What you don't understand is that just with US and Russia, the 'all-out' nuclear war looks dramatically different than during the Cold War. — ssu
This sub-sub-thread is going nowhere. — Pattern-chaser
No, I'll observe that nukes are one of a number of existential threats. — Pattern-chaser
Yes, a global nuclear war could start without warning, but it probably won't. — Pattern-chaser
I choose to spend my retirement philosophising, not digging a deep bunker in the garden. — Pattern-chaser
Either way, there are a number of serious - species-threatening or world-threatening - things that we might chose to be concerned about. — Pattern-chaser
Pertinently, a nuclear attack isn't imminent. — S
To see a part is not to suffer an illusion, it is just to see a part of reality and not the whole. — Dfpolis
Thought, to the degree that it can think anything it wants without motivation, is always in danger of triviality, which cannot simply be corrected for by providing more facts and better resources. It is this internal and intrinsic danger of thought that Deleuze dubbed ‘stupidity’: far from being a lack of intelligence, stupidity is a condition inherent to the very structure of all thought, even of the most intelligent: — StreetlightX
Moreover, if attention is not properly paid to this inherent structure of thought, much of what we say and think will not merely be wrong, but much worse - transcendentally stupid. — StreetlightX
Why assume that this reality we perceive stands a chance of being an illusion? — BrianW
So, really, to be clear, what you're talking about is only the potential consequences, not the actual situation we're in. That is, if there's a nuclear attack, then these would be the consequences. — S
But people, thousands and thousands every day do die already from the preventable causes I mentioned. They dont die today from nuclear weapons. My point stands. — Blue Lux
Do you have to be of above average intelligence to engage seriously with philosophy? — Andrew4Handel
If you think this is the first time in history in which the future of man has been at risk, you are mistaken. — Blue Lux
Nuclear war is a problem, but I am not sure any of the most powerful countries are ready to blow themselves up and enter into a global thermonuclear war. — Blue Lux
People have not been this stupid yet, — Blue Lux
Instead of nuclear war you should be talking about the opioid epidemic, heart disease, emphysema, diabetes, certain cancers, etc., which are in huge ways preventable, although not 100% preventable for everyone. — Blue Lux
If you want to focus on some sort of 'hair-trigger' then focus on the problems that already exist. — Blue Lux
With all due respect, I don't understand why this is the case. I am curious as to why would I need to make such a case, as I don't see how that is relevant at all to my question. — Ole Marius Nesset
But this topic offers the brain-in-a-vat scenario as an example of a speculation that is possible, but comes without any evidence. And it asks: how should we deal with such speculations, logically? — Pattern-chaser
've recently started on my bachelor's degree in philosophy — Ole Marius Nesset
It is absolutely not a half triggered gun pointed at my head. — Blue Lux
I have other more pressing matters in my life. — Blue Lux
I'm not sure that God is a being of infinite ability. Is he able to sin? Can he make a stone so big He can't lift it? And isn't He limited by His promises (to never wipe out mankind again, to send His son to die as a sacrifice for mankind, etc...)? Can he make squared-circles, or both exist and not exist? All this seems to me to limit God and leave Him still vulnerable to paradoxes/conflicts. — Empedocles
Christians generally do not believe in a God of infinite ability — tim wood
You're not going to get very far attacking a supposed whole of philosophy. — Blue Lux
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. — Empedocles
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. I’m open to being wrong and am looking forward to your objections. — Empedocles
There's certainly a large amount of religious influence "baked-in" to western culture (along with a lot of other stuff) and even deeper than that is our hardwiring for altruism and cooperation. One level builds on another. — Baden
And fully disentangling all that in order to discover "the" cause of our ethical orientations isn't possible. — Baden
So, what I'd take from your point is more confirmation that the theist/atheist distinction with regard to morality is fairly hopeless in reflecting anything apart from a personal narrative. — Baden
The fact is what what you tell yourself about what you believe with regard to God probably has little effect on your sense of morality, which runs much deeper, and is likely to be largely settled when you are too young to even appreciate the meaning of religious belief. — Baden
Second, the internet is full of complaints. I don't think there ever existed a person that never complained. — Posty McPostface
Members can change their screen name, but they have to request it, and can't do it on the fly. — StreetlightX
Known to many of us here: HItchen's razor: "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." — tim wood
I'm not fond of the view that everybody is stupid. — Bitter Crank
Philosophers generally do not acknowledge the enormous sway emotions have over how and what we think. They like to picture themselves as rational beings, unswayed by irrational emotion. Fools. — Bitter Crank
I want to analyze why disidentification didn't work for my depression. — Posty McPostface
I don't see how you can dissociate from that feeling of bleakness or apathy. — Posty McPostface
I think the risk of nuclear war is relevant to a thread about the intelligence of philosophers--or anybody else--because the justification for nuclear weapons comes from a deep pool of very bright scientists, politicians, philosophers, strategists, etc. — Bitter Crank
No, I don't have to. I haven't claimed or implied that I know that any particular event will or won't happen later today, and I don't need to. That's an unreasonable thing to demand in response to my objection. If I claim that being struck by lightning is an imminent threat, and that the pressing nature of it is such that it's akin to someone holding a gun to your head, and you object that my claim is misleading, then would you have the burden of having to explain how you know that I won't be struck by lightning later today? No, of course not. That's an argument from ignorance, an informal fallacy. It's possible that I'll be struck by lightning, and you haven't denied that possibility. Lots of things are possible. That both misses the point and tries to shift the burden of proof.
Moreover, people have of course been struck by lightning before, and it has happened way more times then we've been on the verge of a nuclear war, so, in that sense, it's way more of an immediate threat. But you'd still be right to object that my claims are misleading. Being struck by lightning is not an imminent threat. I have gone my whole life without being struck by lightning. So have most others. That's not lucky, that's average and to be expected. It would be unreasonable to resort to extreme measures against being struck by lightning, as though it were an imminent threat, as though it could happen any minute now if I don't do something drastic right now to prevent it from happening, and as though I'm being held hostage by an armed criminal. — S