As a general point, it is neither moral nor immoral to break the law. — Pattern-chaser
But this is just a claim. To be true it must be the case there is no overlap between the two concepts, of law and morality. And of course there is. — tim wood
number is real, but transcendent in respect to the physical — Wayfarer
in order to map and understand what is 'out there' - creating the map, that you say is 'mistaken for the territory' - maths itself has proven indispensable. And maths, furthermore, enables science to predict and discover things which could never be known by observation alone. — Wayfarer
So I think it's not feasible to argue that the relationship between mathematics and nature is merely fortuitous. — Wayfarer
there is exists this very simple "object" [...] and a map, or plan [...] made of all possible mathematical objects that can be built. — Mephist
What do you mean by saying humans didn't always have it? What state of homo (whatever) was not conscious? — Unseen
There is nothing upon which anyone can do other than to blindly guess if there are any gods or not. — Frank Apisa
That's not correct though. We can base our assertions on evidence, rationality, etc. — Terrapin Station
They are not my "beliefs", mostly because I do not do "believing." — Frank Apisa
↪Noah Te Stroete Wtf are you doing on this forum? — Nicholas Ferreira
“1”, “+”, “=“, and “2” have specific meanings by convention. So, “1+1=2” is a tautology. It has to be true given the meanings of the terms used. There is nothing to prove. — Noah Te Stroete
some people - me - think there is an ineliminable increment of immorality in breaking the law, which translates to, it is immoral to break the law. And pretty much everyone else mocks that position. — tim wood
You could start by demonstrating how it is not immoral to consume illegal drugs - and the question is not of degree of immorality, but that it is not immoral in any way at all. This invitation to you. — tim wood
And pretty much everyone else mocks that position. — tim wood
I'd like to focus on how humans developed [...] minimal amounts of reliance on internal drives, automatic functions, etc. — schopenhauer1
Because it is not a controversial claim to presume a bird and a human have different cognitive frameworks — schopenhauer1
please consider and answer the question of the OP — tim wood
I'm interested in why you think it is immoral to break the law, this seems controversial. — dePonySum
It would seem that the learning is done in the brain, not the consciousness. The brain selectively passes along stuff to the consciousness. — Unseen
Consciousness doesn't require an explanation because no knowledge is possible at all without it. — luckswallowsall
It appears we could get by with what I'm calling the pre-conscious alone. — Unseen
Causeless effects are not possible because if an effect has no cause it's by definition not an effect. — luckswallowsall
And yet a human without language - and thus without reason - can and does learn that touching fire causes pain. [...] No language required. — creativesoul
So, science makes predictions that work - no contest there. But that can be accomodated in terms of instrumentalism, without presuming anything about what 'actually exists in reality'. So, I'd just be mindful of the implications of presuming 'what exists' on that basis. There are still many open questions. — Wayfarer
Sure people my say we learn it from a deity but some of them (if they were really) don't seem to care about human life. — hachit
But this topic asks whether maths is invented or discovered. To believe that maths was discovered is to mistake the map for the territory. For maths is a mapping tool. It helps us understand the universe, in some ways, and that is admirable. But it wasn't discovered, it was invented, just like real, literal maps made of printed paper. There's no shame in that. :smile: — Pattern-chaser
Well, my idea is that there is a "map" that exists in some kind of Platonic world that is taken as a model by nature. Parts of this map are taken as a blueprint from nature to build real things and even human beings. The real things are not perfect as the map, but tend to resemble to them in a high degree. Maybe there are even parts of nature that don't follow any map, but the ones that follow the map are the ones that we may be able to understand. — Mephist
So my idea is that the axiomatization of mathematical ideas is invented, but our axiomatizations are based on some underlying objective facts of nature that are discovered. And the distinction of what is real from what is invented could be based on a definition of this kind (is it possible to make this definition more precise?) — Mephist
...compare the cardinal to a human. What are the major differences in cognition that both use to survive? — schopenhauer1
What does it mean cognitively, for the point of view of a cardinal to survive "instinctually" versus a human who is driven through cultural learning? — schopenhauer1
Consciousness is helpless to do anything. All of our actual thinking (assessing, planning, reacting) goes on in the preconsciousness before we even become aware of it. — Unseen
do you think that in order to write a good entry book, which is philosophical in nature, that one would have to have done a substantial amount of reading first? — Aidan buk
The problem is that you have no way to assess the likelihood that there is a genuine case — Janus
Scientist currently believe that genes and the molecular structure of the brain are what creates consciousness, because there is no proven account of anything else. That's how science works. — NKBJ
So, surely we must conclude that anything we believe possible - not probable or likely, only possible - remains so until more evidence clarifies matters? — Pattern-chaser
Logically and epistemologically speaking, yes. I am holding open the possibility that at least some things which we cannot prove to be impossible, actually are impossible simply due to the nature of things, in other words that at least some things may simply be ontologically or physically impossible. This seems obvious to me, and I am genuinely perplexed that others seem to be having difficulties with it, even though no one seems to be able to explain what the problem is. — Janus
Philosophy shouldn't be in the business of "solving ethical problems" anyway, as there are no normative facts about ethical stances.
What's "best" for anything is subjective. — Terrapin Station
Happy mother's day! :100: :party: :flower: — Wallows
Is there still some hefty amount of sexism in the field of philosophy despite ethics as care being a strong argument being proposed by feminist philosophers? — Wallows