To maintain that plateau centric POV, we will need to speculate about the existence of alternate dimensions or white holes that teleport the water to other places. — wellwisher
No and no. See @NKBJ's post on Gettier. But most importantly, injecting psychological condition into knowledge could only result in a blameless error, not justified belief. I hope you see the distinction.Is it possible for one to be justified in believing X while X is unjustified? Or does one being justified in believing X entail X is justified? — mrnormal5150
then to view your own conscious experience as being an individual, private, pathological experience. — Inyenzi
The philosophy of law, according to those descriptions, involves pondering such questions as "What is law?" and "What are the conditions of legal validity?" These aren't questions I've been asked to answer in my practice. I might be asked "What is the law (about something)?" but no judge or client has asked me "What is law?" — Ciceronianus the White
The very practice of such alternate histories questions the sanctity of encyclopedias and dictionaries, for what entries are sacrosanct from pleonexia against the most mumpsimus ideas of a thief, a vicious usurper against the bard? — AR LaBaere
According to the theory of evolution (TOE) traits that confer an advantage in the environment survive while those that are disadvantageous lead to extinction. — TheMadFool
But in reality, the still pool, before we start the pump is the true t=0. — wellwisher
This cannot be time=0 — wellwisher
The first sentence of the text is “Everyone will readily agree that it is of the highest importance to know whether we are not duped by morality.” My first thought was: no, I don’t “readily agree” to that. Because I don’t know what “duped by morality” means. And neither do the succeeding sentences cast any light on the meaning. — tinman917
Roth knows how to play this game. And it's not what you think.his parents' friends were giving them a hard time about what a bad boy he was, and he told them this: "Say, 'You don't know how bad he is! The things we've had to put up with -- it was a nightmare! Now the whole world knows, thank God.' But don't defend me. That's a losing game." — Srap Tasmaner
Infinite is just another word for more than I can count. — Jeremiah
Nobody is going to deny that health is good. Yet life is the decline of health. Sooner or later you lose it, no matter how hard you try to hold on to it. Life kills us all, and oftentimes painfully. This is an example of the structural negativity of life. Other examples include our moral impediment, the onerous burden of need and desire, the transitory nature of pleasure, etc. The philosophical pessimistic perspective is that life, stripped of any contingencies (where and when you were born, what opportunities you have, personal traits, etc) is at-its-core negative. — darthbarracuda
True.the way we arrived at the correctness of the individual values isn't valid, as it doesn't address the problem. — Dawnstorm
People who use counter-examples to your description are those who believe, including me, that we don't exist in a vacuum. No man is an island, as they say. Do you honestly believe that how you feel towards life has no bearing on your observations of humans around you?Sure, it can be a summary, but then this has to be explained. As I've said, most people will just counter this with "I have good experiences, thus schop1 is wrong". The subtleties are what need to be conveyed. — schopenhauer1
Experiences are fleeting. The burden is continuous and ever-present. While good experiences makes a life go better than it otherwise would have been, it does not make up for the burden of continuous survival, maintenance, and entertainment. — schopenhauer1
Multiple Choice: If you choose an answer to this question at random, what is the chance you will be correct? — Jeremiah
Saying they each have a 33% chance is suggesting they all have the same probability of being chosen by the chance event, which is not true; 25 has double the chance of being selected than the other values. — Jeremiah
This is what's at stake.I'd argue the frequency of the answer's appearance in the multiple choice list should not affect the chance of the answer being correct. — Fool
Also odds are not the same thing as chance. — Jeremiah
Good.If both of you are reasonable and tolerant, you will go your separate ways and not think too poorly of the other person — darthbarracuda
Time, not the best argument you have, will change the other person's mind. If, at the moment, you have satisfied yourself with your own argument, then you've done your job. Walk away in peace.Why can neither person change the other persons mind? — Andrew4Handel
I hope not. Just benevolent advisers would suffice.When philosophers become kings, eh? — Posty McPostface
Cool headed, intelligent,benevolent advisers to world leaders. The right arm. Within inches of the leader.Well, given that we require someone with at least some background of education, I tend to think that they can be reasoned with. Does that mean that we need less impulsive and more cool headed leaders? Yes, I think so; but, I don't know what can be done in that regard, speaking of the US, here. — Posty McPostface
I don't know if there's statistical studies done on what we should fear the most. Death by car accident at hundred miles an hour, terminal disease, natural disaster, or nuclear explosion?To live in fear of one another is certainly not how we ought to live. — Posty McPostface
Diplomacy and philosophical principles.How does one surmount this dilemma? — Posty McPostface
Is it possible to know something with absolute certainty? It seems more likely that all things are mere possibilities due to the fact that often our own senses and reasoning possess faults and cannot be depended on entirely. — Lone Wolf
Why does philosophical theory not have a similar evolution whereby philosophical conjecture evolves into established maxim? — Marcus de Brun
Is it better to habituate ourselves to be alone or is it better to resign ourselves with dealing with the frustrations of other people as just the cost of being a social animal? — schopenhauer1
To the extent that Wittgenstein is not a philosopher.To what extent is this same aesthetic in force in regard to what we think of as the real world? — frank
It's paper that's meant to wrap up meat or fish, but is often used for all sorts of other crafty things. — Moliere
I refuse to believe that there are only these options.Some individuals have trouble reconciling these two halves of their being myself being one either losing control of their shadow and acting out in unpleasant ways, or in my case, rejecting their shadow and becoming weak and easily manipulated. — Eric Wintjen
So true. I agree.Some quotes I use as maxims:
Kids need your love most when they deserve it least. — Erma Bombeck — Srap Tasmaner
This is similar to Kurt Koffka's (correctly translated) phrase "the whole is other than the sum of the parts" which itself is sometimes mistranslated as "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts", a translation that Koffka disagrees with.
So it seems the particular term "greater" is a misquote. — Michael
Yes, actually that is what I'm getting at. What do we humans have to do en masse to change the structure and thus change the habits? — schopenhauer1
If a true atom is irreducible and the smallest thing there is it can't have a top or a bottom because then it could be reduced even smaller to the top part and the bottom part. — Purple Pond
Aren't quarks irreducible? From what I recall, when one attempts to subdivide a quark, the combined matter and energy result in the creation of two quarks exactly alike the one you are attempting to split. — CasKev
Not so straightforward as "what humans really want out of life". There is some structure that humans want. It's in the background. It just happens that the result is what we now have -- jobs, goods, recreation, buildings, material possessions. If you want to change human habits, you need to change that "structure", whatever that may be. (And now we are speaking about humans as if we're not of the same composition!)Do you think the modern business dynamic is just a natural outgrowth of what humans really want out of life? — schopenhauer1
Sorry, guilty as charged. I truly thought that was what you were asking. Explain the line again, "People who have hearts that don't work very well...."You are taking that a wee bit too literally — schopenhauer1
And do you think that sea turtles enjoy the barnacles growing on their backs and legs? That's organic. That's natural tendency. The work situation as an organic growth is how it is. And I don't mean having tall buildings and a million offices. Work can be at a farm, or a forest, or at the sea, or underground. I don't think pilots call their cockpits offices.Either way, I don't think it is organic in how you are using it. People don't, in my opinion, have a natural tendency to like office spaces, corporate culture, hierarchies and the like. T — schopenhauer1
No, not just an array of sources. By organic I mean we are an active participant in its growth.If by organic you mean that it came about through an array of sources, well yeah I agree but as you stated, that has no normative value and is pretty self-evident. — schopenhauer1
Yes.By adding the word "organic" does that give more import to your statement? — schopenhauer1
Yes, I say that in the most sincerest of the truth.Do you think the modern relations were "organic" or rather the result of a number of factors that may or may not have lead to ideal conditions as it is now. — schopenhauer1
No. I said nothing of that sort. When I say organic, I mean it in a descriptive way, not normative.Even if it is organic, does that mean it is good? — schopenhauer1
While it appears we have now digressed from your topic, I'll indulge you. People who have hearts that don't work very well and need help from inorganic sources should go get a heart from inorganic sources. We haven't grown inorganic hearts in the lab yet. But certainly, we now have body parts that are inorganic. Like hip, knee, and heart pacer.Some people have hearts that don't work very well and need help from inorganic sources. — schopenhauer1
What does that mean? — Bitter Crank
How much are we missing with our current model of the modern workday? — schopenhauer1