Imagine if more money was put into mass transit. Bullet trains, underground subways. Imagine if every city had worked out a way to transport people where anyone living in a metro area was never more than five minutes away from a stop for mass transit. Imagine a world where there were so many various train routes going from city hub to city hub, there wouldn't even be a need for highways. Imagine if one's personal or commercial goods were moved from various tram-like / light rails along with cable cars that could be connected right to a drive way to a residence. Or, if we had anything interesting, we could use robotic pickups and dropoff of large materials to the locations of our choice. Imagine a world where automobiles were rare, and mainly used in rural areas that were extremely remote or for emergency purposes only. — schopenhauer1
This means that if just one atom that was present then, was not present right now, then the universe, as we know it, would not exist. Now, considering how many atoms just one person consists of, then it makes sense to me HOW MUCH JUST ONE SINGLE PERSON MATTERS. Of course, you could say, well, does it matter if the universe exists or not? But, I would say that most people would answer: yes. — Beverley
To give an example, if you thought somebody had stolen your money, you'd probably be mad, because anger is the feeling which responds to perceived attacks on things that you care about. There are 2 ways to consciously change an emotion: 1. change your perception of the event (in this case, that would mean realizing that you had lost the money and that nobody had stolen it) 2. change your values (convince yourself that you don't care about the money). — Brendan Golledge
it means that I care more about the feeling of discomfort in my gut than I do the people that I am being grumpy with — Brendan Golledge
A representation of an energetic wave — Gnomon
one a natural function and the other an artificial mental model of that function — Gnomon
An ocean wave is a modulation of water, but what is the real substance of a radar waveform? — Gnomon
That's because a waveform is a mathematical idealization, — Gnomon
How are you deciding "relevant", other than as a way of describing the reference that supports your own view? — Hallucinogen
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I should point out that appealing to dictionaries is going to be completely fruitless for your side of the argument, since dictionaries aren't reason-giving. — Hallucinogen
Therefore what should define atheists is claiming to know that God does not exist (or synonymous phrases such as denying God exists), and this goes together with believing that God does not exist, since belief and knowledge are coupled. — Hallucinogen
This whole argument references the sourced definition of atheism you used. I am saying your source for that definition is not a good source.But putting agnosticism together with atheism is contradictory, despite their shared lack of belief, because of what they know differently. Agnostics don't know whether God exists, while atheists know God doesn't exist. You can't be in two states about knowledge. — Hallucinogen
atheism -- The theory or belief that God does not exist. — Oxford Reference
I think linguists have done a good job showing that atheism in the ordinary sense means more than a mere lack or absence of belief. — Leontiskos
5 minutes ago you believed the earth was round, but had no conscious awareness of this belief. — hypericin
Being that a belief is a conscious process, a p-zombie would not have beliefs.A philosophical zombie or p-zombie is a hypothetical entity that looks and behaves exactly like a human (often stipulated to be atom-by-atom identical to a human) but is not actually conscious: they are often said to lack phenomenal consciousness. — https://www.lesswrong.com/tag/zombies
I don't get the relevance of this though. — Michael
Intersecting gravitational fields are therefore the physical model of consciousness. — ucarr
I got involved in this because I'm interested in the debate about religion. We've ended up with the connection to epistemology, probability theory and so on. In a way, there's nothing wrong with that, and we could pursue our differences (which are many and radical) even on this thread. But I don't want to get absorbed in those subjects just now, and you clearly have a thoroughly thought through system in place, so that debate would be quite demanding. I expect you will get more out of a discussion with people who appear to be more on the same page, or at least the same book, as you. — Ludwig V
That contradicts the sources cited, so I will say for the final time, you are mistaken. — Wayfarer
Or are you preoccupied with picking nits? — Wayfarer
Spinoza and Descartes initially published in Latin, and 'substantia', as the Encyclopedia Brittanica notes, was a neologism coined to translated 'ouisia' — Wayfarer
The use of 'substance' to denote 'any kind of corporeal matter of stuff' is attested from 14th c (source) It too is originally derived from the Latin. — Wayfarer
Sure it might have also come in via French but as noted Latin was the lingua franca of philosophy up until and including Descartes. The historical roots of English have nothing to do it. — Wayfarer
English substance comes from French and it matches usía in meaning likely because of the way the equivalent word in other languages has been used in European philosophy. — Lionino
That's the substantive point. — Wayfarer
The true philosopher-kings: the editors of wikipedia! — Moliere
Which is where this whole discussion started in the first place, so with respect to your assertion that the philosophical term 'substance' originates with the French language and not the Latin, you are mistaken. — Wayfarer
And so, having reformed the army quite in the manner of a monarch, he (Hadrian) set out for Britain, and there he corrected many abuses and was the first to construct a wall, eighty miles in length, which was to separate the barbarians from the Romans. — Historia Augusta
Parfit has a reductionist account which concludes there is no persistent self, but what matters to morality is psychological continuity only. — AmadeusD
Because you're talking about an object in that case, not a being. — Hallucinogen
The kind of opposition indicated by the "anti-" prefix is moral. See: — Hallucinogen
The premise of the TE is what it is. Nobody here came up with it. We're just discussing the premise. A couple of us are saying it is not valid. — Patterner
Yes, so "opposition to something" doesn't mean "to deny". It means moral opposition. — Hallucinogen
Why would the p-zombies of such a world be discussing their consciousness? — Patterner
Opposition shouldn't be read to mean "denial of" — Hallucinogen
Antitheism means opposition to the existence of a God — Hallucinogen
H'm. Surely what your diagram means is not just a detail? — Ludwig V
Do you have a background in logic, specifically the truth-functional calculus? — Ludwig V
You can say that it is not a sentence or a malformed sentence (not a wff) and hence no truth-value can be assigned or that it belongs in some third class (truth-value). But you cannot say or believe that it is true and you cannot say or believe that it is false. The same applies to the contradictory - "Colourless green ideas do not sleep furiously" in this case. — Ludwig V
I don't think philosophers are comfortable with irrational belief. But many beliefs have emotions attached to them. We're not machines. — Ludwig V
Something that sometimes happens is a bad basis for generalizing about the concept. — Ludwig V
What do you mean "discarded"? If I come, reluctantly, to the conclusion that my spouse is cheating, the emotion doesn't disappear. Most likely, it will be reinforced. — Ludwig V
I've no problem with you unfolding the fan. But it wasn't clear to me that you think that the strength or weakness of belief is proportional to the evidence, - or perhaps you mean "should be" proportional to the evidence? — Ludwig V
One factor that hasn't been mentioned is the idea that some propositions have a special status in that they are foundational and more or less immune to refutation. This is the category of what used to be called a priori or "analytic". — Ludwig V
I will also say that some beliefs X are more certain than others W exactly because W depends on X. Perhaps when we talk about the strenght of belief we don't have something in absolute terms, like "X is 95% sure" and "Y is 15% sure", but a hierarcy or relation, where the surest propositions (if there are such things) are defined as 100% and the most evidently false (a bachelor is a married man) as 0%, and every other belief is measured in reference to those two. I prefer the latter.I would say "A bachelor is a single man" is very close to 180º degrees (belief with certainty), while "A bachelor is a married man" to 0º degrees (disbelief). If we wish to talk about synthetic propositions, we could use "A square has four inner angles", very close to 180º also. The law of identity could be said to be 180º degrees, as it is the basal rock that every other belief depends on. — Lionino
The zombie brains have to be doing some kind of information processing. — RogueAI
I've often pointed out that it originates with the Latin translation of Aristotle's 'ouisia' as 'substantia', thence the English 'substance' — Wayfarer
If you have one solve a math problem and look at what it's brain is doing with a brain scanner, you'll observe it's brain is doing something. If that something isn't "thinking", what is it? — RogueAI
The epistemological status of belief is relevant only to those who insist it must be. — Arne
Tidying up just for the sake of a system is regimentation, which has its uses (in mathematics and science, for example) but I see no virtue in it for its own sake - and it can be oppressive to people and misleading in philosophy. — Ludwig V
emotional commitment (like belief in God) count as believing strongly and believing something reluctantly (like believing that your friend has scammed you) count as believing weakly? — Ludwig V
Agnostic because there's no (not enough) evidence is one thing; agnosticism because the concept of God is incoherent is another; agnosticism because religion is the cause of much evil is yet another. — Ludwig V
I think you are fastening on a specific feature of belief - that it can be strong or weak - and turning that into an entire system. But belief is more complicated than that. — Ludwig V
Suppose we have a world similar to ours was 50 million years ago. There are little p-zombie hamsters running around avoiding p-zombie dinosaurs. The p-zombie hamsters evolve into p-zombie humans. You're claiming the p-zombie humans would go around talking about lies and occasionally accusing each other of lying? How would their language have any referents to mental states? — RogueAI