So the effects are exaggerated, but there. — Coben
And the point that I was making was that that point misses the point, — S
My argument, by contrast, is also valid but both of its premises are true. — Bartricks
That speech, by way of advertisement, generally speaking, is effective, or powerful, or however you want to word it so long as you don't completely get the wrong end of the stick, which is not at all to suggest that it's totally effective or that it's guaranteed to result in substantial success for a business. His point is so obvious it's hard to see how anyone could miss it or disagree, but I think that some people here are too entrenched in their positions. — S
And, yes, I realize people can believe false things for long periods of time. But you'd think experts, who they tend to consult with, would have let them know that companies that do not advertise do just as well as those that do, and the incredible benefit of saving that money would have led a number of corporations, generally fascinated with money, to try and that confirm this. — Coben
That doesn't work as an attempted refutation. That some businesses overestimate the effect that advertising will have to the detriment of their business doesn't do anything at all against his point. — S
No, it's not patently absurd to say that their words altered the world, so long as that's not interpreted in a silly way. Words do have an influence, as you say, and that entails that they're causal, because again, I don't interpret influence in a silly way. — S
Insatiable and unfulfilled desires are painful by their very nature. — schopenhauer1
The advertising industry illustrates how very widespread this estimation is, — unenlightened
And that is not only false, but patently absurd, as the counterexamples I've previously raised in response to this ludicrous claim of yours demonstrate. Karl Marx, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, Socrates, William Shakespeare, Martin Luther, the Four Evangelists... none of the aforementioned were sorcerers. They were just world-renowned wordsmiths. — S
It's looking at the big picture and seeing a uniform principle. — schopenhauer1
So all of this is wrong about Schopenhauer's view. Schopenhauer's ideal would probably be something like Nirvana- a complete lack of lack. I've said this before about Schop- his world would be one with absolutely nothing or absolutely everything. There would be no deprived states. All being or all nothing. There is no becoming or flux. Thus, a world "worth living" in a Nietzschean "suffering makes things worth it" isn't even in the radar of this kind of holistic metaphysics. That's intra-worldly affairs, and Schop's metaphysics is the "world" itself. — schopenhauer1
Even if one were to concede that something like hunger is bad, — S
The fact that we are in a deprived state = suffering. It matters not what people evaluate about this or that actual experience. In this model, it is acknowledged that we are always in a sense becoming and never fully being. Becoming has a quality of not fully satisfied. — schopenhauer1
Again, why does the guy grab something from the fridge? Why isn't he satisfied without doing so? Is it something related to a deficiency in hunger, thirst, comfort, entertainment? — schopenhauer1
Right, hunger.. Let's start there. In the Schopenhauer view, the "negative" state is that which is not at some sort of satiation- to be deprived. — schopenhauer1
The problem is they aren't commensurable per se. One is about the universe, one is about human nature. You never answered, why is someone going to the fridge from the couch? I know funny question. — schopenhauer1
I am enlightened, meaning I see the truth, and on this forum and this thread, I speak the truth, and you're coming back with pseudo philosophical BS. How can I be egoic if I am enlightened? If you want to question the veracity of this claim, call me out on a post and let's talk. — PhilCF
Well that's a weak argument — Bartricks
its first premise is garbled. — Bartricks
Note, you need to say that if morality is YOUR mental dispositions, otherwise the second bit simply isn't true and the premise is false. — Bartricks
It's not a matter of opinion as to what's reasonable otherwise there could be no basis for reasonable discussion. — Janus
Something that is so structural, it is not reflected on, but runs our lives. — schopenhauer1
There are reasonable and unreasonable definitions. — Janus
Yes, do you understand that you're not a god and your opinions don't determine what's true. — Bartricks
So, what you need to do is construct an argument that has "If I value something, it is necessarily morally valuable" as its conclusion. I — Bartricks
Once more, my premise 2 says this: "If I value something it is not necessarily morally valuable" — Bartricks
Why do you keep talking like you're an authority on these things? You thought my argument was invalid, didn't you? Be honest. And then you decided it was valid. — Bartricks
That's just wrong. there is a common definition of morality, that it is to be concerned with personal interrelations. To be unconcerned about social harmony, general well-being and happiness is to be unconcerned about personal interrelations. Using people for one's own gratification, for example, is a one way street, not an interrelation. — Janus
Tell you what, I'll just think you understand it, and then you will. That's how the world works according to Terrapin, isn't it? — Bartricks
It is deductively valid and apparently sound. It has exactly the same form as my argument - the one you're trying to take issue with. — Bartricks
No, a person who didn't not value those things would not be a morally motivated person, by definition. — Janus
So, to recap, you now accept that my argument is valid. — Bartricks