Consult Wittgenstein. That will reveal an insightful method for answering your own question, which I take as a question which can be generalised to a question about linguistic meaning. — S
What do you think wisdom is? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
wisdom is like knowledge, but beneficent knowledge, things which improve experience, pe sey. — kill jepetto
science generates wisdom — kill jepetto
Religion tries to be a multi-function tool. Science knows its limits. — S
- Wikipedia articleIn Taoism, wisdom is construed as adherence to the Three Treasures: charity, simplicity, and humility.
If it's not a derail, I'd be interested to know what you think wisdom is, and how it might be discovered or attained? — Pattern-chaser
We know what wisdom is, in a sense, or at least the gist of it, because we know what the word means, or we can look it up. — S
I'd wonder what Purple Pond would have in mind with meaning that doesn't involve reference in any manner. — Terrapin Station
[My highlighting.]In a scenario where you were trying sell me religion based on the features and benefits, I'd be like: that's not a unique selling point, why shouldn't I just buy a different product? And likewise with the search for wisdom. — S
Why must something have a reference for it to be understandable? All that requires for something to be understandable is for it to have meaning. — Purple Pond
I've really thought about what would be the reason of this, and the only answer that I come to is that people serving in the British government and British politicians simply don't believe in their country. — ssu
Re laws in general, I'm basically a minarchist. I'm a minarchist because I don't believe that anarchy is possible. Under anarchy, someone/some group is going to take control via organized force, and then it's no longer anarchy. — Terrapin Station
Quality of life is their spouse cheating on them. The assessment does not equal the quality of life. Quality of life is someone living in poverty not how they feel about it. — Andrew4Handel
I am not convinced quality of life is based on how someone feels. — Andrew4Handel
...you incredibly seem to be assuming that we're all going to agree if we just, well, whatever aside from simply stipulating that we must agree... — Terrapin Station
Now what do you do? — Terrapin Station
Naturally if City would lose it status as an European financial hub, that would have dramatic consequences. I assume it won't, the British aren't so crazy, and simply the EU isn't as determined to really challenge London's position. — ssu
Who gets to make those decisions and why do they get to make them? — Terrapin Station
But if one is debating the objective existence of a thing, he must be doing so from the domain of a scientific space-time Universe; there isn’t anyplace else to find an objective existence, as far as we’re concerned. — Mww
A. is false, and B. & C. together is not logically possible. — S
What would it be? — Andrew4Handel
It's not about Computers getting too smart — ssu
The real is that which is as it is regardless of what any individual mind or finite group of minds thinks about it. The actual (or existent) is that which reacts with other like things in the environment. Hence reality and actuality are not coextensive--besides real actualities (e.g., individual events), there are also real possibilities (e.g., qualities) and real conditional necessities (e.g., laws of nature) that cannot be reduced to collections of their actual instantiations. — aletheist
I'd see creative writing and academic writing as being different genres — Baden
this reflects conflation of the real with the actual — aletheist
I am not sure why you chose the quote by Baden ?
'Formulating a rough thesis'. Do you see that as a technical or creative aspect in the writing process ?
Doesn't the provision of a structure aid in creativity ?
Can you explain further what you mean. This interests me. — Amity
↪Pattern-chaser
I agree. I've written four books of fiction. None of which followed those rules because art is a different deal. — Baden
Here's one path you could make use of in writing a philosophical article:
1) Formulate a rough thesis... — Baden
I would be interested to hear about how we progress from critical reading, thinking to creatively writing. — Amity
I don't understand why people would believe in things that there was no evidence for. — Andrew4Handel
This never seemed like a real argument to me and none of those solutions seemed quite right to me. The obvious answer always seemed to me to be that the whole premise is faulty. If God is defined as omnipotent, and omnipotence is understood as the ability to do anything, we should recognize that there's an implicit assumption there: This only regards things that can be done. Why would Christians define God as a being who can do things that can't be done in principle? In this case, that impossible thing is having a being that can succeed at any possible thing failing to create a scenario where he fails to do something. That screams contradiction to me.
There might be an interesting discussion with regards to God failing to do things we are capable of but at the very least the rock thing always feels a bit silly to me. It'd be like saying "If God can't checkmate from both sides of the board in the same game he's not omnipotent." — MindForged
"Therefore the Master
can act without doing anything
and teach without saying a word."
What does it mean to act without doing anything? And how does he teach without saying a word? — Form
and most of what one can say about the ancient world is going to rest on slender supports. — Bitter Crank
Not only is Atheism older than theism, it is far more ubiquitous in the animal kingdom. — Josh Alfred
Nor for you, it seems! :smile: :smile: :smile:To just simply admit, "I don't know" was not enough for the myth makers in our civilization. — Josh Alfred
Why didn't humans stop at atheism? What went wrong? — VoidDetector
I assume the book contains some evidence or justification? :chin: For now, this is nothing more than the usual emotional and irrational attack that atheists make on religion. <yawn>The belief that there were no gods was common in the ancient world, research by Prof. Tim Whitmarsh, professor of Greek culture at Cambridge, concludes.
But “ancient atheism” was effectively written out of history when Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire after the reign of Constantine in the early fourth century, heralding a new era of state-imposed belief, says Whitmarsh in a new book, Battling the Gods, which collates evidence of atheism in the Greek city states.
The study breaks the widely assumed link between atheism and progress or modernity but also rejects the idea that faith is a natural, instinctive impulse.
Once an AI has the freedom to evolve and improve itself, there is no predicting what it might do. — Pattern-chaser
We already have self updating programs now and the world hasn't ended. — MindForged