• Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    Obviously you are having a bit of trouble with the language used in this kind of discussion.Frank Apisa

    Unnecessary attack on language skills, which is easily countered by the fact that I hold the highest degree of English language skills within my community of non-English speakers. It's also easily countered by the fact that I don't fall back on using emotionally charged rhetoric when my viewpoints are challenged.

    But I appreciate that you finally step back from the way of writing you did before.

    I call your attention to the fact that

    a) I do not "believe" any gods exist

    ...is not the same as...

    b) I "believe no gods exist."

    They are VERY different...and convey totally different thoughts.

    The "definition" you were making that you say theists mainly use...should not have been "do not believe in God"...but rather "believe God does not exist." (Frankly, I think that distinction is made more often by agnostics than theists.)
    Frank Apisa

    Please explain how the difference between A and B is more than just in their phrasing. They both refer to a "belief" in the non-existence in God or Gods.

    My point was that agnosticism and theism both adhere to a belief, while atheism, by the definition I gave to Daniel Cox is detached from theism and agnosticism through the concept that it does not even acknowledge a question that doesn't have any rational foundation. That atheism needs the question in itself to be a rationally valid concept first before even entertaining the idea of an answer. I.e having a supported hypothesis as a question, not asking something out of thin air. Both theism and agnosticism rely on an acceptance of some kind before holding a position, atheism doesn't hold any position before its a valid question.

    ASIDE: The singular is inappropriate for this kind of discussion. It should be "gods" or "at least one god." The use of "God" as you used it seems to be pointing to one particular god. And the use of "believe in" is off the charts.Frank Apisa

    That's a rather semantic pedantry. It doesn't change lines drawn between theism, agnosticism, and atheism within my argument. "Belief" is what it is, the acceptance of something as true with limited support of it being true. Belief is never true in itself and when it's true it's no longer belief. The term defines itself and cannot be changed into anything other than what it is.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    My position, what I know emphatically is I'm being held in existence by an "Entity" and that "Entity" is holding me in existence. The definition of words can't gain any traction on the experience.Daniel Cox

    Not sure how to respond to this other than that it's hard to use that as a philosophical foundation for any philosophical argument. Philosophical arguments need to be rationally constructed.

    I don't believe in god." Perhaps that person should internalize that in the first-person, and in so doing would never proffer it in the second-person to someone they know rejects that projection?Daniel Cox

    Not entirely sure what you're saying here, so before I answer it, maybe clarify what you actually mean?

    I'm not in charge of another's education. Someone here who holds an opposing view, Tim Wood I think is his name, was challenging me over the part about being held in existence by God. Claimed something about that being my nomenclature and didn't map onto reality.Daniel Cox

    Also not sure about your point here? Need more clarification on your perspective first.

    The space exploring teapot is an unnecessary platonic idea. I'm leaving shortly, after my e-bike is fully charged, to Mt. Rubidoux where I will be passing out flyers for my soap ministry. Flyers with pictures of my Dad putting the Holy Cross on Mt. Rubidoux April 4th, 1963 using Angel #7187. Is it an intrinsic necessity you are made aware of this fact? No. So it is with the teapot.Daniel Cox

    I'm not sure how this relates to Russel's Teapot? The example I gave is an extension of his analogy, showing different points of view from theists, agnostics, and atheists, in order to exemplify a more defined overview of atheism.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    A person who claims adherence to "atheism" will view the other side as lacking proof, but that doesn't instantiate "atheism" any more than God is proven true by claiming "atheism" lacks proof.Daniel Cox

    The interpretation of "atheism" is commonly about atheists demanding proof for something to exist. If you "do not believe in God", which is another interpretation of atheism, mainly made by theists, you need to accept that it is a belief and therefore the opposite, "there is a God", might be true. This would mean that it's rather an agnostic point of view.

    How do you define the difference between an agnostic and an atheist? If there's no difference, there's no reason for there to be separate definitions really. A belief that there is no God will have to accept the idea that it is just a belief and therefore it becomes the same level of unknowable position as a belief in God. It, therefore, becomes more agnostic and is no longer different from atheism.

    That's why atheism isn't really defined by a "belief", which means it's a method of looking at the world. Atheism is about accepting what is, not what is believed. Accepting what is, means you need to prove something in order for it to be accepted to be. That means if there's a theistic idea of a teapot in space between the sun and us, the agnostic will accept that we cannot possibly know if it's there or if it's not there, while the atheist will not even accept the concept before there's proven observations that might provide a hypothesis of there being a teapot. I would say that the definition of atheism is rather clear in comparison to agnosticism and theism.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    Wow...really tough to get rid of you and your "I am better than you" attitudeFrank Apisa

    That's you interpretation of everything said, that's not the stance I'm at. Your wild and personal interpretation is irrelevant to what I actually wrote. And if you're in the position of "getting rid of people" like you say, then you're seriously just underlying how inappropriate you behave in a discussion. Seriously.

    For the record, "the quality of my writing" has gotten me op ed pieces and op ed sized pieces published in major newspapers across the country...including the BIG one...The New York Times. It got me a full page MY TURN in Newsweek Magazine. ALL of which were published without so much as a single comma being changed.Frank Apisa

    Then why are you writing in the way you do? I have never read anything written like the section you wrote just now, which is infantile at best in its rhetoric and I don't even write English as my primary language. I doubt any major publication would allow that type of writing. But if you're published, then please entertain the same level of respectful writing as you do in those publications, because you are seriously not doing it here. And for someone who gets angry about other people writing like they are superior; listing your publications in the manner that you just did is seriously just doing what you hate yourself; the bragging bully trying to claim superiority in the discussion. I'm not the one bragging in all caps here, you are. You.

    So do not give me any of your "I am better than you" shit about quality of writing.Frank Apisa

    I'm not, I'm asking for a respectful writing within the discussion, you're the one who started saying "bullshit" and behaving rather disrespectful. Do not demand respect if you can't show it yourself, that's just pathetic.

    I considered your comments above to be bullshit...and I so described them. It was a shortcut...a cut-to-the-chase kind of thing.Frank Apisa

    You considering something bullshit is not a valid philosophical groundwork for a counter-argument.

    If you want to climb down off your high horse and actually discuss it with me...do it. If, instead, you want to continue to tell me that you are not going to have a discussion with me...BY HAVING A DISCUSSION WITH ME...have a ball.Frank Apisa

    I'm not the one on a high horse here. Your interpretation of a text does not equal me being on a high horse. You, however, brag about how good you are and how I should accept my argument to not hold water against you. I stick to the information I wrote, you actually place yourself on a high horse directly. A serious inability of self-reflection on your part.

    I am enjoying this as much as I would a discussion on the actual topic.Frank Apisa

    I'm not enjoying it, I'm waiting for you to stop behaving like a bully. If you want respect and equality in the discussion, then stop behaving as you do. Respect is earned, you have not earned anything and can't demand respect if you come into the room screaming "bullshit".
  • Thanks
    Yeah, but then you wouldn't get the fun of commenting here and complaining.

    And I wouldn't get the fun of reading these ridiculous threads :razz:
    NKBJ

    Maybe move locked threads like these into a "humor"-section of the forum? :lol:
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?


    Write a post with a better philosophical substance so I have something to work from. I can't work from answers like "bullshit". It's not that it's triggering, it's that it's fundamentally lacking relevant substance and I don't think the quality of your post is enough. You write like you were writing Facebook comments or twitter rants, not having a philosophical discussion.

    If you can't raise the quality of your writing to a point where the discussion is a progression of ideas, you are merely ranting your emotional opinions. If you can't see that it's the way you write and your attitude that's the problem here, you might not have the ability for self-reflection.

    I can't work out well-composed arguments from bullish attitudes and rant-like rhetoric. It's pretty much beneath me and is beneath anyone interested in proper philosophical debate manners.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    You could simply have written, "I don't think my arguments would hold water against you, Frank."

    It would have been more concise...and more truthful.
    Frank Apisa

    Nope, you just don't understand my argument and replies with it being bullshit instead of nuanced argumentation. Your post is not worthy of being a philosophical part of a discussion since you are not even trying to be involved in a back and forth discussion. Now you want me to say my argument doesn't hold up, as agreeing that you know better. Your arrogance and attitude have been seen across this forum and I don't feel there's any reason to involve myself in a discussion with someone at your level. Return with better manners and better philosophical respect and I may entertain having a discussion, until then, I cannot value your post as a relevant counter-point to what I wrote.
  • Thanks
    Some might have profound posts on the first attempt, while others might be at around post 7600 and only want to talk about celebrity pubic hair. It's really a case by case sort of thing.Hanover

    Maybe joining people can get a recommendation to participate with 10-20 posts before posting new topics, but are able to post topics that only moderators can see, meaning that if they post a well-composed topic, moderators can unlock it if viewed as properly formatted, otherwise they are free to post new topics after their post-number is over 10-20?Christoffer
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    If you want to just take that thought and reword it, we'll have a go at a discussion on a higher level.Frank Apisa

    Or you could have better manners and phrase your arguments better so that I could care to value your opinion. Right now, valuing your argument relevant gets lost whenever I see "bullshit" as an answer. So I'll rather wait for other better-mannered people to discuss with and not waste my time on someone who's level of engagement starts with "bullshit".
  • The source of morals
    I think its based on pain and pleasure:

    - Completely right is maximum pleasure and minimum pain for the individual and group.
    - Completely wrong is minimum pleasure and maximum pain for the individual and group.
    Devans99

    Have you read the moral theories I posted before? It's basically based on this value calculus :wink:

    So in the trolley problem, we kill 1 person rather than 5.Devans99

    But if we think long term, how do we know that the one person killed isn't the causal start of something that leads to a cure for cancer? That person's child or they themselves might solve such a cure in the future, meaning that if you kill 5 to save 1, you save more in the long term. This is why the trolley problem becomes problematic. You can apply the mathematical probability that 5 people equals both more good in the present over 1 person killed and that there might be a larger probability that one of those five will cure cancer or be the casual continuation towards it. However, it is not a certainty.

    That's why probability needs to be included if we ought to define what is of most morally positive value to that choice. It might be worse to kill 5 to save 1 because we think that the one person will cure cancer because the probability is higher that saving 5 will lead to that outcome instead. Therefore it's morally responsible to do so, based on the probability of max pleasure, not what is currently so.
  • Thanks
    I get it but some people come here just to ask questions, wich requires a new thread.hachit

    Most questions on this forum have already been asked, so many are unnecessary. But for those that haven't, I still think participation in other threads are healthy for any poster joining, in order to get a feel for the forum and understand the guidelines of posting.

    Maybe joining people can get a recommendation to participate with 10-20 posts before posting new topics, but are able to post topics that only moderators can see, meaning that if they post a well-composed topic, moderators can unlock it if viewed as properly formatted, otherwise they are free to post new topics after their post-number is over 10-20?
  • The source of morals
    Doing the right thing takes willpower because the right thing is often painful in the short term. Exercise, eating healthy, helping others are examples. Contrast with eating sweets - the wrong thing to - is attractive to people of low willpower - because it is short term pleasure in exchange for long term pain.Devans99

    Completely agree that long term is harder, but often tend to focus on a morally better outcome. However, inducing what is morally good or bad in the long term is still what is problematic and needs a method.

    I think perfecting your morals includes adopting a definition of group as 'all sentient life' - leading to respect for all sentient life.Devans99

    Agreed, but within this group, how do you solve the trolley problem? As an example? Moral dilemmas need a method that includes the complexity of many different situations.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?
    Do you realize that is all bullshit?Frank Apisa

    To you perhaps

    It means whatever a person wants it to mean when using it.Frank Apisa

    How do you conclude that to be the true concept of atheism?

    For people who use atheist as a descriptor to claim some sort of intellectual superiority to people who use agnostic (for instance) because the topic is not worth discussing...or that it is a useless topic...is bullshit.Frank Apisa

    You have a fundamentally limited understanding of what I actually wrote, so that's probably the reason your intellectual level is to just spam "bullshit". If that's the level of intellectual rhetoric and discussion you want to exist on, I think it's easy to deduce which is intellectually superior.

    Just sayin

    I would welcome a more philosophical response than "bullshit", if you demand not to be intellectually inferior, as per your own way of defining things.
  • The source of morals
    I think morality could evolve as your community or sense of community evolves.Devans99

    Yes, but this was about the source of morals. The source is emotional, vegetarians evolve morals based on their emotional feedback towards other animals. They also view killing animals for food to be morally wrong. Some of them, extremists, might even kill other people in a way they feel is morally good because they killed someone that kills animals. Morals are easily corrupted if not examined and understood.

    So willpower is another variable that could change causing someones morality to change.Devans99

    Willpower is irrelevant if a deep understanding of human psychology and biology as roots for moral values are ignored. Deep understanding of ethics is required before willpower to act upon such balanced moral values.

    Many problems in society seem to stem from an inappropriate definition of the group/community. For example, regarding the group as 'your country' rather than 'the human race' tends to lead to conflicts of interest and war. Leaving animals out of the group, leads to ill-treatment of animals. Etc...Devans99

    In order to find a balanced moral, people need to exclude any idea of "group", since thinking in terms of groups limits the causal concepts of moral choices. I.e however you choose a group as a framework for moral choices, it excludes something else. If we think about our planet and all life on earth we might exclude other life in the universe. This is why it's complicated as thinking "too big" locks any morals into unknowns.

    It might be that the most moral way to induce good values is to include most groups as possible and that in itself is a morally responsible way of thinking. That there is morality to how we should think about morality, not just the moral choice and act itself.
  • Thanks
    There should be a post-number before being able to start new threads. Like, after 10 or 20 posts you can start new threads. Far too many new topics like these pop up all the time. Anyone could just join and start nonsense-topic-spam that moderators need to close and delete. A post-limit would at least require participation in discussions before starting their own topics.
  • The source of morals


    Our morals stem from biological emotional feedback that has its roots in how we function as pack animals. If you want the most basic causality start for our sense of morality, there it is.

    From that, because we are intelligent enough to analyze our own perception of the world, we conceptualize our emotional response to actions and relations into models of principles.

    These models are the foundation for moral theories and moral guidelines.

    Since people have different experiences, different emotions, personality types, etc. different models are in conflict with each other, raising moral ideal conflicts. These conflicts can be between individuals or groups which have organized models for the group. I.e individual morals and doctrine morals.

    The morals that we sense to be basic, like "don't kill each other" basically stem from the emotional care of the group. It's easy to corrupt by putting the care for the group against the invasion of another group, meaning war with another group, killing the other group can be justified to be morally good because it's morally good to care for the group you defend.

    That's why ethics is a hard topic since it's easily corrupted by the context it exists under. I do, however, propose there to be a way of inducing a set of basic morals by examining humanity as a species. It's when we examine morals while corrupting the examination with our own personal morals, that we fail to explain morality in any rational way. And if we examine morals while corrupted by institutionalized moral values, we are essentially limited in our thinking to that of a puppet of that institution.
  • Causality and historical events
    How can we say that the assassination of Franz Ferdinand was a factor in causing WW1?curiousnewbie

    Because it kick-started the conflicts that led to WW1. If it didn't happen, we might be living in a world with a lot of imperial states and we might even not have computers as we do today. Much of today's technology comes from innovation pushed by two world wars. The conflicts before WW1 might have led up to a smaller scale war, diplomatic tensions etc. and other types of outcomes than how history turned out to be.

    Causality is like domino bricks falling onto each other; just scale them up to more complex models.
  • Why are most people unwilling to admit that they don't know if God does or does not exist?


    Atheism is neither agnostic or certain of the non-existence of God. That's the traditional fundamental misunderstanding of atheism. The atheistic approach is simply that without proof or data in support of any claim, that claim shouldn't be made as a fundamental belief. So the notion that God "could exist" becomes irrelevant since it's not even a concept worth entertaining as there is nothing pointing to such an explanation for anything.

    If raising the question, the answer is agnostic, but the question is flawed in the first place through an atheistic perspective. Just like Russell's teapot analogy, the question itself becomes absurd: "We can never be sure there is or isn't a teapot in orbit around the sun". That is an agnostic claim and an absolutely absurd one. The theistic perspective would be that they are certain that the teapot is there, without any data or rational deduction of how or why. The atheistic perspective is that the question itself is absurd, so the answer whether there is or isn't a teapot becomes just as absurd. As long as there isn't anything pointing towards the existence or non-existence of a teapot in space, the question itself is just abstract, absurd fantasies not worth entertaining in search of knowledge. It may even be that the search for proving or disproving such a thing is fundamentally a waste of time when there are things in our universe that we can measure and is much more worth examining in order to understand existence.

    The atheistic question then becomes, why should we waste time asking absurd questions, debating absurd non-sensical hypothetical answers to these absurd questions, instead of putting time and energy into the things we can actually measure and get knowledge about? We should build from what we know, grow knowledge of what we can actually grow knowledge from and build our understanding of the universe and our existence from that evolving knowledge. Anything else is a distraction and a waste of time if knowledge and understanding is our goal.
  • Why Free Will can never be understood
    However we verify or falsify the argument, determinism will never find solid ground outside of an irrational belief system.unenlightened

    Determinism has solid ground mathematically through probability. At quantum levels, probability has a randomness that hasn't been combined with larger models yet, but the probability of anything other happening outside causality of larger than quantum events is so low that it's within infinitiy numbers.
    Free will does not have such support. So saying that determinism has no solid ground outside of an irrational belief system is pretty much just nonsense.

    However closely you examine the virtual world of a computer game, you will never find anything that violates the determinism of the program; you will never find any trace of the player, but only of his input, which you may see as 'either random or programmed'. But we know that people play games, and are more than their avatars.unenlightened

    How in any way does this relate to the laws of the universe? Are you using an analogy of a computer game to compare the free will of the player with the free will of our selves within our universe? I don't even need to break this down to show how irrational such an analogy is. Free will is governed by the same laws of physics and the same universe as anything else. Thinking that our free will and our sense of self is disconnected from that is both narcissistic and arrogant by us as humans. A desperation of holding on to an illusion based in a sense of importance to our existence within a universe that couldn't care less about us existing. And theological explanations have no solid ground to support such irrationality without including tons of cognitive biases.

    It appears to me that I make choices, and the making of choices entails that they are not already determined.unenlightened

    If I program you, psychologically, to crave for a certain product through repetition of commercial exposure of that product; you will eventually include a will to use that product. Commercial work shows how infantile people are when thinking about free will. Corporations can control what people want by the illusion of what they need. So the choices you make do not appear in a vacuum, you have no isolated thinking that works as the basis for the will you act upon. So to detach your will from what creates that will is ignorance of how our mind actually works.

    What "appears to be the case" is not in any way solid support for a conclusion that determinism doesn't exist and determinism does not mean "someone determined it", it's about causality, laws of physics. You need to ignore both the laws of physics and how psychology works in order to conclude your free will to be free of any influence and reason, both biologically and psychologically.

    This could be an illusion, but no one has presented the least reason to think it is an illusion.unenlightened

    There's plenty of reasons and support for determinism, but if you have a cognitive bias towards believing determinism to be wrong, you will ignore those reasons and support.

    So just as I do not assume the sky is pink because it appears to be blue, so I don't assume that I cannot choose because it appears that I can.unenlightened

    This line of thinking is just naive. Your mind and brain are not detached from laws of physics and the rest of the universe. You cannot use your subjective feeling as support against determinism. And the sky is blue because of physics and your eye register the blue color because of it. Your assumptions are totally irrelevant when judging the nature of what spectrum the sky shows. Measure the spectrum and you get the data and if you get brain damage, the sky might change appearance, but the data is still the same, i.e your assumption about the sky is irrelevant since it's affected by how your brain works, not the actual composition of how the sky produce the blue color. The sky is blue whether you want it to be or not, determinism is governing everything in the universe, including our brain and mind, whether you want it to or not. What you assume to be true about your sense of free will is irrelevant as support for free will. You cannot prove the validity of the book you read by using the book itself as proof, that's fundamentally corrupt and biased.
  • How do we consciously think before translating it into word or image thoughts?


    You should look into the "System 1" and "System 2" theories in psychology. They may answer those questions for you.
  • Why Free Will can never be understood


    The idea of free will is rooted in our defense mechanism against the concept of determinism. We desperately need to justify our own sense of control over ourselves and our life since the idea that we are part of a causality system is as close to cosmic horror we have in our knowledge about the universe. But the fact is that we can't escape the logic of determinism and any attempt to do so always fall flat when falsifying any argument in favor of free will. A common denominator for those arguing for free will is usually that they at the same time believe in supernatural elements to our existence and laws of the universe.

    The closest thing to something breaking determinism is using quantum randomness as a deciding factor for choices and decisions, but that would only cause a physical representation of chaos that is causally undetermined, it would never grant the ability of free will. So, even if randomness were a factor within the causal system, it never supports free will as a system. However we verify or falsify the argument, free will never find solid ground outside of an irrational belief system.
  • Darwin Doubt
    It looks like the place where you got them is a low quality source, and best ignored.andrewk

    That's an understatement.
  • Darwin Doubt
    1. The type of evolution were looking for is one were features are added. We have never found evidence of that type of evolution. Only the type were features are lost.hachit

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn13673-evolution-myths-mutations-can-only-destroy-information/

    2. When you look at the about 50 million fossils we have not one has evidence of evolution. So why should we believe that getting more fossils well prove otherwise.(this is 80% of his presentation)hachit

    Evolution doesn't occur through stepping stones, it's a process of change over a long period of time and there are many fossils showing this.
    https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn13717-evolution-myths-yet-more-misconceptions/
    In fact, there are far too many fossils with intermediate features to count – trillions if you include microfossils. These fossils show the transitions between major groups, from fish to amphibians, for instance, as well as from one species to another. New discoveries are continually made, from the half-fish, half-amphibian Tiktaalik to an early giraffe with a shorter neck than modern animals.

    3. Those that beleve in evolution that know these facts treat evolution as a fath not fact. We also need to rethink the theory because we found a spear head in a dinosaur bone.hachit

    What spear in a dinosaur bone? Which publication of paleontology shows this?

    4. Dawin's legacy was that he created a world without need for a divine creator. However we don't have proof of his world so we're going to need to change how we think.hachit

    Yes, we do.

    Basically, you listen to someone who just ignores facts, findings and the science of paleontology in order to draw a conclusion. Should I spin the wheel of fallacies? Because there's a lot of them in this kind of reasoning. This is apologetics 101.
  • The Mashed is The Potato


    Would you agree that there are two types of identity? Variable identity, which is an identity which comes before its malleable variation; potato becomes a mashed potato, but it's still a potato since that is its elementary identity. A sofa cannot be a sofa if it is mashed since it's identity comes from the constant identity as a sofa. The sofa is a sofa because of a combination of variable identities into a form which makes it a constant identity.

    Therefore, we can define identity based on variable and constant identities.

    How would you define expressed meaning vs the initial meaning. Is there a variable meaning that has an elementary aspect to it, or is it a constant meaning that will lose its identifying form when it is expressed?
  • Einstein and Time Dilation


    Time doesn't slow down for the one traveling. Time is constant for the observing traveler, but for anyone looking at the traveler, they would see his time as slower. The traveler would see others speeding up. If the traveler reaches the speed of light, he would end up at the location traveled to instantly, meaning, the traveler would end up at a point outside of normal spacetime, since the traveler cannot observe anything if the destination and time to get there is instant and infinite at the same time. Look into how a black hole would work theoretically based on Einstein and Hawkings.
  • Is an armed society a polite society?


    Since you start out with the same kind of attitude that I was urging you to stop with I have no reason to continue wasting my time on your ego. You have been given answers and you refuse to stop using biases and fallacies. I went to this forum to get away from having to argue against populist rhetoric.
  • Proof that something can never come from nothing
    I'm not aware of anything in reality that matches that.Marchesk

    But you could perceive the concept that a room is still a room if what is inside it is the absence of anything. From this, the property of nothing as something is what makes the room a room.
  • Proof that something can never come from nothing


    If you define that space as having properties, but if there are no properties to that space, isn't it then nothing? How do you define nothing?
  • Proof that something can never come from nothing
    That sounds like a really weird way to phrase building a house. But okay, you're creating space for rooms. It's only nothing in the context of it not being building material. There's still air, hopefully.Marchesk

    Is it not still a room even if space in between is a vacuum, not even with quantum particles? Does a room need air to be a room?
  • Proof that something can never come from nothing
    You have to add nothing to the building blocks; walls, floors, and ceilings of a house in order for space to create rooms.
  • Is an armed society a polite society?
    What proof do you have that ordinary people, without a degree in philosophy, cannot understand the concept of a dialectic discussion. Through out history people have been doing this with absolutely no formal education. The way you talk it is as if these abilities are something that developed because of colleges. Lots of the greatest philosopher had little or no education at all. Thinking is something that can be and is developed by anyone that wants to develop their abilities and is possible without out going to the university. That is the BS of the universities sell so that you will pay their exorbitant fees.Sir2u

    It doesn't take much to understand the basic concepts of dialectics and dialectic discourse, but do you think that if you went out on the street and asked random people what "dialectic" is, I can guarantee you that very few even knows what it is. You are trying to argue that people know dialectic methods without training when the closest is that they might accidentally do a dialectic, but do not have it as routine. This way of arguing that you are doing now is populistic, it's the anti-intellectual ideas that experts aren't needed, that knowledge is bullshit and that common sense is enough. It's the same BS that populists are spreading around, undermining any kind of intellectual discussion and progress in favor of emotional outbursts from people with low education. Their perspective is extremely important, but this anti-intellectual BS is actually disgusting and disrespectful against those who actually put a lot of time and effort into learning.

    It is a good idea to read all of the thread if you want to participate properly. I have not, as I explained to someone else, made any demands. You stated what you think was the solution and I pointed out some of the problems with your idea.Sir2u

    You didn't point out problems. I'm not sure you actually understood the points I've made before smashing the replay button.

    Both of which have been discussed at length, the former idea causes too many problems and would be expensive. The latter is a long term project that would not fulfill today's needs.Sir2u

    And you want a magical unicorn somewhere in the middle, please explain what large scale options you have outside of those two, I'm all ears, because that right there is no criticism to what I said, it's a denial of how society works in a democracy. This is why your demand on us to write an absolute solution is naive.

    That s the only solution that I have ever offered, educate the people. But as I said earlier it will not work until the people have a reason to give up their guns. By reason I mean that possibly the feel safe without them, when do you think that will happen?Sir2u

    You are talking in circles. First, you say, exactly what I've been saying all the time, that to solve all this is to educate people. But then you say that there won't be a change until people feel safe. You are putting the cart before the horse.

    The whole point of educating people is to make them understand that they will only feel truly safe when all cogs in the machine have been put in place.

    For some that claims to be so superior at thinking, that is very badly expressed. It has nothing to do with philosophical discussion around justice and ethics.Sir2u

    I do not claim that, stop your mockery bullshit, it's childish.

    Let me help you to express it in a clearer way.

    Because gun control has elements of MORALITY and ethics it can be discussed philosophically.

    I think that sounds better, don't you?
    Sir2u

    So why do you even question the idea that gun control is a philosophical discussion? You're doing semantical nonsense arguments to "win the day" instead of doing a dialectic.

    I never said it was, I just wanted to find out how you would explain it. Bummer right.Sir2u

    No, you are just incapable of linguistic pragmatism. There's a fallacy called ambiguity fallacy. You question gun control as a philosophical topic, then you question the philosophical category in which the discussion of gun control goes under, to arrive at a conclusion that was linguistically pragmatically understood from the get-go.

    The initial text you questioned gun control to be a philosophical topic was this:
    Just see how many get excited at a party if you start talking philosophy. This is not what most common people have an interest in. Which also means that they don't have the tools to understand the issues and are easily persuaded by lobbyist and smart political rhetoric.

    If you actually read that again you see that I pointed out that because gun control is a topic that can be discussed philosophically and should be, there are better tools through it than just common talk which can be affected by lobbyist and political rhetoric. Philosophical discourse is better equipped to look at the actual facts of the matter.

    How you changed that to questioning gun control as a philosophical topic, I don't know, and I don't know how you arrive at your last conclusion which is basically saying the same thing as I pointed out in the first place.

    You are arguing in circles in order to just win any points you can, but what's your actual point, really?
    Ambiguity fallacy.

    Well I suppose I could try imitating your dickhead tone, but I don't think that I have enough of a stuck up snobbish attitude to pull it off. But I will try if you want.Sir2u

    And you just keep going. Maybe you should look at who had the tone in the first place, who uses the most ad hominem words and arguments? Maybe you could even look at how others answer to you, then compare the data and do some self-reflection.

    Your interpretation as snobbish is in your own head, you read some counter-argument to your argument and instead of keeping with a traditional calm and philosophical dialectic behavior, you just burst out insults back to the one making the counter-argument. Why do you think I point out that you seem to lack philosophical methodology knowledge? Because you don't show any of it.

    Wow, so your opinions thoughts are correct because you use the dialectical approach. Where did you find all of the information that you used to come to these certified conclusions, I would love to see it. I think that you really need to go to the USA and offer you assistance in solving this problem. I don't think that they have anyone like you over there because this problem has been going on for years and years and no one has been able to come up with a solution.Sir2u

    What conclusions? That we either have the option of enforcing laws against people's wishes or educate them to understand why strict gun control is good for them so that they vote in that direction? It's basic logic of the democratic system. And the dialectic approach I'm speaking of is how we discuss this as a group. You aren't doing it, you basically just attack what you don't like and won't actually use any dialectic approach. And when someone does it to you, by dissecting your argument, you just call them a variety of ad hominems. It's extremely childish behavior on a philosophical forum and you don't seem to understand why so many argue against you in here.

    I don't know. I am not in the habit, as you seem to be, of testing everyone's ability to use their dialectic skills. How many times have you tried to have dialectic discussions with people in the street?Sir2u

    It's not about testing people's ability. Are you intentionally misunderstanding what you read in order to just give whatever counter you can on everything? You do understand that what I'm talking about is that because not all know about dialectic discourse methods, they will lean back on emotional opinions. It's why arguments without method often fail because there's no self-reflection through the dialectic method. People just bash their opinions in other people's heads, this is a fact. You can just look at the hyperbolic comments on comment sections anywhere online and you will understand what I'm talking about.

    sinse they took away our whips and bats.Sir2u

    An attempt at a joke I presume?

    So you think that maybe if I quoted something from Socrates to support what I have said about gun control it would be more believable? Hmm, I will have to try that sometime. Or maybe if I continuously asked questions to provoke people to think but refused to admit I had any personal knowledge It would help my case. Reading about other peoples' way of thinking does not mean that you will be able to think like them. If that was the case I would be able to run circles around Witty.
    While we are on the topic of peoples' knowledge about philosophy, did you ever figure out why those people came up with the idea that everything was made up of water?
    Sir2u

    You're just ranting irrelevant stuff right now. I'm talking about methods of discourse, not quoting philosophers. Methods in order to get rid of irrelevant rants.

    True, but there are not that many moral problems, most of them are technical. Most development companies have legal department that deal with anything dodgy, Maybe that is where they would work.Sir2u

    I didn't think we were talking about specific companies. Moral problems, both internally as a company and externally with what the company is doing, applies where it is applicable. Within this topic, it is very relevant to have ethic philosophers consulting decisions of gun laws. But it seems you view philosophers as opinion bullshitters and not professionals? Like, better to get some street smart people to go through the moral complexities of political questions that will affect billions of people in all manner of life situations than a philosopher in ethics.

    I never said I had an answer, at least not one that would work as needed, but I did point out that a lot of these things have been discussed before and I have given the reasons why I doubt they would not work. I was not demand absolute solutions, but with all of your superior dialectic prowess I thought that maybe you would be the one to come up with the right answer. Seems not to do so.Sir2u

    I did, but you don't agree that it is a solution, or don't understand how it's a solution, therefore you want another solution. And once again, I was referring to a dialectic discourse, which I urged you to do on the solution given, which you didn't, you just wanted another solution. So, I can't do more before you do your part of the dialectic, and that has been my point all along.

    And a simple epistemic fact should be easy for you to prove, so go ahead and do it. But before you try answering think about the people that developed dialectic methods, where did they study? How did they come up with the ideas if it is not possible without education?Sir2u

    People who haven't trained in argumentative methodology, who don't know what dialectic means, is or is done, does not have that method as a tool while debating and discussing. Most people do not have such training. Those who have such training has most likely been studying some kind of philosophy.
    Therefore, most common people don't have the methods needed for a dialectic method for knowledge.

    In other terms:

    X is dialectic understanding, Y is normal argumentative understanding. X leads to Z which is improved knowledge and better arguments, Y leads to A which is an argumentative emotional stalemate.
    p1 X most likely leads to Z but does never lead to A.
    p2 Y most likely leads to A but rarely lead to Z.
    p3 X is common with those trained in argumentative methodology, Y is common with everyone else.

    Therefore the probability of X being superior to reach Z is higher than that Y leads to Z and since X is more common with those trained in the methodology, it is lower in quantity than Y which is the rest.

    It's a simple fact of probability. If you don't agree with the above probability, please feel free to counter it properly. The probability is a large scale probability, which means, in this case, that if a proper dialectic method is recommended to understand all nuances of a complex political issue, fewer people are able to reach a nuanced conclusion.

    I never get excited by wishywashy discussions with people that think they are better than the rest just because they studied philosophy but know nothing of reality. Reality here is used in the sense of everydayness. But I do enjoy it when the fish are biting.Sir2u

    And you judge people without knowing anything about them or their experiences in life and reality but can't entertain the thought and simple fact that people can both be trained in philosophy and have real experiences.

    You judge character, the way someone writes. It's fallacious, biased and disrespectful and if anyone needs a reality check it's definitely you.

    I am not really sure what you mean by this. Do you mean that someone has been judging me because of my behavior? If that is so, that is not my problem and it is very unphilosophical to use this as an argument to prove that I am wrong.Sir2u

    If you use ad hominems in your arguments, you fail to argue and can't demand more of others. If you behave badly in a discussion, that is your responsibility and if people criticize you for your behavior it damn straight is your responsibility to do better. It's rather hypocritical to call out others behavior when they react to your behavior. That is what's called a tu quoque. If you go to a party and start punching someone and then get hit back by others, would you then call them out for hitting you? Like you have been mistreated in any way? Wouldn't that be delusional, to say the least. The ad hominem name-calling, the mockery etc. just because someone formulates their text in a certain way that you don't like is, as I said numerous times, childish.

    I have not mocked you for any knowledge that you have provided, what ever knowledge that might be.Sir2u

    You just have a total lack of insight into how you write to people. And even the end of that sentence is a mockery. It's a bullying mentality, like some insecure teenager trying to hit back at every chance they get. To me, it's just irrelevant and desperate ad hominem-rants which gradually, for each time you write such things, lowers my respect of your knowledge in proper discourse.

    If you want respect and good behavior from others, you should lead by example.

    I get some very interesting responses from the people with interesting things to say. Especially those that don't take the time to write long post full of criticism.Sir2u

    Maybe people just don't care about answering to you because of how you write? I shouldn't, I mean, especially since I'm answering to a long post full of criticism... oh, the irony.

    Never judge a book by its cover. I seriously doubt that you have read even half the number of philosophy books that I have. But I don't like to swagger around telling everyone that I know everything and common people don't.Sir2u

    I don't doubt that you doubt that. I also don't go around telling things like that. I mean, you should never judge a book by its cover, right? Especially when you don't even understand the books content or the point I made.

    Do unto others what they have done to you. You insulted most of humanity so don't cry when someone tell you that you do not know everything. Ask around, I am extremely polite to all that are polite to me.Sir2u

    Is it an insult to point out that some know more of argumentative methodology than others? Is it an insult to humanity if I say that some people know cooking more than others and that some chefs are masters of cooking? If you cannot understand the simple probability logic and instead interpret that as an insult to humanity and that you shall take up the sword to defend humanity against this vile creature who said that there are fewer masters of cooking in this world than common people who mastered cooking, then I can't help you. Then you simply don't understand a word of what I said and instead just emotionally burst out ad hominems because you cannot wrap your head around what I actually said. And if you don't agree with the probability, please counter the argument I presented earlier, in a nice dialectic manner, so that I can read it without having to read your emotional burst of populistic anti-intellectualism, it's tiring.

    So you get points for trying. But in your own words philosophical tools and methods of dialectic are supposed to come up with the answers. So why don't they? Is there no way you can go beyond your answer to reach the solution? You said that these tools were used for that purpose.
    If you cannot go any further towards a solution to the problem then what does that mean?
    Does it mean that you cannot use them properly? Or maybe you are ignorant of the true facts of the situation.
    Could it maybe mean that there is no solution? No, you said that it would always reach a solution so it cannot be that.
    Sir2u

    It means you don't participate in a dialectic discourse in order to reach a good solution, you are more interested in blasting anti-intellectualism towards those who propose methods to reach solutions. When presented with an initial solution, you don't return in a dialectical way, you do emotional outbursts and then write nonsense answers. As I read other answers to you, I'm not quite alone in thinking this way. Maybe that should be a hint to you, but you'll probably just ignore it.

    There we go with the challenges again. I don't have to prove you wrong, you have done that countless times yourself without realizing it. Do you really think that you would recognize a dialectic if it hit you in the face? Actually you might, if you read about Meno.
    Explain to me how I could prove that I have an understanding of what we are discussing. Would you like me too some tests or something maybe? No I am not being hypocritical, I leave things like that to others that cannot "win" an argument without putting people down to do so.
    Sir2u

    Deflecting rants of nonsense. You have been given answers. You have a solution told and an opening to counter with an argument.

    You are totally unable to self-reflect upon your own writing. You just burst out emotional rants with no content. I've answered this long post and yet, after reading all of it, you have actually not said anything new at all. You repeat your earlier points without reading answers to them, I mean truly read them. You continue a bullying attitude which is the same kind of anti-intellectual nonsense that populists push over and over, and which I think is beneath discussions on philosophical forums. If you think I have low respect for common people outside of philosophy then no, I don't have low respect. But "common" people like you certainly question whether or not I should.

    You've read my point and argument on knowledge of dialectic methodology and you read my point on what is the best solution in order to restrict guns. I'm still waiting for a response to those, worthy of a philosophical discussion. I will exclude any further nonsense rants from you and focus on that. Want to express your bullying populist attitude, go punch a pillow.
  • To be or not to be
    what beauty are you talking about exactly?Rhasta1

    It's often the last thing people hold onto when going from belief to nihilism and understanding the meaninglessness of life. People who believe in religion or some higher meaning attach an aesthetic beauty to existence which they feel would be pointless as well if they accept that all else is. My point was that I find this to be misleading for them because they have no concept of the aesthetic beauty of existence and the universe, outside of the idea that it was in some way designed. I'm referring to the mathematical precision and aesthetics of how we perceive everything around us. It can feel like it has some higher and spiritual beauty, but we have a programming that makes us see the world in a way that changes our emotions, that's all, but also in of itself a kind of beauty not to be missed.
  • The God of Creation vs the God of Rituals
    In Christian tradition God seams to care about what happens on earth first rest of the cosmos being devoid of life takes secondary role.Avro

    Which is contradicting as to why the rest should be of an almost infinite scale and with such complexity. So that there might even be exotic material in the universe that does not even exist here on earth, while some material and aspects of rituals handle material and matter that have a rarity on earth, giving them high value, but in the universe, there's tons of it. Like rare metals, such as gold, which there could be whole planets of, but in some religious rituals, gold is of high value. Why does it have high value if there's a place in the universe that is entirely made of molten gold? So there's a lot of contradiction between a God who made the entire universe and a God who cares if linen and wool are mixed in clothing. I have a hard time even entertaining the thought of trying to make sense of it, so how can it make sense? This is a good example of why there's little probability of a god even caring about this tiny blue planet if a god existed at all.
  • Is God real?
    So, all belief consists of ideas in the head about the world around us.creativesoul

    You demand a simple answer and I gave it. Belief does not exist without human thinking about something and starting to believe something, out of that comes to different types of belief. You cannot detach the belief from humans, even if a belief was written down and people forgot the one expressing the belief, it is still an expressed belief from that forgotten person. You are taking different concepts of belief and counter-argue the basic definition with that there's "too many versions of belief and therefore you can't define it".

    Statements of belief are not in the head. They are belief. Therefore, not all belief is in the head.creativesoul

    They start in the head, expressed, they still come from the mind. A belief can exist, written down outside of the mind, but the belief is still from an initial mind. Belief is that which defines the type of statement it is, i.e something from the mind that is acted upon like it was fact. I defined a spectrum of truth we apply to belief, which ranges from acted upon like pure truth, to an understanding that it is a belief that is acted upon.

    Some belief is about ourselves. They are belief. Therefore, not all belief is about the world around us.creativesoul

    This is what I mean with you breaking down everything into their smallest parts. You demand a simple definition of belief and then you dissect it to conclude that it isn't complex enough to incorporate everything.

    However, all human use of belief as it exists for us humans relates to the argument I have made. If you stretch the definition of belief to not work with my argument, you essentially just invent another interpretation of belief, which isn't in use by people.

    Belief is lingering thoughts about the world around us, ourselves, the universe, everything we can imagine and every thought we conjured into constant and variable memories. Belief starts with an idea, that through time turns into a concept of truth which may or may not be considered real truth. Belief can be expressed, influence other people's ideas that form into their own belief and it shapes how they, we and all humans act, behave and form the world-view and concept of all people's selves...

    ...I can go on and write an entire essay on belief without really breaking the argument I made.

    Belief is prior to language. That which is prior to language cannot be existentially dependent upon it. Belief is not a concept. My charge here is that your conception of "belief" is inherently inadequate for taking proper account of belief.creativesoul

    How do you define belief yourself? Would you say that "belief" as it is used in language, and because of that, how it is used in my argument, does not work with my argument? Or is a semantic deconstruction of the term "belief" just a linguistical pragmatic failure to understand the argument through an ambiguity fallacy, intentional or unintentional?
  • Is an armed society a polite society?
    I have a very small, 5 people, group of friends. I have 2 other family members. And we do discuss world problems of every kind, even though I am the only one that participates in a philosophy forum. But I work with hundreds of people everyday. Most of them seem perfectly capable of talking about the problems of the world as well. So I still don't understand why you think that non-philosophy forum people do not have the tools necessary to think about such things.Sir2u

    Because regular people don't generally understand the concept of a dialectic discussion, they see any discussion between two opinions as an argument without end since both sides just clash without understanding the other or the self. It's also a ground for meta-ignorance. This is why I numerous times doubt your insight into philosophy since you never demonstrate that philosophical process in your writing.

    I am beginning to believe that "naive" is your word of the week. And I don't see how your route is realistic.Sir2u

    Because you demand absolute solutions to very very complex problems. That is almost a textbook answer of what naive is. The "solution" I described involved the very realistic idea of educating people into supporting strict gun laws through democracy. You either go by a totalitarian state-regulation to just ban guns, or you work with the people so that they understand the problems and understand why it's good for them as well. If you have any other solution beside enforcing change and planting seeds for change, feel free to express it, but if you want simple answers, that is the naive route.

    This does not answer the question, I asked how gun control qualifies as a philosophical question, not which area of philosophy would possible put it into.Sir2u

    Because it has to do with philosophical discussions around justice and ethics, two of the biggest topics in philosophy. Why is it not a philosophical question to have a discourse around that topic? Please elaborate on why it does not qualify.

    I have not asked anyone whether they can do a proper dialectic. But as you are making this statement about the non-philosophically inclined people's incapability, I am sure that you have asked everyone you have ever met in your anthropological wanderings and all of the parties you have ever attended. Because that is the only way to know such things that I am aware of.Sir2u

    Can you write any text without having an asshole tone to them? Without a dialectical approach, there are only opinions, often with a meta-ignorant problem underneath. People might have heard the word dialectic, but how many can have a dialectic discussion? How many discussions have you heard between people which ended in both sides improving their own ideas or come to the conclusion that the other was right? I mean, truly changing for both sides?

    Actually I doubt that most of the people here on the forum are philosophy students or have a degree in philosophy. I can think of several members whom I know of that do not.Sir2u
    Of course, most don't have a degree in philosophy. But without any insight into philosophy, what is even the point of being on this forum? I mean, to read is good, but to participate in discussions without being humble about their own knowledge in philosophy and instead rage on with pure speculative opinions, fallacies and biases, is to a degree not even recommended by the forum guidelines. If there's no effort to even learn some basic philosophy, why even bother? Then Twitter is probably a better platform for such rants.

    While knowledge of the use of dialectic tools is useful to argue successfully, it is useless in the face of ignorance. If you know nothing about the topic, there is no use for these tools.
    Seriously, do you think that the common people have not realized that there is a problem with guns? They know well enough that there is. It is not the lack of these tools that stops them from doing something about it, but the lack of methods that can be used. They vote for the people that they want to represent them and the ones that propose removing the guns lose. They protest in the streets and get arrested because, as you say it turns into a brawl.
    You say that you have the use of these tools, what are you going to do to solve the problem?
    Sir2u

    Dialectics leads to a better understanding of your own opinions and others. It's a tool to let people reach better conclusions and be less influenced by people with the power of persuasion.

    You suggest methods to be used, what methods are there in your argument, which brings forth a change without restricting democracy and liberty of the people?

    This does not qualify as proof of the statement you made.Sir2u

    The articles say that some people think that philosophy graduates might have a better career that others, but it makes no mention of them gaining popularity as a hired.Sir2u

    I very much doubt that is what the companies think, if they hire someone as a consultant they want the problem solved not just thought about.Sir2u

    It would get things going again without which there would be no new problems down the line because there would be no company.
    But it would make sense to hire someone that could do both problem solving and preventative work. Unfortunately, "preventative" in industry usually means foreseeing possible problem and trying to prevent them, which would be almost impossible without the technological know how. I don't think many philosophy graduates would be able to predict possible week points in any system that they have no knowledge of.
    Sir2u

    It's a cultural difference then since observations in my country are that companies and industries increasingly have pushed for philosophy training in leaders and philosophers consulting during problems, rather than just trying to figure things out themselves. It means they frame the problem the company is facing through the lens of philosophy in order to foreshadow the consequences of the solutions to the problems. They're also educating employees, especially in the tech industry and A.I.

    I don't think many philosophy graduates would be able to predict possible week points in any system that they have no knowledge of.Sir2u

    That are not the problems I'm talking about. But for example, figuring out the ethics of gun laws require quite a lot of philosophy in order to give a nuanced perspective to politicians and the people. If a problem touches upon philosophical problems, why would those questions be left to those who work with systems to solve? It's like calling a plumber to fix the roof.

    I have made no demands, I asked you how you would solve a problem and you have no answer.Sir2u

    Because you don't have an answer, I don't, no one really has, which is my point. It's a philosophical dialectic with the aim of finding a solution. My suggestion was given and you demand absolutes instead. You are demanding something without any real interest in the discourse. If someone doesn't give an absolute solution to something you seem to interpret that as a disqualification of the specific participant on the topic. I gave you a possible solution, you have answered nothing on the validity of the causational consequences of that solution and instead demand an absolute solution. It's once again, naive and almost childish as a demand.

    Oh dear. Is it my fault that you have nothing to contribute to the solving of the problem? I am not the one that sets myself above the common people nor do I claim to be a philosophy.Sir2u

    I do not set myself higher than common people, I stated a fact that common people don't have dialectic methods to discuss something in order to reach a higher understanding of their own opinions. That is a simple epistemic fact which would be ridiculous to counter without proposing that common people would automatically know it without studying it. It's almost a populistic idea and anti-intellectual, the kind of dismissal of knowledge that's been plaguing the world more and more the last ten years.

    I am just a humble thinker with opinions based on what I see and what I know. It would seem to be that you are the one covering up your inabilities with pompousness.Sir2u

    You are pretty far from being humble. You should really calm down and take a look at your own writing before judging others. The critique against you does not being until you behave in a certain way, the causality of this is pretty straight forward. You judge others all the time and you mock the knowledge they provide with inadequate reasoning and pure speculative opinions. The response you get probably reflect the writing you do more than all the other people and their knowledge.

    I can say exactly the same thing about you. You do not know me or what I have studied, but you presume to make statements about what I should do to improve my understanding of truth and the world.Sir2u

    You write about philosophical tools and methods of dialectic like you have no idea what you are talking about. So, I draw a conclusion based on how you actually write. And since your attitude is extremely impolite towards others that might have more knowledge in this area, I would say you solidified that notion. So, no you can't say the same thing to me because I actually try to answer, you are just defending your own ego with mocking and ridiculing other people.

    So, either you demonstrate that you have an understanding of the things discussed and prove me wrong when I suggest you study more, or just stop with your tu quoque fallacies. You attitude at the moment is the evidence in itself of my statement.
  • To be or not to be


    Everything is pointless. But even though I'm of the opinion that there's nothing behind the beauty that exists around us, I find there's even more beauty in the idea that the randomness and probabilities of the universe settled on something that can perceive its own beauty. Even if it's just probability, it's truly mind-boggling and epic. I don't need fantasies to experience the grand awesomeness of everything, I think it in itself is enough.

    Other than that, what else is there to living than to live the life you have? The other option is to never have lived, which is pointless as it cannot perceive itself not living. The question of pointlessness just becomes absurd as there's nothing to compare to. You have a pointless existence, and it's more than not existing at all.
  • Atheism is far older than Christianity
    Why didn't humans stop at atheism? What went wrong?VoidDetector

    Because religion, spirituality, and fantasy come to people trying to figure out the unknown without having the tools to really understand them. It happens today as well, when someone can't explain something, they attach delusions and fantasy to them before trying to make logical sense. I would say that it's part of the system 1 and 2 of how we think. System 1 is instinctual, it acts directly but does not think as we think it does, it only uses previously known information. It then feeds new information to system 2 which "thinks" about it and organize new information into new ideas combined with old information, that we then act upon in system 1. So when people encountered something they couldn't explain, they most likely reacted with system 1 and without any other information, they let system 2 make up an explanation to why that was.

    This is why historians reason that the first religions were smaller, village-based religions which differed around the same concepts such as floods, thunder, famine etc. The larger religions and pantheons then evolved when trade-routes were formed between these villages, like a "sticky boulder" which rolled through the land, collecting bits and pieces of different spiritual and religious ideas and formed a larger narrative, which took over. So each of the larger religions throughout history started off with small fragments of smaller ones.

    In essence, it's easy to understand why religion and spirituality formed because it always forms within people who try to understand something unknown without the right tools to do it outside of their own mind. It's taken us over ten thousand years to reach a point where we have scientific methods to figure out something without influencing it with our own fantasies.
  • Is an armed society a polite society?
    You must have a very wide social circle to be able to make this claim.Sir2u

    No, it's about being observant to the behavior and opinions of common people around you. If you want to know more about how things are being discussed outside of your own small group of friends and relatives you need to act like an anthropologist and really look and listen to how people are.

    And the funny thing is that I doubt that you have figured out the truth about the world and existence but here you are talking about gun control. Without providing a solution.Sir2u

    I already told you the realistic route of action. Stop acting naive.

    Is gun control a philosophical topic? That sounds really weird to me. I thought it was a social problem that we were discussing possible solutions to. Exactly how does it qualify as a philosophical topic?Sir2u

    Philosophy of ethics and justice.

    Just because people do not want to talk about philosophy at a party in no way proves that they don't have the tools to understand the issues.Sir2u

    Have you ever met anyone outside of philosophy who can do a proper dialectic? Most discussions about sensitive topics always end up in brawls with each side always saying their opinion and no one reaching a higher level of understanding. It's exactly because of the lack of dialectic tools. But you don't seem to know much about these things?

    Who is this "us"? I don't and I am reasonably sure that the majority of posters here do not consider themselves to be philosophers. I spend most of my time trying to sort out my own problems and have spent a minimum of time and effort on the issues of the world. What have you done to solve the problems of hunger in Africa, child labor in Indonesia or slave traders in Europe?Sir2u

    No, you are certainly not a philosopher, that's for sure. But you can study philosophy on your own in order to handle problems in a better way. Like, not acting as you do with the last sentence of that paragraph. Why do you think philosophers are now being hired, at a higher rate, to companies and businesses who need to make choices that affect people? Entertain the thought and the causality from that.

    Before you can teach, you have to know. Which is the top of the list for jobs available for people with a philosophy degree. I have not been able to find any information about how many philosophers are actually hired as consultants but there does not seem to be much of a need for philosophy graduates in that area.
    If you can please post a link to the information about that I would be thankful.
    Sir2u

    It might be more evident in my country, but here are some hints
    https://www.cnbc.com/2018/02/20/mark-cuban-philosophy-degree-will-be-worth-more-than-computer-science.html
    https://bigthink.com/experts-corner/why-future-business-leaders-need-philosophy

    Philosophy is more about how you think about problems, not direct solutions to problems. What's the point of hiring someone who has the answers to current problems if they cannot solve new ones further down the road?

    How can a question be naive? The person asking it maybe, although not in this case, but the question cannot be naive.Sir2u

    Of course a question can be naive, like asking what someone is doing with his philosophy to solve an entire continent of poverty. How is that not naive, blunt and fallacy-ridden?

    So basically you, a self proclaimed philosopher, has no solution to the problem that has not already been discussed on this thread. All of the tools you say you have are just as useless as the ones the coffee drinking common people have.Sir2u

    I recommend that you study a bit more philosophy before you demand solutions in the way you do. You're acting like a child right now and it's probably not worth continuing this discussion when you seem incapable of being humble.

    But there is probably one thing that the common people have that you don't, a better understanding of how things affect them. Sitting high on a mountain looking at you belly button might make you a better philosopher, but until you get down in the streets you will not understand the problems you are trying to solve.Sir2u

    You know nothing about me, so who's actually sitting on a high horse, judging?
  • Is an armed society a polite society?


    I think I gave you the most realistic answer. Educate and turn people in a democracy towards wanting strict gun laws. You can't do much else. One thing to start with would be to force news and media to be objective, so that bought private companies won't spread misinformation that's supportive of a gun lobby agenda.

    Don't put the common people down, a lot of us do understand the information.Sir2u

    Common people do not discuss these issues on a philosophy forum or try to figure out the truth about the world and existence. They want to drink Starbucks coffee and enjoy some evening entertainment or sport on TV. I'm not criticizing this (although I think people should care a bit more about truth), I'm only stating the facts of how the world is. Just see how many get excited at a party if you start talking philosophy. This is not what most common people have an interest in. Which also means that they don't have the tools to understand the issues and are easily persuaded by lobbyist and smart political rhetoric.

    It's actually us, philosophers and people who've been putting a lot of effort and thought into the issues of this world, who will be the ones educating other people on these issues. Why do you think that philosophers have been gaining popularity as a hired consultant in many workplaces?

    How long do you estimate until that happens?Sir2u

    That's a bit of a naive question. It's time when it's time when people want it. Just look at how people have started waking up to the facts because of all the rapports of mass shootings. Or it can go in the other direction. For US, I think the problem is fundamental in US history and culture, so I don't think it's gonna happen anywhere but the most progressive states.

    It starts with the people. If you want a solution, figure out how you can convince one single gun owner to give up their guns for the greater good. If you can't convince a single one, you won't be able to push a whole nation.
  • Is an armed society a polite society?


    I really don't see a problem with finding out what to do. The data is clear that strict gun laws and quality of life/politeness go hand in hand. There's pretty much grad school psychology to understand the mechanics of what guns do in people's hands, especially if a societies culture is "keep enemies out of my parameter or else...".

    You're right in that it's harder to enforce the laws, but that's dependent on how the fundamental mentality of the people is. The solution will be, in places like the US, to either force people to follow the rules, or accept that the risk of mass shootings, school shootings, high violent crime and individual isolation out of fear of strangers is the norm. You either enforce laws or you don't, it depends on what the people want in a democracy.

    Unfortunately, common people don't have the tools to understand this on their own, but you can still not force laws beyond the democratic process. So the only thing that I can see is positive is to educate, to provide the information about this to the people so that they, after a while, stop defending their personal preferences in order to increase the quality of life within their nation. Only at the right time can politicians enforce more strict gun laws without enraging half the country.