knowledge is strictly defined as belief that is justified, true, and the justification is adequate to eliminate Gettier problems. But we can (and should) strive for justified beliefs. — Relativist
I believe a God of religion does not exist. Not just"absence of belief" - that's for wimps ( IMO- no one should make this noncommital claim). I also believe unicorns and fairies don't exist.
I believe it's possible that some sort of intentional entity exists, that may account for the existence of the universe, and/or for the nature of consciousness (ie an immaterial solution to the hard problem). If I actually believed in this, I'd call myself deist (but still.an a-theist). But I don't actually believe it, I just think it's worth considering. Hence, I call myself an "agnostic deist", but still a-theist, and my general position on knowledge in makes me virtually an agnostic (we can't know much of anything) in general. — Relativist
and why should I start using that particular label? — Relativist
