No, these have a Form Justice, beauty and goodness in you and me and in society will always be shadows. — Benkei
In short, justice is personal morality wrote large. — vulcanlogician
I think you altered the OP a little ( or I’m dumb, happy to accept either ) but interesting post and I agree. I really need to read Kant. — Dan84
I sincerely hope you realize Plato's Republic is not a book on statecraft. — Tzeentch
Idealism that's not positing non-physical existents? — Terrapin Station
Is that not free enough for you? Do you insist that true freedom entails being sufficiently free to make a different choice given exactly the same set of deciding factors? That seems absurd - because it implies a freedom to make choices for no reason at all. — Relativist
I'm a physicalist/materialist, but my view isn't a "belief in physics" per se.
Among the big problems for me with the "God" side of things is that in my view the idea of a nonphysical existent can't even be made coherent. — Terrapin Station
It also takes some guts and balls to commit suicide. — Wallows
I don't at all agree with that. What would be the support of it? — Terrapin Station
So we're saying, without proof, that maybe it could be otherwise--maybe when A happens, B wouldn't have to happen, right? — Terrapin Station
And knowledge-wise, what prohibits us from knowing necessary connection? A billard ball hits another at a particular velocity, etc., and the struck ball reacts with another particular velocity. The difference between knowing that that is a "regularity" and a "necessary connection" is? — Terrapin Station
Wait, first, "we don't know anything with certainty" doesn't gel well with "Hume is very certain about causation," does it? — Terrapin Station
Are you simply focusing on the Humean comments that amount to us not being able to be certain re causation — Terrapin Station
For what purpose? What is a "spiritual" substance? How does a spiritual substance differ from a mental substance? I don't think you're paying attention to what I'm asking. — Harry Hindu
Of course I can form an idea of you mind. Every time you speak or submit a post, I form an idea of what is in your mind. I try to predict people's behavior and in doing so, I form an idea about the contents of their mind. Having ideas about other people's mind is one of the features that separates us from most other species. — Harry Hindu
That last part there - you lost me. — Harry Hindu
What I am asking is if materialism or idealism were the case, then what would the actual difference be in the attributes of the primary substance? There should be some difference in how the primary substance actually is or functions if these two substances (matter and mind) are so different to cause this debate to go on for so long. — Harry Hindu
Did Plato envisage the clouds (dirt, hair, mud) have a Form? It was left an open question but my feeling is that the answer tends towards 'no'. — Wayfarer
So is the idealist saying that the primary substance is mind, not ideas? If so, then the question becomes, "what is the difference betweeen mind and matter?" Ideas would be matter-dependent or mind-dependant. Again, what is the difference? — Harry Hindu
But we perceive thinking objects just as we perceive non-thinking objects. The difference lies in their behavior, not how they appear - as material objects. Both thinking and non-thinking objects are governed by the laws of physics (cause and effect). — Harry Hindu
Not if "no alternative decision could have been made." — Terrapin Station
Again this is incorrect. We directly perceive matter all the time. — Terrapin Station
Matter is an idea, but not all ideas are matter. — Metaphysician Undercover