What I find odd is that right after Hume talks about how induction is unjustified he seems to go on and use it. — Purple Pond
Of course it is mind dependent [...] unless you are a brain dead sheeple. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
They were obviously deeply mired in the heresy of scientism and clearly beyond salvation ... — alcontali
The term "verify" is common language, and therefore, highly ambiguous. In my opinion, it is not suitable as a technical term. — alcontali
Why do you think philosophy majors are so enamored with socialism? — Wallows
Dawkings is honest, surmising a one in a quadrillion chance for there to be 'God'; he goes by probability, — PoeticUniverse
He may be honest about the fact that he believes that, but it's a ludicrous claim. I can only assume he meant to mean something like, extremely unlikely. — Coben
I take the view that "good" is vague because the concept it labels is a vague one. "Good" is relative to who or what the thing is good for/to. I see no problems with that. It allows for the co-existence of (good-for-humans) and NOT(good-for-mosquitoes), which reflects the RL situation of fighting malaria with insecticides. It's only when someone mistakes "good" for an absolute thing that problems arise. Problems such as the famous misunderstanding that is the 'Problem of Evil', which this topic addresses (at least partly). Good is demonstrably not absolute; why do we continue to use it as if it was? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
How do you "reach an understanding"? — Harry Hindu
How do you understand something you use, if not by using it? — Harry Hindu
I will bet that you moral sense, like mine, begins with some kind or reciprocity rule. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I find "good" to be a term of limited use. When I do use it, I choose to use it in the everyday sense, with an intentionally broad and vague definition. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Again, fair point. I would ask if you have a suggestions for a more useful term or definition — WerMaat
I would ask if you have a suggestions for a more useful term or definition — WerMaat
Like people best put in several universes are here mixed. — Coben
You seem to define "good" as "profitable or pleasurable"? — WerMaat
I define "good" as "in accordance with Maat" — WerMaat
What good is a good god, when people want an evil god? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
a description of what ethics is isn't itself ethics. — Terrapin Station
I don't really look at ethics as a "tool" (or set of tools), by the way. I look at it as phenomena to be described. — Terrapin Station
My interest is in correctly identifying and describing what is. — Terrapin Station
...but to limit ourselves to just one tool, when there are others available that might also prove useful? Not me. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
...but to limit ourselves to just one tool, when there are others available that might also prove useful? Not me. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
How would you define contradiction, Pattern-chaser? "Paul is tall. Paul is not tall." Wouldn't you say that's a contradiction? — god must be atheist
I maintain there is a contradiction, at the same time that I agree with you that "good" is a relative term. I say this because "good" even as a relative term can't be taken as "not good". Something that is not itself at the same time IS a contradiction. — god must be atheist
The getting that something for MY country is good for ME, but it's devastatingly BAD for YOU and YOUR country. This is a contradiction, not just a lack of uniformity. — god must be atheist
Taken from here.Here is a summary of what you should take from this chapter and into the next. They are, I hope, a fair summary of the structure of modern mathematical logic as a system capable of examining itself and embracing modern physics and mathematics:
[...]
Axioms are not self-evident truths in any sort of rational system, they are unprovable assumptions whose truth or falsehood should always be mentally prefaced with an implicit ``If we assume that...''. Remembering that ultimately ``assume'' can make an ass out of u and me, as my wife (a physician, which is a very empirical and untrusting profession) is wont to say. They are really just assertions or propositions to which we give a special primal status and exempt from the necessity of independent proof.
Any premise you assume as a basis for logical/mathematical deductions counts as an axiom. — Devans99
Science then takes things a step further by testing the axioms and the provisional conclusions against reality. — Devans99
An axiom or postulate is a statement that is taken to be true, to serve as a premise or starting point for further reasoning and arguments. The word comes from the Greek axíōma (ἀξίωμα) 'that which is thought worthy or fit' or 'that which commends itself as evident.'
The term has subtle differences in definition when used in the context of different fields of study. As defined in classic philosophy, an axiom is a statement that is so evident or well-established, that it is accepted without controversy or question. As used in modern logic, an axiom is a premise or starting point for reasoning. — Wikipedia
’Nothing takes place without a sufficient reason’ - Leibniz — Devans99
now we can have existing outside of time/causality a truly uncaused being that is the ultimate cause of everything. — Devans99