Our liberty and democracy are being destroyed as the Military Industrial Complex is swallowing up the rather weak secular organization we had. (I am testing this bold statement. If you think me wrong please say so.) — Athena
For some people, revolutionary conflict would be utopia. There would be a great cause to fight for, a great enemy to fight against -- good vs. evil -- and revolution need not be a violent overthrow of the government. — Bitter Crank
Discontents, mental illnesses, physical ailments, injuries, and so on can leave people unhappy. — Bitter Crank
GOOD JOB! I love the way to cleaned up the popular misunderstanding. :up: — Athena
There would be markets, because markets are the obvious method for people around the world to trade goods and services. — Bitter Crank
Didn't he also say that "Americans will always do the right thing after they have tried all the alternatives."? — Bitter Crank
The personnel may change over time, but there always seems to be opposing advocacy groups in favor of loosened mores, and other advocacy groups in favor of tightened mores. — Bitter Crank
Now, the union movement is more important than NSFW microblogs, but the more ordinary individual's capacity to carry out executive agency are suppressed, the harder it is to maintain a healthy democracy. — Bitter Crank
but the devil is in the details — sign
Before the term science was coined, philosophy encompassed the "study of the nature of our own minds and how that relates to the universe" as well as the "study of the universe using our own minds". The diversification that happened later resulting in science as a separate subject is specialisation, just a normal part of the progression of the fields of knowledge. — BrianW
I think we make art to observe ourselves externally or from a less personal perspective, and participate in science in order to perceive ourselves as interacting in the part of the universe which we readily perceive. The art and science are both questions and attempts at answering them. I believe philosophy is both the questions and the answers, and the confusion in between. — BrianW
I think philosophy is what generates that beatitude which artists seek in beauty, which science seeks in knowledge, which the average person seeks in comfort and a sense of belonging, etc.
Those who would dig into the past will find that inventions and creations were just as much inspiring parts of our lives back when philosophy was the predominant field of study. And I'm not asking that it should retain its eminence, but that we should not forget its significance because there's much to be extracted from it yet. — BrianW
Yeah. To give the people in those fields a little credit, I think they pretty much have to squeeze out something new to get a PhD. But this new thing can be very small, a mere footnote. — sign
Basically we can have a friendly conversation right now because we recognize one another's essential dignity/freedom/value (whatever you want to call it.) We recognize that the other is 'cool' enough to talk to and listen to.I'd joke that the point is to get cool and stay cool, knowing that this word 'cool' is a little awkward here, a little uncool. — sign
As I see it, most of us are lucky enough if we can just catch up with the conversation. — sign
(None of this is original with me. It's just a paraphrasing of philosophers I like.) — sign
Indeed. So the question might be whether or not we actually achieve some terminus. Is the journey infinite? Or is there some kind of completion? Does philosophy only ever understand what has already happened? Or can it ever see the future and thereby neutralize it? (The future that we can calculate is already present, one might say.) — sign
In nearly every case I see this sort of thing it's some pointless complain by a conservative or libertarian who wants people to stop pointing out that genocide and slavery can't be whitewashed and that they don't count against the morally uosta ding nature of their great ancestors. It's so often so clearly self-interested that I'm pessimistic when I see this sort of thing. — MindForged
Here's my problem. Your post just says things and doesn't give any reason for people to accept what you're saying is true. — MindForged
You're confusing the limits of moral epistemology (which deals with how we know what's moral or immoral) and moral metaphysics (which deals with what actually is moral or immoral). Pick a standard normative moral theory and it will give a fairly robust explanation for thinking that murder is wrong (killing is a broader class of actions, sometimes killing is justified). — MindForged
It is evidential to some extent. I apologize if I didn't make it clear before, but I don't believe nothing exists. I'm more on the line of thinking that how we view existing objects is arbitrary.Is this evidential or just a gut feeling? — TheMadFool
As far as I'm concerned there's a limit to illusion. EVERYTHING can't be an illusion, especially our sense of self. — TheMadFool
Are you saying there is no such thing as consciousness? — TheMadFool
However, I gave an outline of various hints and arguments that this is indeed the case. There is a computational and epistemological argument that they cannot know anything beyond what they are programmed to know, and they are not programmed to be self-aware or other-aware, because they, lacking appropriate hardware, cannot be. — tom
For some reason we find the notion that animals don't suffer horrifying, when it is in fact a blessing.
8 hours ago — tom
Are you suggesting that all problems are mathematical in nature and therefore have a mathematical solution? — Arne
Are you suggesting that people truly interested in the nature of being are going to satisfied with know that there is an answer but that we just do not know what it is? Either god does/does not exist. We just do not know which. But it's all cool. Few people have ever asked whether there was an answer. Instead, the ask what the answer is. Surely you must have notice that? — Arne
Seriously, a reading group for Heidegger's Being and Time will get off the ground in the next few days. If you think a computational approach to being is the answer, you need to get in on this reading group. It is extremely hard stuff, but you will never again look at the world in the same way. — Arne
I am done. I can be no clearer.
— Arne
You mean someone doesn't understand your idea? That couldn't be evidence that you are spouting nonsense and refuse to reason could it?
Is fallacy your word of the day? False and fallacy are not synonymous. In philosophical argument, a fallacy is generally considered a failure in reasoning that renders an argument unsound. On the other hand, false is an attribute of a philosophical premise and/or conclusion. I strongly recommend investment in a dictionary. The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy is one of the best. A bit pricey. But it should last a life time. — Arne
Statements having a binary truth/false value are "apophantic" and generally considered to have minimal meaningful content. — Arne
And if you think there is any philosophical consensus regarding your theory of truth, you would be wrong. Your "state" theory of truth is a new one. And what good is it? And what is the status of the claim the all unicorns have purple tails? Well according to you, we know it must be true or false, we just do not know which. What help is that? If you are going to have a theory of truth, it ought to useful. — Arne
Seriously? Perhaps you should place your pride in who you are rather than what species you were born into. The former depends entirely upon your choices while the latter has absolutely nothing to do with anything you have ever done. — Arne
Wrong.
You may rest assured that the others guy's mistakes are not as "unique" and "special" as yours.
How fallacious of me to expect people to actually make arguments in support of their claims.
When will I ever learn? — Arne
Perhaps you and the poster have a different understanding of imagine. It never occurred to me that imagination must be limited to the logically possible. Oh well.
I am going to bed now. — Arne
I am done. I can be no clearer. — Arne
and please define "experience".
I will wait here. — Arne