You are asserting that 'rights' arise because of blatant violations of human justice men inflict on men. I like that. So then rights and the state arise from the same source, a need for protection. — Cavacava
They had rights. In a lot of cases their rights were violated.Do you suppose that because some did not consider blacks human that these people did not have the rights that we assign to all humans. — Cavacava
Nazis could violate the rights of Jews.Could the Nazis take away the rights of the Jews, in principal? — Cavacava
Evocative statement. We look at definitions or the limits of imagination to find a priori knowledge. Can you imagine a human who effectively has no rights? Maybe a lone wildboy like Enkidu?I am looking for the concept of right, a priori. — Cavacava
Sure what you have itemized is the case but it does not speak to rights in their existential sense, what is essential to be human. — Cavacava
an you thnk of anyone whose books I could read, or videos I could watch who is more brilliant and insightful than him? — rickyk95
A tool that can do this is in itself pretty awesome, it enables societies to function based on mutually agreed upon principles or laws. — Cavacava
The anti-relativism (or maybe moral superiority?) that's amply displayed in the UN's list of rights suggests to me that a certain characterization(s) of what is meant to be human ought to be included in our understanding of what a right is. — Cavacava
doesn't follow that another religion would emerge from that. — Agustino
Impossible - very very unlikely. Why would you say that — Agustino
don't see the contradiction. Can you specify — TheMadFool
I hope you're referring to the infinite regress problem because if you are I have to say that this counter-argument doesn't show up in the tidy room argument as in we never ask who created the someone who's the purveyor of the order in the room. So, why is this a problem for the argument from design? — TheMadFool
That's definitely happened in electronics. But if you look at the industry required to make or repair a windmill, for instance, steel and glass still require about the same amount of energy today as ever.Reminds me of Buckminster Fuller's 'less is more' which he called Ephemeralization:
the ability of technological advancement to do "more and more with less and less until eventually you can do everything with nothing," that is, an accelerating increase in the efficiency of achieving the same or more output (products, services, information, etc.) while requiring less input (effort, time, resources, etc.).
Wiki
Almost like a pragmatic reinterpretation of Occam's Razor. — Cavacava
I'm not entirely sure of the context. In the case of living sustainable, I think that a smaller scale, and consumption of land and resources is always preferable, yes. — Wosret
I read small is beautiful a few years ago on Banno's recommendation. T'was good. — Wosret
You cite it, you show it. — Wayfarer
Kierkegaard, however, was quite clear. — TimeLine