Right. So we disagree on what makes "useful" obtain, so to speak.
First, do you believe that it can be true or false that something is useful? — Terrapin Station
treat others how they want to be treated. Simple. — darthbarracuda
??? You'd have to explain better why in your view fate would have anything to do with whether you can be right or wrong in an opinion of whether something is useful to you at a particular time. — Terrapin Station
You can have a different opinion at a later time. That doesn't mean that your earlier opinion was wrong. — Terrapin Station
How can the default (existing) be more futile than not existing? — m-theory
Me? But I don't find everything a 13-year-old does funny. — Terrapin Station
I already gave examples of when some things are not as futile as other things.
Everything is not equally futile. — m-theory
Can you be wrong about feeling that something is useful? — Terrapin Station
Finding everything a 13-year-old does funny is called being an uptight, mammering, pox-marked haggard who can't see the value in being playful and whimsical and child-like? If you say so. — Terrapin Station
Are you saying it is equally likely that should not exist? — m-theory
Do you find anything useful? If so, you don't think that everything is futile. — Terrapin Station
Having a sense of humor isn't the same thing as finding everything a 13-year-old does funny. — Terrapin Station
I did exactly that, I gave an example to measure futility, we can compare the futility of different goals to get an objective measure of the objective futility saturation.
Again it becomes very obvious that everything is not futile in equal measures. — m-theory
What I intended for you to ask yourself is how futile is it for you to pursue the goal of trying to prove everything is futile?
How important is it for you to realize that goal?
Are there other goals that you have that are equally or more important that are less futile that you can pursue? — m-theory
I'd probably be more likely to buy a bridge from you at this point than to believe that denial. — Terrapin Station
Why should I care subjectively?
And what does mean if it is an objective fact that I don't care that everything is futile because I am content? — m-theory
And maybe you're 13? — Terrapin Station
Yes. I failed to see that you were saying that that was unclear to you.
I'm saying from my perspective, and in my view this is necessarily from individuals' perspectives.
I did things useful. I feel there are points to various things. — Terrapin Station
Isn't "if everything is futile, discussing how futile everything is... is futile" a tautology?
If you say "all men are liars" why should I believe you? — Bitter Crank
Again relative to what?
Am I to imagine some cosmic being that judges the value of all of human life?
Do I take a consensus of the living and ask them to decide if humanity is worthy pursuit? — m-theory
To the question of? (Whether God exists?)
I'm giving the definition of "futile." What is "God exists" (or "God") the definition of? — Terrapin Station
The pink fairy needs to attend to this point. If everything is futile, then discussing futility is... futile. — Bitter Crank
Stare at the ceiling and ruminate upon those critical lifetime decisions and ask yourself what might have been had you only done otherwise. Finally drift off into a timid slumber of regret and awake to an overcast day of lethargy. Lather, rinse, repeat. — Hanover
That is not my issue though, just because some people find no teleological purpose that justifies their own existence, this does not mean that it is futile for me to form and realize my own goals for my own existence.
I don't feel any obligation to justify my own existence, or human existence, or the entirety of all existence.
At least not to anyone but myself.
Just because I don't justify these things to you does not mean I lead a futile life, for it is not for you to judge my life's futility or fruitfulness for me.
Perhaps your's is a fate of futility, but I am content that mine is not. — m-theory
I think it's helpful to recognize that whether you think life is "futile" or not, any response to the question is fundamentally a belief. Whether you come to a conclusion through a series of propositions, or through an experience, an emotional response, or whatever it is, we never apprehend a full knowledge of whether life has purpose. We momentarily forget the exact propositions, the experience fades, the emotions go back and forth, etc. Belief is the gap between the idea and our consciousness. I think it's good to recognize this in the climate of thought we live in, at least in the West. — Noble Dust
Was this a serious proposal ("Everything is futile.") or more along the lines of sarcasm ("Life is like a sewer; what you get out of it depends on what you put into it.")?
The author of Ecclesiastes thought everything was pretty much futile, and he was being quite serious, as far as I can tell. — Bitter Crank
Futile relative to what?
Suppose I decide to pursue one of two goals.
To spin gold from straw
Or
To get a glass of water from the tap
Obviously one of these goals is less futile than the other. — m-theory
You'd answer yes if you don't find anything useful and you don't believe that anything has a point.
You'd answer no otherwise.
So "No." — Terrapin Station
Well, even someone saying 'Is everything futile?' has its own self-refuting consequence, when it causes you to bring it to the debating table, doesn't it? — mcdoodle
The Zombies (1965) are a bit more convincing. Their picked their name prior to the zombie apocalypse obsession. — Bitter Crank
This thing of beauty https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_jwv2QMtAo — Noble Dust
"Red" is not an EM wave with wavelength 620-740 nm. That is what red is caused by, but the experience of red is something different. Again under a dualist schema. Red is not a property of an object, but rather a property that an object causes us to experience. — darthbarracuda
That is not how it works. Infinite possibilities do not entail that anything and everything is a real possibility. There are infinitely many possible triangles, but none of them have four or more sides. — aletheist
All universal theorists are arguing for is the existence of an entity that somehow exists in multiple places at the same time. The red of that firetruck is similar to the red of that fire hydrant in virtue of the fact that both objects instantiate the universal "red-ness".
It can be helpful to think of properties as ways objects are. Universal theorists think that these "ways" are repeatable entities. Those with the same property are literally instantiating the same universal. — darthbarracuda
Why are we able to be confident that you will not turn into a pineapple in 3.5 minutes? Because that is not a real possibility, any more than a triangle turning into a rectangle while remaining within the infinite continuum of real triangles. — aletheist
They are all real because they possess certain characteristic properties — aletheist
there is an infinite continuum of potential triangles, with different combinations of angles and side lengths. — aletheist