Do you think people who think more in images than in words are more prone to anxiety, worse attention, but on the other hand, more open to visions and revolutionary ideas? What helps you? For me, it's writing a journal. Tell me what is your voice — MorningStar
but why not select bits and pieces in one's pursuit of truth. — ENOAH
Religion is like opium. People take it to keep from curling up in a ball on the floor in the face of adversity like the death of a child. The main threat to religion is good healthcare. So if you look out and find people living with little to no safety net, more religion is on the way. — frank
Long-lived religious traditions are perhaps the most pronounced form of collective wisdom available to humans — Leontiskos
OkModern affairs and lived experience are telling me that people are broadly still sheep that need herding. — Lionino
I agree. This is definitely a lot of the purpose of religion. Most of the “truth” you get is about how to act anyways. The concepts lead to actions, which supposedly lead to some result. Thank you for the clarifications.The practice is the point, really. The truth is just there to give a basis for the practice. That's why Bhuddhism, Stoicism, etc. all figure in this discussion. — Ludwig V
. I suspect you'll come to find, e.g., that the ideal Christian is quite different from the ideal Jew and that different religions contain different visions for humanity. — BitconnectCarlos
But it also seems to me that we might also find that certain traits of human character might find recognizably similar expression in each religion - or at least those that are big enough to have internal divisions or sects. The most obvious example is fundamentalism, which seems to me to be instantly recognizable in all the major religions — Ludwig V
This is a good idea, I think. It does have a few issues, though. One is that a lot of belief in religions comes from personal experiences, and it might be too easy to write off someone’s religion as ridiculous if you don’t try it first.Instead of a religion, ask if God matters. If we assume God matters, and/or assume we matter to God, then instead of seeking a religion, you seek a saint, or a wise, mystic sage, one who lives a religion. If you find God in that saint, then you might look to the religion that saint practices, and see if you see for yourself why that religion can be lived by that saint, and why that religion might help you become a saint yourself. — Fire Ologist
That basically excludes Buddhism, which is not predicated on there being a God. It might be better phrased ‘if there is a higher truth’ or something along those lines — Wayfarer
Forgive me for my specific interpretation. I don’t think my view on this (or, if there is a God, the truth of it) actually matters to the post, but I’m willing to share my justification.You seem to hold to a fairly conventional idea of a god. A single god? Why not 2 or 16? A god who is anthropomorphic and pays attention to us and has 'correct concepts'? Why not an indifferent god such as the one of deism? Why not a cosmic consciousness version of theism, such as held by William James?
What reason do you have for believing in your particular account of god? — Tom Storm
It's simply not practical to think of trying out all the sects of Christianity or any of the others — Ludwig V
Maybe. I guess I would respond to this by saying that this would just be another experiment. Assuming you care about religious truth, values, or community, you would probably also attempt to practice religions (which likely brings to you back to nature anyways).The most logical path to religion, or God, or the spirits, or whatever mystical thing you're seeking, is a wide berth around churches. Those vast piles of wasted stone, timber and human effort do not contain a deity or a soul. Walk in the woods on a May morning or an orchard in September twilight or across a meadow on a hot, still July afternoon, then rest in the shade of a viburnum. If you're ever going to have a spiritual experience and find some kind of truth, that's where you'll find it. — Vera Mont
I think this is what was trying to say. That A is lying, but doesn’t always lie (because B always lies). A only sometimes lies, and has the capacity to tell the truth.Person A cannot be the person who always lies. — Michael
At what point do you declare my predictive powers eliminate your free will? How many trials must there be and would a single variance re-establish my free will? — Hanover
If I accurately predict the outcome of 50 coin tosses, does that necessarilymake the coin toss outcomes not random? — Hanover
Does anyone? — Vera Mont
The evidence is so overwhelmingly on the side of freedom of will (it is the basis of all law, qua responsibility for actions, which is the foundation of civilization) that the burden of proof is certainly on the side of the unfree.... — Pantagruel
That is exactly what I would say, but not for that reason. I agree with this point completely, and since I have mentioned the difficulties of defining free will, I will define a lack of free will instead.Conversely, you can prove the existence of free will by proving that it is impossible to construct such app. Hence, the existence of free will is a mathematical problem. It is effectively about an incompleteness proof. — Tarskian
Maybe a little bit? I sort of believe in causal (or soft or whatever) determinism, but whether everything is causal (which it seems to be) is not actually as significant of a question as the others in the free will discussion.I take it you're a compatibilist? — flannel jesus
that their actions are the consequence of things like "physics" happening - things which their will has no control over. — flannel jesus
But then again, if higher education were such a fantastic starting point, then why do so many of its graduates end up slinging coffee at Starbucks? The proof is always in the pudding, isn't it? — Tarskian
There simply is no job where you have to manually compute math results. These students do not learn how to build such software. They also do not learn how to use such software. Instead, they learn how to fail at being themselves the software. — Tarskian
That's just another scam. The government spends money on "scientific research". Next, when there is scientific progress somewhere, the government is quick to claim credit for it, and then wants some more money for "scientific research". — Tarskian
You cannot make progress inside the system, because that will almost always be shut down. Every innovation is in one way or another a threat to existing interests. That is why all progress is made outside the system — Tarskian
No, it doesn't. For example, if you want to figure out how to write a mobile app, no school will ever help you. — Tarskian
I’m not talking about programs that teach more specialized subjects, but instead specialized paths built into public education systems. Totally agree with this though, just not that some organization could create separate paths for every student in a largeish country.I would say that the only way to get people started in their career is a specialized path for every student. It is possible and it is being done already. — Tarskian
True. I was mainly talking about public education systems, and how they usually don’t have that many options to fully commit to a certain path because younger students aren’t trusted to make good decisions for themselves. The “starting point” would be higher education.Not having any starting point at all, is not the solution either. — Tarskian
Maybe. I was mainly saying the baseline educationBaseline generalities do not prepare for anything at all. We already know that. That is why youth unemployment is a reality nowadays. — Tarskian
No, current education is pretty much a complete failure. I am surprised that any graduate finds any job at all. — Tarskian
No, because Starbucks et alii do not require it. The cash till can perfectly handle all arithmetic. The cash till is a computer. — Tarskian
This, to me, holds little weight. Such programmers might simply want to see what the subject does without interference. The simulation might just be so good we can’t find any evidence that we are in it.Guidance through such a virtual world might be helpful, and yet there is no trace of anyone 'programming' or 'guiding' us anywhere. — jasonm
It does, as inconsistencies would be evidence of the simulation that the creators might not want to have. A better question is “Why include inconsistencies?”If it's just a simulation, does it matter if the laws of physics are perfectly consistent? — jasonm
Again, assuming the programmers want you to know they are there. That might ruin the simulation, it seems more likely to me that they would not do that.Again, if you are there, leave us with some trace of your existence through 'miracles' and other types of anomalies that our world does not seem to have. — jasonm
Third: what type of computing power would be required to 'house' this virtual universe? — jasonm
Nevertheless, I think the best answer comes from Occam's Razor: "Explanations that posit fewer entities, or fewer kinds of entities, are to be preferred to explanations that posit more." — jasonm