I think you can still do good philosophy without providing a definition for literally everything, but when controversial terms and issues come up, then yes everyone could benefit from trying to clarify their thoughts by coming up with definitions. — Uber
Rather than argue over the meaning of "animal", we can just argue over whether animals have rights -- just to use your example you opened with. And we can clarify exactly what we mean by said terms as we go along, just as we would have to even when setting out our terms from the start. — Moliere
In a sense it doesn't matter what the definition of a word is as long as it is understood. The only point in providing or asking for meaning is to clarify usage, and once that is understood then the other possible uses a word can be put to are not relevant. — Moliere
In the animal utopia farm, there's no decision any animal could make that would allow them to live longer. They would all die whenever they become useless to the person exploiting them for food. Such as, a hen that can not longer lay eggs. That hen becomes useless, so off she goes to get her throat slit. — chatterbears
It is not considered part of the plant. That is why it is called a fruit, as it does no harm to the plant if picked properly. It is not advisable for teenagers and younger children to have strictly adhere to a fruit diet, but it is definitely doable and sustainable for everyone else. Fruits contain enough sugar and fats to survive. Why would I need to plant all of them? All I need to do is ensure the survival of some of the seeds and the plants lineage is unharmed. Not all plants are guaranteed reproduction now and every seed doesn't need to germinate. Just as not every human gamete is protected or guaranteed reproductive success. — yatagarasu
None of them are okay to kill for food. They have a right to live. Accidents are accidents. (see deer example), that is not intentional killing, which is the moral dilemma here. By sessile I assume you mean like sponges and coral? If that is the case then I would say they fit into the same category as other animals. If it lives, you shouldn't kill it to eat it, unless it is unavoidable (see bacterium/fungi). — yatagarasu
I can use the same idea, while still believing it within myself to be true of my character, and alter the sentence thus: "A minimum of two people involved in a discussion should at least agree on the definition of certain words before heading too far into a conversation, of maybe a particular matter", or, "A minimum of two people involved in a discussion should at least agree on the definition of certain words before heading too far into the discussion."
Does this change anything with regard to your response? — Dalai Dahmer
Hmm. I thought those things were implied. For any discussion, participants need to agree on the definitions of the terms used. Philosophical discussions are different from other types of discussions in the terms that are used and how they are defined. Philosophy itself is about questioning what we take for granted, which could be the definitions we use. — Harry Hindu
Not if you plant the seeds. It is possible to survive on fruit alone, it is just more difficult ( and not advisable for young people ). — yatagarasu
Huh. Thought about this for a while. Consulted vegan friends and they, including myself, couldn't find anything wrong with eating an animal that died of natural causes or was killed unintentionally. I guess it's okay, you would just be hard pressed to find a lot of meat this way, not to mention that eating animals at old age is pretty unappetizing (from what I've heard). — yatagarasu
You can avoid eating plants or animals but still survive if you wanted to — yatagarasu
I never claimed that. I said humans can survive on fruit. — yatagarasu
No, because eating the deer is intentional making it wrong. — yatagarasu
Every single one of these threads I have made someone jumps out and goes, "Oh it is not a paradox, therefore paradox resolved." It gets old and I get tired of going back and forth on that point. I mean it is actually moot whether it is officially a paradox or not, the conundrum doesn't fade away just because someone decided not to call it a paradox. So it is easier just to tell people it widely recognized as a paradox, or something along those lines and I am not lying, these are well known paradoxes.
So call it an appeal to authority if you like. I don't really think it falls as neatly in those lines as you do, but either way it is an effective approach to move the discussion off a moot line of discussion. — Jeremiah
The town barber, who is a man, shaves exactly every man in the town who does not shave himself.
Does the barber shave himself? — Jeremiah
What occurs to me is that in a given discussion, there's no immediate need to pursue definitions ad infinitum. You define until you reach agreement. If what you agreed on later raises issues, you define again.
A few different ways to look at this:
(a) there must be common ground to have a discussion at all;
(b) to explain your position to someone, you must put it in terms they understand;
(c) to convince someone of the <correctness, usefulness, whateverness> of your position, you must give them reasons and reasoning they'll accept. — Srap Tasmaner
Excellent OP and thread, Tom. — Harry Hindu
A minimum of two people involved in a discussion should at least agree on the definition of certain words before heading too far into a debate. — Dalai Dahmer
Bizarrely, I understood that question without the need of you providing any definitions. What does that tell you?
Sure, sometimes certain key words could do with being given a definition if they're likely to cause a problem. But there's no need to take it to extremes. I found it pretty funny that you provided a definition for "discussing" and "definition".
Also, I think you unfairly dismissed unenlightened, who had a few good points. — Sapientia
So the butcher, the baker, the cobbler, the culter, the chef...don't have an aesthetic? — Cavacava
I think this is only possible if force of these works reaches certain objective truths about the world that — Cavacava
I could. But I chose to respond here, because you used it as an example, and I think it is an example that plays against you. Arguing about what a vegan diet is would be a derailment of that thread. There is a history of usage in the context, that you ignore in favour of dictionary rigidity. And now you get all huffy. Ok dude, have your well defied discussion without me. — unenlightened
But the meaning of those terms has keep philosophers in heated debate for thousands of years. What is of value, how can value be measured, is value objective or subjective? Are ideas objects? Is what is rational anything other than a public language (like ethics and aesthetics)? The whole area of how a word can 'mean' anything objectively is, in some sense, what the whole of Wittgenstein's 'Philosophical Investigations' is about.
Anyway, the discussion I'm referring to is on the Math and Motive thread, though you'll have to get several pages in, it's really just a side-track. — Pseudonym
I simply don't believe you are confused about the definition of 'animal' in relation to a vegan diet. — unenlightened
I may have been off on appeal to authority, but that is not a reason to sweep aside 100 years of history, especially when we are talking about language, if people have been calling it a paradox for over 100 years, guess what it is a paradox. — Jeremiah
Also you forgot the link to the OED, which provided the definition of a paradox. Try reading it, as it turns out contradictions can be paradoxes. Is that the argument I made that you cut out? Was that what I was trying to say with the link? Because it is an authority. Appeal to authority, is not a reason to shrug off an valid authority. — Jeremiah
I don't accept your authority on the argument of authority, guess that means you are wrong. — Jeremiah
You do realize argument from authority is only wrong if the authority is wrong. I think over 100 years of history is a very strong authority. — Jeremiah
You do realize this has been a recognized paradox since 1901? — Jeremiah
The town barber, who is a man, shaves exactly every man in the town who does not shave himself.
Does the barber shave himself? — Jeremiah
I have to raise my hands in the air and admit I am guilty of same and will apply more caution with vague terms. — Marcus de Brun
What is your concept of the non-physical? — johnpetrovic
Define 'value', define 'ideas', define 'goal', define 'understanding', define 'better formulated', define 'rational', define 'meaning'. — Pseudonym
Interestingly I've only just been having a discussion about Wittgenstein's private language argument on another thread... — Pseudonym
Is objective morality imaginary? — Atheer
I think it is objectively wrong to have differrent judgements on identical cases — Atheer
Racism is an ugly fruit of a natural plant. That's what I'm saying. The people who embrace it are not necessarily ugly at heart. One of the most important reasons for seeing this is that counter intolerance is just as ugly as the primary type. If we label racist people as vermin, we have dehumanized them and shut the door on them. We have failed to realize that people can change. — frank
A term often used to describe racists is "ignorant," which describes a lack of knowledge or understanding, implying education is the cure. — Hanover
Why assume that they aren't?
They clearly are, otherwise they wouldn't neglect to speak about the ones they find damaging, and openly espouse the one's they find helpful... — creativesoul
Well first of all, it would have to be intentional. So that example wouldn't be. XD But, yeah. I meant it in a general sense. You can avoid eating plants or animals but still survive if you wanted to. — yatagarasu
Plant and animal destruction for our livelihood can be avoided — yatagarasu
I never claimed that all animals can feel pain. I stated that all sentient animals can feel pain, which is what the science supports. And the science all supports the idea that a life-form such as a plant or microorganism [such as bacteria], does not have a central-nervous system or a brain to process pain. If you want to state that you don't need a brain or a nervous system to process pain, then you need to provide scientific evidence to support that ridiculous claim. — chatterbears
Again, as I said to Tomseltje, if you believe that plants can feel pain, please provide the scientific research to support that. — chatterbears
I mainly want to know because I feel like "sentient beings are a no-no line of argument" to be very exclusive and does not respect life as much as it should. We are the arbiters of who lives and who dies. The plant says, "I'm alive too!" and gets shut down because it isn't "sentient" enough. — yatagarasu
We're obviously talking about cows, pigs, chickens and other animals that are most commonly eaten--animals which have been proven to be highly intelligent and capable of feeling physical and emotional pain — NKBJ
That is demonstrably not true, though. It has been well-established that when in complete sensory-deprivation our brains are still very active. We hallucinate. We essentially create our own stimuli. — JustSomeGuy
In a moneyless society, what could motivate people to make goods for others? — GreenPhilosophy
A plant cannot "want", as it doesn't have a brain to perceive anything. A plant "wants" to survive in the same way bacteria "wants" to survive, yet neither of them have a brain or central nervous system. Neither can feel pain, produce thoughts, have emotions, etc... A nervous system is only one part of the equation, as something also needs a brain to perceive pain or have thoughts and emotions. — chatterbears
The fervor that people can have defending their views can only be described as fanatical and zealous. — darthbarracuda
Calling people's axioms "gods" is analogical, I think, and not appropriate as a literal interpretation, though. — darthbarracuda
The Abrahamic god is the one in the back of the minds of philosophers of religion. But I want to focus on the philosophical God — darthbarracuda
↪Tomseltje
There are no such things as "scientific truths". This was already addressed in this thread, I suggest you actually read it. — Jeremiah
I think I would consider myself an agnostic with regards to the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, omnibenevolent, creator of the cosmos. — darthbarracuda