But, there is a constant lacking present in everyone's life. This lack is the source of frustration, anger, and sadness. — Posty McPostface
Sometimes folks (philosophers and others) try to basically "wave away" an issue by claiming that it's only a terminological dispute. As if they're implying that everyone really agrees on the non-linguistic stuff, but they just have disagreements about how to use language/which words to use. — Terrapin Station
But it's not the case for a lot of disputes that they're merely terminological. People are really disagreeing about what the world is like, independent of language. — Terrapin Station
Maybe the person just doesn't want to get into a dispute that they're tired of, or that they find silly, or futile, or whatever. — Terrapin Station
Maybe they're insular (and/or arrogant) enough that they actually have a difficult time understanding that someone could disagree with them about what the world is like. — Terrapin Station
And of course, sometimes disagreements are only terminological, — Terrapin Station
Sometimes you see philosophers push back against language-first view, and insist that they are interested in X, rather than the meaning of ‘X’. But what do they mean? — Welkin Rogue
Trump's claim that he can with a stroke of his pen overrule the US Constitution is the very definition of authoritarianism. — LD Saunders
Instead i feel more motivated and inclined to live a simple life of happiness, a life where i travel the world, make lots of friends and get lots of girls (lol). — Johnpveiga
There seems to be almost universal agreement among theists and atheists that a God either exists, or not, one or the other. We might be suspicious of the fact that this widely shared assumption appears to be taken as an obvious given which requires no examination. — Jake
If we were to examine reality without the burden of this blind assumption, we might see that the vast majority of reality from the smallest to largest scales, space, does not fit neatly in to a tidy simplistic dualistic "exists or not" paradigm.
Thus, it's at least possible that the simplistic "exists or not" paradigm the God debate is built upon may not accurately represent reality, which if true, tends to turn the entire God debate in to a big pile of pointless rubbish. — Jake
Upon seeing this, some people may wash their hands of the God debate and turn their attention to other matters. This seems a reasonable choice. Other people may choose to dump the questionable "exists or not" assumption and then continue a God investigation on that basis. This seems a reasonable choice too. — Jake
Most people will ignore all of the above because they've memorized a collection of beliefs and arguments which they use to publicly inflate their ego, and they don't want this fun game spoiled by some party pooper. Ok, I suppose this is reasonable too, but perhaps not all that interesting. — Jake
Yes, what are these limits and how do they dictate discourse? — Posty McPostface
Wittgenstein was a sort of mystical poet. Have you read any of his works? Start with the Tractatus, it's pure enjoyment. — Posty McPostface
Cheap in what way? Grows confused. — Posty McPostface
The limits of my world are the limits of my language. — Posty McPostface
Go on... — Posty McPostface
More pieces of wisdom — Posty McPostface
In the meantime tell me if you agree with Schopenhauer? — Posty McPostface
The epistemic closure comes to my mind. Can it ever be attained? — Posty McPostface
What do you mean by that? — Posty McPostface
What about sincerity? — Posty McPostface
So, why so much disagreement about various issues? Is this just moral relativism stated another way? — Posty McPostface
But, how do you reach Rogerian agreements between such opposing views as supremacism or such matters? — Posty McPostface
Then what job does a philosopher have? A questioner of truth? — Posty McPostface
I'm asking whether there is any merit to philosophical quietism? Or must we be loud and rambunctious about the issue of God, life, ethics, and so on? — Posty McPostface
Any advice appreciated. — Posty McPostface
You'd have to explain the different ways that you think that people are using "exist" in more detail, without just trying to contextually hint at it without spelling it out. — Terrapin Station
One cannot have the game without the board and the pieces. One cannot have epistemological language-games without there being first something foundational, and I believe that our background reality gives us such a foundation. — Sam26
Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us.
It may be that it's difficult to say what being is, but that is no relief from a duty to try to say what it means...Think about all the nonsense, pseudo-philosophy, pseudo-metaphysics that goes on about topics in which the being of the topic has neither been established nor defined, nor in many cases even made explicit. — tim wood
Reason arises out of the language of reason, we reason from one proposition to another, that's what we do in logic. However, as I've already stated, there are beliefs that have nothing to do with the language of reason. These beliefs are shown in our actions, they have nothing to do with the logic of reason. We show these beliefs everyday in our actions. I open a door, I sit in a chair, I pick things up, all of these actions show certain fundamental beliefs. I don't justify them, no more than I need to justify my belief that I'm sitting at my computer typing, again, they are part of the background of our reality. I believe that being or the thing that is fundamental to reality itself, I refer to as consciousness, is such a foundational or fundamental thing. — Sam26
As to a ground in ultimate value as desire, overlooked is the possibility of good as a matter of reason. If you want to base reason in desire, I suppose you can, but it's not very useful, and is destructive of what is useful. — tim wood
I don't think that's anything complicated. Exists=obtains, occurs, is instantiated, etc.--whatever synonym we want to use. — Terrapin Station
The way I use the terms is simply that "subjective" is mind-dependent, or in other words, we're talking about mental phenomena when we talk about the subjective, and "objective" is mind-independent--we're talking about something that isn't mental phenomena. — Terrapin Station
And then "authoritative"--there, we're probably just talking about a social phenomenon. People who are considered, due to social conventions, biases, and all sorts of things, to be experts more or less. — Terrapin Station
So the real issue, which isn't simply a terminological issue, is whether memories always exist just like they do when you're aware of them, — Terrapin Station
The problem is that things like "objective knowledge," so that the knowledge itself has as one of its properties that it is objective, are really category errors (knowledge, by definition, can't have the property of being objective), so you can't have a "kind-of objectivity" when it comes to something like knowledge. — Terrapin Station
It's not even some unique genius of humans. — SophistiCat
The reason people settle down in their lives is that they have (at least partially) satisfied their thirst for life and are ready to die. The people in whom the desire to live is the strongest is the young, who have yet to have lived the life to its fullest and who still are pursuing their dreams; settling down is nothing but abandoning and giving up on these dreams. — BlueBanana