Platonic thought has nothing to do with the visions of Saint Teresa. — David Mo
That's not counting though. Anyone can make up a new definition of "counting", and use that definition to make whatever conclusion one wants to make about infinity. But that conclusion would be irrelevant to what "counting" really means to the rest of us. So if Cantor turned "counting" into some sort of abstract concept which has nothing do with the act of counting, as we know it, I don't see how that's relevant. You are just arguing through equivocation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Infinity just means 'without end'. — A Seagull
Sure, but we were talking about counting, not pure maths. The contested statement was:
Counting infinity has nothing to do with time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let me throw in another question: how does philosophy differ from "thinking" generally? Or does it? — Xtrix
Philosophy is not based on authority but on the exercise of personal reason. — David Mo
Philosophy is not religion
Philosophy is not sophistry
Philosophy is not science
Philosophy is not just ethics
Philosophy is not math
Philosophy is not just a form of literature — Pfhorrest
'cause there's all them other sorts of tautologies. — Banno
"what is the ontological status of institutions?" — Matias
Our apparatus is definitely classical, but it's a fairly radical direction to claim our apparatus imposes anything on the quantum realm ... as this seems to imply the apparatus exists first. — boethius
For example, understanding the complexities of Second Temple Judaism and the historical Jesus vs. the Jesus of what becomes the mythologized version of orthodox Christianity is quite lacking in most conversations. Same goes for the development of any religion really. None of them came out as perfectly christaline specimens — schopenhauer1
Uri Geller has been debunked on several occasions. — whollyrolling
There have been hundreds of experiments involving alleged psychics and alleged paranormal phenomena that have all come up completely empty. — whollyrolling
Religion is hierarchical and only the top dog can be the master dog. — praxis
True but that does not tell us anything about the veracity of belief. Personally I am very cautious about psychoanalytic views on religion. They are too vague and too easy to make up. It seems to me that humans are deeply attached to the language of myth. Myth may be older even than written language. You only have to look at tribes in far away places to see how mythological they are. Humans need to mythologize consciousness and that is why religion is so heavily mythologized. It is pointless to talk in terms of whether myth is 'true' or 'false'. Myth is only the 'packaging' for our spiritual reality (whatever you take that to mean). We build myth around these things because we are deeply mythological.Yes, but that would be true in a material sense that it is actually creating functions by harnessing natural processes and materials that are useful for survival, comfort, or entertainment and can be measured as to its development and effectiveness in solving the need or want. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure what you mean by everything happening simultaneous. If such were the case there would be no cause and effect? — boethius
Anyone can think they are a master of knowledge in the realm of mysticism. — schopenhauer1
In Richard Dawkins' God is Too Complex to Exist, Dick is not talking about a god or any god. Is Thor too complex to exist? Of course not. — Daniel Cox
Correlation is not causation. — Daniel Cox
The concept of a circle for example; is independent of any particular mind so it must have existence outside of all minds. — Devans99
EnPassant, mathematics predates the mind, the universe and God. — Devans99
It must do, maths is logic and logic is not something you create, you are born with it. — Devans99
What on do you mean by "mathematics precedes space" and how did you reach that conclusion? — S
Cut to the chase. Give me the short version. Thus far, it just looks like a distraction or a delaying tactic. — S
But that does not mean you can place an extraordinary claim on the same level as delusion. There are plenty things that cannot be shared but you cannot reasonably assert they are delusion purely on the basis that they cannot be argued for. You can refuse to believe an assertion but saying it is delusion or on the same level as delusion - well, that's a bit too much like Dawkins petulance for me.But extraordinary beliefs require extraordinary evidence. — S
I only asked whether you were interested in epistemology in the strict context of the problem I raised. — S
It is a matter of reason. Can you reasonably distinguish your belief from a delusion? If not, then you fail at philosophy. — S
Ummm...you seem to be talking about a particular God here.
I'd like to know more about it.
Could you put a bit of "flesh", so to speak, on it. — Frank Apisa
Your belief is on the same footing as a delusion if there's no way to distinguish between your belief and a delusion. — S
Are you interested in epistemology at all? — S
If I had a thought this morning I know I had the thought but can I prove it?Yes, true. And he probably has reasonable ground for his belief, just no positive proof. Have you two settled the question of whether or not you can know something and not be able to prove it? — Merkwurdichliebe
That might be true if by 'knowing' you mean abstractly knowing. But God is not an abstraction. You don't seem to be talking about God here, you seem to be talking about abstract knowledge of God.In the atheist sense, knowing God exists, is as ridiculous as knowing your ethical ethical principles exist. — Merkwurdichliebe
Oooo wweee, you just introduced the aesthetic mode of existence. — Merkwurdichliebe
Well, I'm not putting up a pretence, honestly. I will answer your questions but I really don't feel like getting into another 'prove God' discussion. They become interminable.You can go far if you drop the pretense. — Frank Apisa
Yes, I know God exists. But I am 'deluded' right? But if the Dawkinsian accusation is made against me it must be backed up; ole Richard has to prove I have some screws loose. But how can it be that otherwise perfectly normal people are deluded? I'm afraid 'deluded' is not an argument.You either KNOW gods exist...or you do not. — Frank Apisa
Having those feelings (vague or not so vague) is NOT a substitute for KNOWING. — Frank Apisa
It is okay to acknowledge that you do not KNOW if any gods exist...on any plane or in any way. — Frank Apisa
Some of us, however, are so averse to acknowledging it...that pretences are invented to pretend that one CAN KNOW a god exists...by means other than KNOWING it. — Frank Apisa
Anyone pretending to KNOW a god exists (or that no gods exist) by KNOWLEDGE that is little more than vague "feelings that a god exists (does not exist)"...is playing a game with him/herself. — Frank Apisa
Attempting to pretend any of us knows by tortuously mangling the meaning of KNOW...is beneath anyone who wants to discuss things in a philosophy forum. — Frank Apisa