Right. By definition then if one accepts nominalism. — Noah Te Stroete
that doesn’t answer the question of HOW individuality happens. — Noah Te Stroete
And what was nominalism an answer to? You said “where nominalism begins.” What was the question? — Noah Te Stroete
Can you remind us what nominalism is in your own words? — Noah Te Stroete
But do you think they are different in the way two things of the same type are different, i.e. two oranges, or are they different in the way things of different kinds are different, i.e. an apple and an orange? — Pantagruel
It depends on how you define "theory." If you mean a hypothetical structure, then, no, it is not a theory. If you mean a way of organizing experience, then yes, noting that certain things (trees) are equally capable of evoking the concept <tree> does organize our experience. — Dfpolis
maybe what I experience as consciousness and what you experience as consciousness are not the same? — Pantagruel
Imagine you watch a great movie, you are so in it that you lose your sens of self, you lose your awareness of yourself. Same principle, imagine an AI having some qualitative experiences but doesn't have any mental capacity to be aware of it .. can't have realization, perception, or knowledge. — Basko
Yes, trees are often just present — Dfpolis
Well, if source A relies on corroboration from source B, which relies on corroboration from source C, etc.,
Unless you are explicitly saying that there is some 'foundational set' of authoritative sources which all mutually validate one another. — Pantagruel
So my first question is: Is an authoritative source sufficient evidence? — Pantagruel
It is per decision that you based your policy on actions that will impact a living being capable of giving consent in the future based on statistical abnormality though right? — khaled
Cool and you define "abnormal" in a culturally evolved sense? As in whatever society decides is abnormal? — khaled
Is genetically modifying sperm and eggs in such a way that the final result of that modification is that a child will be born with 8 broken limbs on birth morally problematic? — khaled
That is what "genetically modifying a child" means yes. — khaled
I take it it IS morally permissable to genetically modify a child — khaled
t could also mean "I don't have a problem with it" as in it is ethically permissable but it IS a moral issue. — khaled
I am asking which fertilization counts as: Moral issue but it has been determined that the act is permissalble or not moral issue at all — khaled
You can't simultaneously complain that I misread what you say and also that I ask for clarification. — khaled
So if it so happens that the WAY you genetically engineer a child to have 8 broken limbs on birth doesn't involve interacting with the embryo post fertilization in any way is it morally permissable to genetically modify a child to have 8 broken limbs on birth? — khaled
I didn't ask if you had a problem with it I asked do you even consider it, morally speaking. — khaled
Now how does genetic engineering fall under that category? Because you also said it does previously — khaled
So, now given that fertilization doesn't count as "actions performed on an entity that is currently not capable or granting or withholding consent, but that will likely survive as a consent-capable being?" because the baby doesn't exist as it is occuring, on what ground did you say abnormal genetic engineering is wrong? They are both modifications to sperm or eggs so why is one wrong and the other ok? — khaled
Someone like Terrapin Station is simply going to say something like, "I don't believe harm should be the only consideration or any consideration for moral decision making". — schopenhauer1
Anything other than harm at the procreational decision-making level would be forcing a projected agenda on someone else that would be using them for that agenda. — schopenhauer1
Until natalists can answer why starting negative situations on other's behalf is permissible — schopenhauer1
I don't think the matter is as simple or flippant as you are making this out, — schopenhauer1
This decision affects another person, — schopenhauer1
Creating negative situations for other people, — schopenhauer1
That's not what's written there.... I didn't ask this. — khaled
But I'd say the emphasis on observe-hypothesize-test-revise misses out what's going on in theoretical discussions. The Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies doesn't have observations and tests and so forth. It is largely an argument from the basis of what difficulties are resolved -- towards a more coherent theory.
Surely you'd include this in your notion of science. — Moliere
What is it that makes these activities not-scientific, in your view? — Moliere
If Jill applying any sort of force on Jack that is going to leave a long lasting effect is bad just cuz then it doesn't matter if that force or something else is the cause of Jack's suffering. A and B have nothing to do with causality but if you pick A then what caused Jack's suffering doesn't matter morally. That's what I mean when I say it doesn't matter to debate who's the cause of Jack's suffering. But had you picked B then determining if that force is the cause of Jack's suffering is significant. You picked A so it doesn't matter if Jack suffers or not or what makes him suffer, Jill is still at fault.
I started this whole situation assuming you would have picked B and was trying to understand how you can causally peg a force to someone's suffering directly. You don't have to do that if you picked A though.
So now I guess we're back at where we were like 3 days ago. You consider actions done on living creatures that are currently not capable of giving consent but will become capable of doing so in the future at some point morally considerable. Ergo you didn't think genetically modifying children to suffer is morally permissable. However you set the bar of what counts as "abnormal" alterations at "whatever society dictates is normal or abnormal" which by definition will never make birth abnormal. So if your argument justifying why fertilization (an action done on a living creature that is currently not capable of giving consent but will become capable of doing so in the future at some point) is morally permissable is because society dictates it. And if that is all it takes for something to be morally permissable then there is no chance you'll ever consider birth as morally problematic
I just want to get this point straight. Does fertilization fall under: an action done on a living creature that is currently not capable of giving consent but will become capable of doing so in the future at some point?
And if so is your reason for saying it is moral that society has decided it doesn't count as "abnormal"
And if not how is it that fertilization is different from genetic engineering. They are both modifications done on living creatures (sperm and egg) currently incapable of giving consent that will become capable of giving consent later. But you classify one as a modification and the other not — khaled
How unconcious chance produces extremes of fortune thereby creating mutually exclusive worlds of experience, its random nature meaning the most vulnerable may be dealt the worst hands, etc - — Robert Lockhart
