• Discrimination - Real Talk
    [1.] Everybody stereotypes everybody... right?BrianW

    Yes (at least from my point of view). But, is stereo-typification a form of discrimination? I don't think so. I don't think we stereotype to make people feel less equal to us. It can only be discriminating if directed towards that purpose. But then the same is true of any expression. So, why is stereo-typification often misrepresented as discrimination? I think it's because of negativity. For example, in some tv series, Canadians are often represented as being better mannered (more polite) than Americans (U.S.). But then, it is often attributed to naivety (stupidity).
    Also, "black" people are often stereotyped as more violent than "white" people. Obviously that is not true. A case could be made for the number of "black" inmates but then there is always a corresponding case of the environment and living conditions. So, in a rich and wealthy american (U.S.) neighbourhood, what is the statistical comparison between the number of "black" and "white" law offenders of similar social and financial backgrounds? My guess is it would be a tie or close enough.

    So, why can't Canadians just be better mannered culturally and then have that as an inspiration for others?
    Why can't "black" people be physically dominant in their life expressions and then investigate whether that is what gives them the edge in sports activities?

    My point is, without the right kind of reasonable impetus in our dealings within society, a simple thing as stereo-typification can be made into a monster that it isn't.
  • Discrimination - Real Talk
    OP is a muddle. If it can't be clarified this thread will be closed.StreetlightX

    What isn't clear?
  • Discrimination - Real Talk
    The quotes... seriously?

    Ok, the quotes are mine (consider them as a kind of soliloquy in reply to the numbered questions). Since they're under my name, aren't they automatically attributed to me?
  • Discrimination - Real Talk
    OP asks us to reflect on whether begging is the right way to go about overcoming discrimination when this is the approach of literally nobody.Judaka

    You seem to either not understand the point of the OP or to insinuate your own meanings into it. Allow me to explain with an analogy: there have been laws against stealing for over a thousand years, yet we haven't eliminated such acts. My point with discrimination isn't just about the type that is unlawful but all kinds. The most prominent discriminations are the subtle ones which have an air of deniability about them. At the same time the most common first response to racism is anger which precipitates into hate speech, violence, etc, none of which are useful.
    That does not mean there lacks a way to overcome discrimination. In fact, the best method has been to employ reason. The foremost supporters of equality against all kinds of discrimination have been those devoted to application of reason. They could be philosophers, scholars, ordinary men and women, etc, however their method is intrinsically self-sustaining because it can withstand reciprocation. Even politicians who usually try to fake it sometimes slip up and get caught in their lies.
    However, reason is not the path of least resistance for most people. Usually they want to demand appropriate consideration, declare their right to equality, defame the biased, etc, etc, which to me is kind of like begging for a certain level of acceptance since they all need acknowledgement from others. Hence that question in the OP.
  • Discrimination - Real Talk
    Then you ask if begging for acceptance is the right way to go about overcoming discrimination. I don't know if you've been paying attention or not but right now, there is not much begging going on. If you are overtly racist or sexist, you will be personally attacked, your business may be attacked and you may even be physically attacked and we've seen countless examples of that.Judaka

    Imo, this has nothing to do with overcoming discrimination. Resorting to verbal attacks or physical brutality is a statement about the level of intelligence (emotional and intellectual) one employs. Not only is it counter intuitive to ending discrimination, it also fuels the fire often beyond control of the participants.
  • Discrimination - Real Talk


    The OP is good by me. If you don't get it, you just don't get it.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes


    I think it's more of a translation of a greater underlying rule.
  • What makes you do anything?
    conation
    /kəˈneɪʃ(ə)n/

    noun PHILOSOPHY•PSYCHOLOGY
    the mental faculty of purpose, desire, or will to perform an action; volition.
    — Google

    If there's such a faculty, then perhaps doing something is an intrinsic part of being human.
  • What's it all made of?
    THE TAO AND ITS NAME

    1. Naming things enables us to differentiate between them, but names are words, and words easily give rise to confusion. They do not replace the thing or direct experience of the thing which they name, but only represent or describe it.
    Consider a thing such as a strawberry. If we wish to find the word 'strawberry', we look in a dictionary; if we wish to find a description of a strawberry, we look in an encyclopaedia. But if we are hungry, we do not go to the library, but to the field where fine strawberries may be found. If we do not know where there is such a field, we might seek guidance as to where fine strawberries may be found. A book on the Tao is like such a guide. It can point us in the direction of the strawberry patch, but cannot provide the fruit itself. It can give an idea of the taste of Tao, but of itself, has no taste to compare with direct experience of the Tao.

    Consider now three things: There is the universal principle which enables all things to be, and to flourish naturally; there is the name 'Tao', by which that universal principle is known; and there are words which describe the manifestations of the Tao.
    Even the name 'Tao' is only a convenience, and should not be confused with the universal principle which bears that name, for such a principle embraces all things, so cannot be accurately named nor adequately described. This means that Tao cannot be understood, for it is infinite, whereas the mind of man is finite, and that which is finite cannot encompass that which is infinite.

    Although we cannot understand Tao, we are not prevented from having knowledge of it, for understanding stems from one of the two forms of knowledge.
    It stems from that which is called cognitive knowledge, the knowledge born of words and numbers, and other similar devices. The other form of knowledge, conative knowledge, needs no words or other such devices, for it is the form of knowledge born of direct personal experience. So it is that conative knowledge is also known as experiential knowledge. Cognitive and experiential knowledge both have their roots in reality, but reality is complex, and complexity is more of a barrier to cognitive knowledge than it is to experiential knowledge, for when we seek cognitive knowledge of a thing, that is, understanding of it, the knowledge we gain of that thing is understanding only of its manifestations, which is not knowledge of the thing itself.
    We may seek to understand a thing, rather than to experience it, because, in a world beset with man made dangers, it is frequently safer to understand than to experience.
    Tao is not man made, and there is nothing in it to fear. So it is that we may experience Tao without fear. When we cease to seek cognitive knowledge, that is, cease to seek understanding of a thing, we can gain experiential knowledge of that thing. This is why it is said that understanding Tao is not the same as knowing Tao; that understanding Tao is only to know that which it manifests, and that knowing Tao is to be one with the universal principle which is Tao. This is to say that knowledge of Tao is not the same as understanding Tao. To know Tao is to experience both Tao and the manifestations of that universal principle. As human beings, we are born as manifestations of Tao.

    If this seems complex, the reason is because Tao is both simple and complex. It is complex when we try to understand it, and simple when we allow ourselves to experience it. Trying to understand Tao is like closing the shutters of a window before looking for a shadow. We might close the shutters to prevent anyone from discovering our treasure, but the same shutters prevent the moonlight from entering the room. All there is in the room is darkness, and in total darkness we cannot find the shadow, no matter how hard or diligently we seek.
    We call one thing a shadow, and another darkness, but the shadow is darkness, and the darkness shadow, for in reality, both darkness and shadow are absence of light, yet we call one shadow and the other darkness. The shadow is darkness in the midst of light, but within total darkness, the shadow seems to disappear, for darkness is a shadow within shadows. We may think that the shadow has been destroyed when all light is removed, but it has not been wiped away; in reality it has grown, but we need light even to see that form of darkness which we call a shadow.

    Such is the pursuit of the universal principle called Tao, that if we seek to understand it, we prevent the very means by which it may be found, for the only way in which we might find Tao is through the experience of Tao. We find Tao when we do not seek it, and when we seek it, it leaves us, just as the silver moonlight leaves the room when we close the shutters. We find and know Tao when we allow ourselves to find and know it, just as the moonlight returns when we allow it to return.

    We do not need to seek Tao as we seek physical treasures such as jade or gold. We do not need to seek Tao as we seek such treasures as fame or titles. We do not need to seek the treasure of Tao, for although the greatest of treasures, it is also the most common. Perhaps it is because it is so common that so few men find it; they seek it only in mysterious and secret places, in chasms and caves, and in the workplace of the alchemist. The Tao is not hidden in these places, and is hidden only from those who frequent and inhabit them, secretively, and with the shutters closed.

    Just as darkness may be known as the absence of light, so too may light be known as the absence of darkness. When we experience darkness and light as having the same source, we are close to the Tao, for Tao is the source of both darkness and light, just as it is also the source of all other natural things. When we experience ourselves as part of Tao, as a shadow or reflection of the universal principle, we have found it, for it is said that "Experience of Tao is Tao".
    — The Tao Te Ching (An Introduction by Stan Rosenthal)

    .
  • Why doesn't the "mosaic" God lead by example?


    First, you're saying the same thing I am only with a different conclusion. That is, we perceive God according to our human perspectives but we interpret according to our expectations of our ideals. It doesn't answer the question of what the right perspective is and why.

    Secondly, you haven't shown God to be absolute in power and wisdom, why?

    Thirdly, why do people keep saying that God has saved humanity. In what way is the salvation manifest? Because, even after the flood, sin is still a part of humanity.

    Lastly, William Lane Craig isn't applying logic to his "Euthyphro Dilemma" because he has premises with no foundation which he gives his own subjective interpretations of. For, example, from that link you've given, he says that,
    (6) Therefore God’s nature is good neither because of the way He happens to be nor because of His fitness with reference to an external standard of goodness.
    which is analogous to a previous statement,
    So, the theist tries to split the horns of the dilemma by saying that God is necessarily good, and that the source and standard of the Good is God’s very nature.

    and
    (5) So, by (1), (3) & (4), it follows that God has the same moral character in every possible world.

    So, my question is this,
    God is good. And that goodness is by His nature. And He always acts in accordance with that nature. Therefore, when He sets down laws one assumes they must be directed towards that goodness. Why then would He not obey such laws? If God's standard of goodness is His own nature, by not abiding by them, He is showing that, either His laws aren't divine or He just overestimated himself beyond His true capabilities.

    Now, supposing those laws are for humans to follow but not God, how are we supposed to learn the value of those laws or of the goodness in them when God doesn't seem too concerned to abide by them?

    My point is, it seems we (humans) value humanity more than God does.
  • Time-Space-Energy conundrum
    @BrianW seem to have been affected by the same energy spike bouncing around the solar system. Hopefully they will recover soon.Bitter Crank

    I don't know what that means but I think there's something logical in that query.
  • Time-Space-Energy conundrum
    To get all meta, one problem with this scenario is that the speed of light would be the same in this universe as it would be in ours.T Clark

    Not necessarily. Our light is just luminous energy expelled from certain interactions of form-configurations. That other universe would have theirs, too.
  • On Buddhism
    Would you be surprised to learn that reincarnation is not a Buddhist teaching?

    "Reincarnation" normally is understood to be the transmigration of a soul to another body after death. There is no such teaching in Buddhism--a fact that surprises many people, even some Buddhists One of the most fundamental doctrines of Buddhism is anatta, or anatman--no soul or no self. There is no permanent essence of an individual self that survives death, and thus Buddhism does not believe in reincarnation in the traditional sense, such as the way it is understood in Hinduism.
    - https://www.learnreligions.com/reincarnation-in-buddhism-449994

    What Reincarnation is Not

    Reincarnation is not a simple physical birth of a person; for instance, John being reborn as a cat in the next life. In this case John possesses an immortal soul which transforms to the form of a cat after his death. This cycle is repeated over and over again. Or if he is lucky, he will be reborn as a human being. This notion of the transmigration of the soul definitely does not exist in Buddhism.
    - https://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/reincarnation.htm
  • Beauty is Rational
    ON BEAUTY

    AND a poet said, Speak to us of Beauty.
    And he answered:
    Where shall you seek beauty, and how shall you find her unless she herself be your way and your guide?
    And how shall you speak of her except she be the weaver of your speech?
    The aggrieved and the injured say, "Beauty is kind and gentle. Like a young mother half–shy of her own glory she walks among us."
    And the passionate say, "Nay, beauty is a thing of might and dread. Like the tempest she shakes the earth beneath us and the sky above us."
    The tired and the weary say, "Beauty is of soft whisperings. She speaks in our spirit. Her voice yields to our silences like a faint light that quivers in fear of the shadow."
    But the restless say, "We have heard her shouting among the mountains. And with her cries came the sound of hoofs, and the beating of wings and the roaring of lions."
    At night the watchmen of the city say, "Beauty shall rise with the dawn from the east."
    And at noontide the toilers and the wayfarers say, "We have seen her leaning over the earth from the windows of the sunset."
    In winter say the snow–bound, "She shall come with the spring leaping upon the hills."
    And in the summer heat the reapers say, "We have seen her dancing with the autumn leaves, and we saw a drift of snow in her hair."
    All these things have you said of beauty, Yet in truth you spoke not of her but of needs unsatisfied, And beauty is not a need but an ecstasy.
    It is not a mouth thirsting nor an empty hand stretched forth, But rather a heart inflamed and a soul enchanted.
    It is not the image you would see nor the song you would hear, But rather an image you see though you close your eyes and a song you hear though you shut your ears.
    It is not the sap within the furrowed bark, nor a wing attached to a claw, But rather a garden for ever in bloom and a flock of angels for ever in flight.
    People of Orphalese, beauty is life when life unveils her holy face. But you are life and you are the veil.
    Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror. But you are eternity and you are the mirror.
    — Kahlil Gibran (From 'The Prophet')
  • Beauty is Rational
    Basically, I am trying to understand what he means by love is rational because it is beautiful and you can know something is truly beautiful or not by thinking about it, but not by feeling or seeing.Sameer

    Imo I think Plato is trying to say that love is not a means of gratification of our sensual nature and that true beauty can only be realised when we apply rationale, i.e., true beauty is that which satisfies every aspect of our being-ness, not just particular functions of it. In other words, true beauty is beyond physical form (which is to be seen) and beyond mere feelings (which we seek to gratify through indulging our desires). So, by applying philosophy, one realises that beauty is an expression of the greater life manifesting through people and therefore to appreciate its value means understanding its provenance and responding accordingly.
  • Are science and religion compatible?
    Knowledge is knowledge.

    It doesn't matter whether it's science or religion. They're all trying to give us information with some kind of utility in our lives. So, what if the delivery isn't the best - religion is not a joke, so it's ok to miss the punchline; and what if it doesn't appeal to our hearts or explain the personal (subjective) - science is not reason or common sense, we still have to apply our thinking abilities despite the experiments.

    I don't know if it's the fear that if we're wrong then we've failed or something much more primal than that, like fear of the dark, or the unknown, but there is a need to stop bulshitting ourselves.
    Most people haven't conducted scientific experiments for themselves to be able to say they trust scientists. Most people accept on faith that scientists know what they're doing. Try applying that to religion, spirituality or metaphysics - what do we get? And, why the difference?

    The answer is simple - they target the personal. How come meditation wasn't deemed scientific (until recently, if that) when it's been known for thousands of years that it is useful? Why don't we accept qi (or prana) when the evidence of bio-energies (bio-electrical/bio-magnetic/bio-electro-magnetic) are so obvious in our physical mechanics or so readily acceptable to our intuitions?
    It's because we're afraid. Unlike science which is all about the external, religion (spirituality and metaphysics) direct greater influence to the inner person (the psyche). That's why we don't question faith, because if we're wrong then it might mean failure, loss (death). And we hate loss (death), by a lot. Unfortunately, we fear it even more.
  • Why doesn't the "mosaic" God lead by example?
    are you saying that Islam follows the OT (the 5 books of Moses and the Mosaic traditions)?Hanover

    Yeah. I know they follow the ten commandments and also most of the laws stated in those five books by Moses.

    In some places, they still try to apply laws such as:- stoning adulterers to death, cutting the arm of a thief, etc.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    Let's say that in this 'reality', there are no laws that are set in stone, but rather some beings have created these laws through their will, and they can change them through their will.leo

    Reality/existence begins with those beings themselves.

    If we know what they are then what are they? Do you have a list, or they can't be expressed in words?leo

    From a different thread I posted this:
    I think if one finds the characteristics that are ever-present in reality/existence then one gets a much better definition of what that reality/existence is. So far I have - identity, activity, force/influence, form/space, time.

    [1.] Identity - Basically, we can't deny something and we can't affirm nothing. Therefore, every conversation, information, knowledge or understanding about anything begins with the identity of a something.

    [2.] Activity - At the very least, the something that is fundamental to everything, call it energy/god/life or whatever, must be performing the action of being. It must be representing itself to itself (internal characteristics) and to others (external influences). Else, there would be no such considerations.

    [3.] Force/Influence - This is just the ability and capacity to be and to express that being-ness.

    [4.] Form/Space - This is defined by the field, range or extent of activity or force/influence by any identity.

    [5.] Time - This is the rate of activity or relative activity. It could be current activity vs past activity, a particular designation of form/space in comparison to another, certain configurations relative to others, etc.
    BrianW

    The above is according to my own investigations. And, I think there could be a way to state them in terms of the laws manifest in those characteristics/qualities. For example, a law of identity, activity, space, etc.

    Bottom line is, you don't have to accept my opinions but I hope they help you to formulate yours.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    But is your certainty on this a rule or a law? And if it is a rule, how can you know that gravity is a law, and thus that we will never find a way to disable gravity in the future?leo

    Like I said in the succeeding statements,
    If gravity is not absolute, then it must be a function of an absolute law.BrianW
    Also,
    Of them, we know they are not laws because, even though they endure, they are fluid in terms of their application/operation. Often we can work around them, modify them and even discard them in favour of others depending on our progression towards our goals.BrianW

    Therefore, gravity still remains gravity, no matter what.

    What do you mean exactly by reality/existence is absolute? There are plenty of things we used to call reality that we now call imagination, and plenty of things that we used to called imagination that we now call reality, and different people have different views on what is real and what isn't.leo

    The fundamental truth must be that, "REALITY/EXISTENCE IS." (Others would substitute reality/existence with other identities or designations, but that truth holds regardless.) This is because, contrary to that truth, no amount of knowledge, wisdom, philosophy, science, language, etc, etc, could have a foundation with which to begin or operate. Therefore, the laws which establish reality/existence (which I refer to as laws of nature or natural laws) are absolute because they express that fundamental state.

    Imagination is, fundamentally, a part of reality. It only differs from reality when we assign different meanings or applications to those words. What I mean is that, imagination is a function of our mental faculty, which is real. There are no illusions outside of reality/existence because every activity, function, operation, etc, is tied to some aspect of reality/existence as an expression of that reality/existence.

    I wouldn't say it is impossible that we live in a world governed by absolute laws, but do you acknowledge that if we live in such a world we can't know what these laws are? Otherwise if we know what they are, that means we know that they will keep being valid in the future, and how could we know that? So if we can't know what they are, is it useful to make a distinction between laws and rules? And if somehow we can know what they are, that means we have scientific principles (rules) that are in fact laws, and then again is it useful to make a distinction between laws and rules?leo

    We know what they are because they are identical in the smallest (most limited) as they are in the greatest sense (the absolute). They operate in us just as they do the whole universe. Though, we cannot match the activity or operation of those laws in terms of quantity, we can certainly improve the quality expressed through us. Also, we don't need to know everything, just to accept what is. For example, the art of propelling projectiles had been mastered to quite a significant degree even before the science of gravity. We don't need to know everything in the universe, just enough about what is in our environment to be able to develop the capacity to navigate everywhere else. And, paramount to that, are lessons on what and how to learn. I think Kant expressed it as,
    Know Thyself.

    We can't run marathons before we learn to walk, and we can't uncover the mystery of the birth of our universe before we understand our own. I think that would be obvious if ambition didn't blind us. Also, before we learn rules, we must be able to develop codes of interrelation and operation, that is, discipline (of which, science is one of those; just as are the moral guidelines, the constitutions, etc). After that, we can work to understand how to operate rules and principles regarding extracting utility from the resources around us, with respect to greater unity and harmony. And as we improve our deftness at that, then absolute laws will become more and more apparent. It is no coincidence that in a world with greater moral values and realisation of human unity and harmony, as ours is in comparison to one or two millennia ago, there would be greater advances in knowledge. However, we are still a ways to go towards achieving the goals we have set out to -> end world hunger, eliminate bias such as gender bias, eradicate diseases and physical suffering, etc, etc.

    What I'm saying is, if you don't see the interconnection between the laws, rules and codes, as I have stated, then you are bound to have a problem with them. There is no real separation from each other and they kind of build into one another from different perspectives as reality/existence operates. The absolute laws express quantity (relativity) through processes I designate as rules which in turn can only be of value in our lives through the discipline of codes. In turn, our understanding ("quality") develops in reverse from the codes to the rules to the laws. They all work together from the fundamental/absolute state towards the limited/relative states and then back again in response towards the absolute.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    But you could assume that Einstein's theory of gravity is complete, it is precisely this assumption that leads astrophysicists/cosmologists to suppose the existence of dark matter and dark energy, the fact that without them Einstein's gravity doesn't match what we observe in galaxies, but with them it does.leo

    Not quite. Einstein's theories are still highly hypothetical since he gave no definitives on the relations between quantum phenomena, time, gravity, etc. In fact, this aligns with the OP's idea of rules having a fluid nature and depending on our application of them. And, also, of rules helping us cooperate with laws of nature.

    So maybe what you mean is that what is going to happen is already written into nature as natural laws, whereas our scientific theories are only approximations of these laws and are potentially faillible?leo

    * [potentially fallible limited]
    I believe this is another way to express my opinion.

    But what if in the future we manage to create a device that makes two planets repel one another instead of attract one another, that means we could do away with gravity. How would we know that this is impossible? And then how would we know what is law and what isn't?leo

    The device would still not alter gravity. Machines (rockets) which move against the Earth's gravity have not disabled gravity, merely employed the use of certain operations allowed within the purview of the law of gravity. I am certain that, even in that supposed repulsion, gravity would still be at work and any momentary hitch in such a function would be met by the corresponding response from the present influences of gravity.

    It could be that gravity works in some specific way now, and that at some point in the future it will start working differently. But then you could always say that the true law specifies how it works throughout the history of the universe, and that a law that doesn't always work is not a real law. But there is still the problem of determining what is law and what isn't, unless you're ok with saying that there are laws but we don't know what they are? Otherwise if we knew these laws, then some scientific theories (rules) would actually be laws.leo

    By laws of nature I mean the operations which establish reality/existence. Reality/existence is absolute, therefore its laws must be absolute, too. I get what you're asking, "what if gravity is not absolute?" To that I can only say that, If gravity is not absolute, then it must be a function of an absolute law. This just means that, we are bound to discover greater and/or more comprehensive operations with respect to gravity which would still essentially retain the distinction between laws and rules stated in the OP.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes


    The universe is always changing with respect to the configuration of its components, are its laws always changing in the same regard? Or, in what way could the universe and its laws change?
  • What is progress?


    Can we say that human progress is towards humans and humanity attaining a level/degree where we have mastery over our life mechanism and the environment in which it exists? If so, then it will have to be progress across the board (in as many dimensions as possible).
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    There are 'laws', as you say, that we invent, and we get punished if we break them. And there are 'natural laws' that describe how the universe works, according to our understanding of it, of course! These are opposites. The first type of laws bind us to behave in a particular way. The second type of law is bound by the universe, and if the universe should change, the laws must change to reflect it. Be careful not to confuse the two, or misunderstanding is sure to result!Pattern-chaser

    By my understanding, natural laws operate the universe and can change the universe without the laws themselves changing. In fact, I do not think the natural laws change at all. Is there an instant of natural laws changing?
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes


    So, we're in agreement. Right... ?
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    Legally, codes are laws. I'm not sure what alternate sense of "code" you might be thinking of--I suppose something like the set of principles that some organizations have? In that sense, codes are the same as rules.

    If you break a law or rule, it usually results in some form of punishment, up to excommunication (from society, from a place of employment, from an organization, etc.). It's up to each individual whether they want to risk the punishment in question.
    Terrapin Station

    I get it, and as I said, my explanations may not be semantically appropriate or definitive, especially with the multiple meanings we assign to some words. The difference in my use of the words law, rules and codes is just to express perspective. Again, my explanations are not definitive. However, I can be certain that it is possible to break the laws of a country and escape punishment. The same does not apply to natural law because its consequences are immediate and inevitable. Action and reaction, according to natural law, are instantaneous.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    To make sure I understand you correctly, "law" is often defined as a "system of rules which a particular country or community recognizes as regulating the actions of its members and which it may enforce by the imposition of penalties", you would classify that as a code and not as a law right?leo

    Right.

    Another thing, in your view what's the difference between natural law and scientific law? It seems that you classify "natural laws" as laws, and "scientific laws" as rules.leo

    Yeah, this is pretty flimsy on my part. However, I used "scientific laws" because that's how they are designated. However, they are not laws in the sense of natural laws.

    For instance why would gravity be considered a natural law and not a scientific law? Are you saying for instance that Newton's law of gravitation and Einstein's general relavity are scientific laws and not natural laws, whereas the observations we make that things tend to fall to the ground count as a natural law and not a scientific law? I don't see a difference myself, in both cases observations are compiled and generalized into a principle. Also, the terms "scientific law" and "natural law" are often used interchangeably by some people.leo

    Newton's and Einstein's laws of gravity are not complete by themselves. While they do refer to the operation of gravity, they only designate the part which we understand. For example, the new investigations into dark matter and dark energy hint that these may actually be the fundamental aspects which determine the action of gravity in nature. So far, science can only teach us gravity as we have encountered it, but our experiences are too limited. We know there's more to gravity than we have discovered but we can only work with it to certain extent. This is why I refer to the scientific as rules or principles while the natural are laws. Don't think of my explanations as definitive, they are just a means of expressing the difference. Bottom line is, language can use one word for as many meanings as is acceptable.

    Newton's law of gravitation does fit the description, it can be said to have been modified or discarded in favour of other scientific laws, whereas the underlying concept of gravity has perdured, so you might say this is what makes gravity a "law" and Newton's gravitation a "rule". But it is not inconceivable that in the future we might manage to create some anti-gravity device, and then gravity would stop being "unavoidable" and so it would stop being a law the way you defined it. So it seems to me that we can't really know whether we're dealing with a "law" or a "rule", maybe what we interpret as a law will turn out to be a rule, and maybe what we interpret as a rule will turn out to be never modified or discarded, which would make it a law. So maybe the distinction you make between law and rule is not warranted.leo

    It will be impossible to do away with gravity (the law of nature), however, Newton's laws of gravity (which I designate as rules) have already been modified especially with respect to quantum mechanics. Our scientific rules will always be improved on because our knowledge is never perfect/absolute. That is a certainty.
  • Law vs Rules vs Codes
    * The asterix above shows a change made several minutes after the initial statement, Please bear with it.
  • What's it all made of?
    The philosophical definition of spiritualism; the doctrine that the spirit exists as distinct from matter, or that spirit is the only reality.Razorback kitten

    Not quite.

    As one who subscribes to spirituality (without religion), I sincerely beg to differ on account that your over-simplification of spiritualism has excluded a key aspect of its identity. Spiritualism can define spirit as distinct from matter but, it always insists that matter and spirit are two sides of the same coin. And just as the heads and tails of a coin co-exist though are distinctly different, so are spirit and matter.

    Even in the domain of spiritual knowledge, spirit and matter are more complex in their interactions than a mere distinction in their definitions. In fact, they meet the same difficulties as consciousness and perception. For example:

    22. Matter is generally defined as being "that which has extension," "that which can make an impression upon our senses," "that which possesses impenetrability." Are these definitions correct? - From your point of view they are correct, because you can only define in accordance with what you know. But matter exists in states which are unknown to you. It may be, for instance, so ethereal and subtle as to make no impression upon your senses; and yet it is still matter, although it would not be such for you. — Allan Kardec - The Spirits' Book

    What definition can you give of matter? - Matter is the element which enchains spirit, the instrument which serves it, and upon which, at the same time, it exerts its action. (From this point of view it may be said that matter is the agent, the intermediary, through which, and upon which, spirit acts.) — Allan Kardec - The Spirits' Book

    23. What is spirit? - The intelligent principle of the universe. — Allan Kardec - The Spirits' Book


    And, from Emanuel Swedenborg's books, one also gathers that, residents of the various realms of the spirit world are as tangible and material to each other and their environment as human beings are with regard to physical stuff.

    As a hypothetical example, we could put it as, it is possible that what are ghosts to us may not be such to each other or to a different sphere of vibration (and I'm not saying that ghosts exist).
  • What's it all made of?
    What's any energy, regardless of perspective, made of?Razorback kitten

    I think that's the one thing we can't reconcile. Perspective is an ever-present factor in everything we know and when we try to escape it, we can't seem to come up with anything definitive. Even conceptual stuff are tied in with perspective. So, I think the best we can have is a concept that kind of connects or represents as many factors as possible but, even then, whether someone can see that inter-connectivity or not depends on their perspective.
  • What's it all made of?
    What about perspective? Somethings which are not matter to us may be matter to others, for example, magnetic energies can oppose each other as surely as solid objects, the same with light, etc. (In this case, matter refers to energies which allow tangibility, sensibility, recognition and response, etc.)

    Perhaps, it's about the relation of energy to each other that gives the properties and characteristics we think are distinctive and constant while, in fact, outside the particular relations/interactions, those same energies display other quite varied properties and characteristics.
  • Atheist Take on Reincarnation and Karma


    I think it depends on your understanding of reincarnation and karma, and then whether you accept it as real and as having value in the logical sense. Personally, I do.
  • What's it all made of?
    I get what you mean but there is a truth to all things and regardless of whether that thing is this or that, it still matters to me that it be defined.Razorback kitten

    I think a definition is just an organisation of characteristics and qualities and their significance.

    You have to admit, accepting energy for it's qualities hasn't brought much to the table.Razorback kitten

    On the contrary, it has given science a perspective that is relative to everything. Also, it allows us to build on an idea that is more fixed than others, that way we don't have to undo the previous structure just to cope with new information, for example, with the realisation of the strangeness of quantum mechanics.

    A label without a proper definition is meaningless. And we can't have a proper definition without the right perspective of its characteristics and qualities.
  • What's it all made of?
    It isn't enough for me to accept it on its influence in reality. To me, it seems the same as saying energy.

    How about NOTHINGness, just empty space. Interacting with other empty space, until SOMETHING is happening out of nothing. I believe you really can make something out of nothing.
    Razorback kitten

    It's all the same no matter the name we call it. Even in your analogy, the empty space is interacting and out of that a configuration called "something" arises. In the end, the narrative is all the same despite the different names and only the characteristics or qualities we assign to that fundamental state of reality/existence really determines what we're referring to. The rest is just perspective to help us understand where everything diverges from and converges to.
  • What's it all made of?
    I would like to hear some ideas about what you think matter is made of.Razorback kitten

    To answer that question I usually ask myself,
    what can never cease from being?

    I think if one finds the characteristics that are ever-present in reality/existence then one gets a much better definition of what that reality/existence is. So far I have - identity, activity, force/influence, form/space, time.

      [1.] Identity - Basically, we can't deny something and we can't affirm nothing. Therefore, every conversation, information, knowledge or understanding about anything begins with the identity of a something.

      [2.] Activity - At the very least, the something that is fundamental to everything, call it energy/god/life or whatever, must be performing the action of being. It must be representing itself to itself (internal characteristics) and to others (external influences). Else, there would be no such considerations.

      [3.] Force/Influence - This is just the ability and capacity to be and to express that being-ness.

      [4.] Form/Space - This is defined by the field, range or extent of activity or force/influence by any identity.

      [5.] Time - This is the rate of activity or relative activity. It could be current activity vs past activity, a particular designation of form/space in comparison to another, certain configurations relative to others, etc.

    So far, this seems to tick all my boxes.
  • What good is a good god, when people want an evil god?
    Unless the world goes esoteric ecumenist like Jesus was.Gnostic Christian Bishop

    Thanks for mentioning this. I hadn't given it a name, but I kept telling my friends that Jesus wasn't in the least bit "christian" or judaist like the religions may try to portray. He knew of the biblical teachings but he chose to express himself more as an esotericist than a "religionist". In fact, the reason the new testament bible teachings are so different from the old testament is because of his perspectives which became or were used to reform the older, grosser expressions of religion.

    Anyway, thanks a lot for this.
  • Why doesn't the "mosaic" God lead by example?
    Of course, they do this. In school I was not allowed to defend myself physically. The teachers, at least many of them would if they were attacked on the street. A fight between kids, both kids got suspended, period. Parents can give orders which children must follow. They on the other hand need not follow the orders of children. Police can decide to put me in the back of a car in handcuffs and cart me off overnight. I cannot decide to do that to them. They can even make and error but not be punished if they followed their rules. I cannot do it to them even in many situations where it would not be an error. There is no situation where I can kill a lot of people including innocent ones. Governments and military leaders can do this. I am mentioning examples where I think most people see this and most people consider this to often be correct, though sometimes it can be wrong.Coben

    I don't see any form of discipline in any of those examples. In fact, it's quite the opposite - cases of indiscipline. They are good points on reactions, accountability and responsibility. That is, people's reactions to a given set of rules. Usually, those who know that they can get away with stuff if they're not caught, they do that stuff when they can. Others don't care, they do what they believe is right for them despite the consequences (some kids still fight in school regardless of suspensions and expulsions), and so on. All that would be proof of indiscipline. In terms of religions and morality, it's the inadequacy of which I'm pointing to and which is prevalent among most adherents of these religions despite teachings to the contrary.

    Discipline means realising, accepting and walking a particular path, not reacting in fear of repercussions or misbehaving due to lack of appropriate accountability and such. Response due to fear is one of the biggest factors in these Abrahamic/Mosaic religions. Can you imagine how much adherence there would be to religious moral guidelines if the threat of hell was withdrawn?
    Consider nowadays, when parents don't use corporal punishment, we see a lot of defiance to orders; same with police, now that accountability and certain responsibilities are expected and demanded of them, they behave with more regard for those they encounter, culprits or not.
    You haven't demonstrated discipline, rather the very opposite of that.

    All you have given are cases of indiscipline based on lack of accountability and responsibility by those with some degree of power over others. And, this is also one of the points I've been making - that, without reasonable critique, and expectation of responsibility and accountability from God, His actions are no different from humans. And, my primary issue with that is, God, who knows better, should act better.
  • There is no Real You.
    Then, if the universe is real, I am real.
  • Why doesn't the "mosaic" God lead by example?


    Ok, I think we're digressing from the original point: If God did as humans do, and played the deniability card or masked His actions under probabilities and possibilities, then I wouldn't have a problem with it. But, as presented in the respective scriptures, God's actions are definitive and intentional and God is depicted as absolute in power and knowledge. I'm not referring to cosmic/universal situations, just the human interactions, only activities within the human range of abilities and the fact that God seems to act against the standards He wants to set.
    Can anyone impart discipline which they do not adhere to? The answer, from human experience, has been a resounding NO. If only that God possessed that knowledge.

    How about this: In the Bible, 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 New International Version (NIV), it says:-
    4 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

    After reading that I'm thinking, there's no way the biblical God could claim to be love, right... ?

    I'm a big believer in circumspect and perspective but I'm having a hard time reconciling God with the definition of love given in that verse.

    Ok, so, yeah, God is superior to humans and has reasons and purposes beyond what humans could comprehend. But, still, this is a human 'playground' with human interactions. He should know best of all the consequences of His actions as well as our reactions from His influences. The narratives of the respective scriptures are not just a testament of God's might but more pronouncedly of His failure to reach human hearts and minds. With all that power and knowledge, one would assume, expect, nay believe in automatic success... how terribly mistaken they would be.
  • Why doesn't the "mosaic" God lead by example?
    The whole point of my argument is we may not be in a postion to know. Just as a child might not know. Just as a civilian might not know what was necessary. Just as a non-expert might not know.Coben

    My personal experience is different because I used to call out my parents on their nonsense, for example, I asked my dad how he thought he could impart to me the notion that smoking was bad when I knew for certain that he began smoking while in high school. In the end, he fessed up that such lessons were an attempt to have one's kids do better than the parents but were not necessarily definitive lessons on morality.

    And, for the record, children do know. It's just that their knowledge processes (conscious and sub/un-conscious minds) have yet a ways to go in terms of integration, but they always suspect or intuit certain hints about their parent's actions.



    I'm not saying there isn't or couldn't be another side to this coin but, any reasonable being should hold everything to proper analysis and critique. Not only do we question our parents but we also often act out against them when they try to play two-face. From my evaluation of religions, morality (especially from those of the Abrahamic/Mosaic religions), I find a near perfect analogy with respect to its failings as I observe with human parenting. Coincidence... ? I think not.
  • The Universe Cannot Have Existed ‘Forever’
    What says we aren't the drunk looking for his keys at the lamp post because that is where the light is?JosephS

    We totally are. :chin: