• Biden vs. Trump (Poll)
    Maybe. It's not just about rape though. It's about things like climate change, which is more important.
  • Biden vs. Trump (Poll)
    A third party might make sense in some situations. But isn't not voting also an evil choice? Not voting affects the numbers.
  • Biden vs. Trump (Poll)
    It's a really horrible situation. I can't see any non-evil practical choices though.
  • Biden vs. Trump (Poll)
    Isn't he still the better of two evils?
  • Why is there persistent disagreement in philosophy ?
    So what I'd argue is, Evidentialism is not how science actually functions.h060tu

    OK, but it is more physical-evidence-based than philosophy, no? And that difference is enough to explain why philosophical disputes can and do go unresolved for millennia, whereas scientific questions get actually decided fairly regularly in the light of evidence. That's the question of the thread.
  • Why is there persistent disagreement in philosophy ?
    Sure, that's fair enough. But the arbiter of what makes a scientific theory, model, paradigm, or whatever, true or not, is still evidence, which is objective, or at least strongly intersubjective. Scientific theories have a resource that philosophy does not have. When scientists disagree, they typically go over the evidence, or collect more evidence, or reinterpret the evidence, or question the authenticity of the evidence, or suggest that the evidence needs to be seen in a whole new light, or something. Philosophers don't have that. We have internal consistency, consistency with the broad scientific consensus, appeals to common sense, Ockham's razor, introspection, necessary truths, conceptual clarification, etc. Science has all these too, but it has evidence as well.
  • Why is there persistent disagreement in philosophy ?
    The scientific method, eventually, forces agreement in a way that the philosophical method cannot. Physical evidence is public, and appears (more or less) the same way to everyone that looks at it. This typically forces agreement, eventually. Even people who don't want to believe what the evidence suggests are convinced. Philosophical theories have no physical evidence that settles them one way or another, indeed that may be what makes them a philosophical theory and not a scientific one. There are still standards that make some philosophical theories better than others, but they are not as public or clear-cut.
  • Axiology: What determines value?
    It appeals to my panpsychism. I didn't want to mention that as 180 and I disagree sharply on that, and I was enjoying being able to agree with him on something.

    But panpsychism aside, it seems to accurately characterise a healthy attitude to one's own existence: to seek to continue it and develop it, to increase the things one is able to do with oneself, increase one's functional efficacy; and also a healthy attitude to others existence: increasing the possibilities of inter-function with others, to aid one another in seeking to persist and grow and develop. Of course, there may be occasions where it is not possible for two creatures to both grow in the way they want to without one interfering with the other. But such abortive relations can perhaps be re-made with adjusted values, so that their purposes and values do not clash. One value we are encouraged to have by Jesus and The Beatles is love. And if we define 'love' as something like the will to develop the possibilities of existence, then that should hopefully result in mutually beneficial relations, whatever forms that takes :).
  • Axiology: What determines value?
    To live is to evaluate.

    In Spinoza's terms, every life seeks to persist in its existence - continue, survive, grow-develop (à la 'will to power'); thus, every life values - is valuable to - herself; and insofar a life recognizes other lives as valuable to themselves, a life enters into reciprocal valuing with and among them, to value and be valued by other lives. Thus, value, or meaning, does not come "out of nothing"; it comes from community - natality, sociality, fatality - and reinforced, or enriched, by communicative practices (e.g. cooperative labors, crafts-arts, rituals, trade, discursive dialectics (e.g. scientific / historical / philosophical inquiries)).
    180 Proof

    I like this. Seems intuitively right.
  • Bannings
    Thank you. :)
  • Bannings
    Is there a prohibition on any conspiracy theorising, or only on excessive ridiculous conspiracy theorising?
  • What is the probability that there are major conspiracies
    100% There must be big conspiracies. Knowing what they are is the problem.
  • Science genius says the governments are slowly killing us with stress.
    I may be quibbling here but I think a stressful situation is different than what causes stress. Stress itself begins and ends in biology.NOS4A2

    Ah OK. I see what you mean.
  • Science genius says the governments are slowly killing us with stress.
    I’m pretty sure the body causes stress, not governments.NOS4A2

    Environmental factors are part of the causal story, no?
  • Science genius says the governments are slowly killing us with stress.
    GCB nothing to disagree with there. And to answer you rhetorical question, of course they should.
  • The Metaphilosophy of Analytic Pragmatism
    I'll read it. Prompt me if I forget. You won't know if I've forgotten or not but that's epistemology for you.
  • Can Consciousness really go all the way down to level of bacterias and virus?
    Any developed panpsychist view needs an answer to the combination problem. Micropsychists are particularly targeted: how can lots of individual conscious atoms combine to form a larger conscious entity? Do the individual atoms lose their consciousness? Or are there lots of conscious entities all overlapping? Are their experiences all separate, or do they bleed into one another? As Searle puts it, "What are the units supposed to be?" How is the panpsychist to come up with a plausible story here that isn't just made up and arbitrary?
  • The Codex Quaerentis
    I like the cover. Looks like it was wrestled from a Lich and you're about to level up big time after reading it.
  • Can Consciousness really go all the way down to level of bacterias and virus?
    Also, what is the point of a claim that can not be confirmed in principle and has no explanatory power?Zelebg

    It explains why anything at all is conscious. It might also explain why anything at all happens, if everything that happens is a result of intention. Admittedly these are explanations at the very broadest level possible - you can't get any useful tech out of this, or solve practical moral problems with it.
  • Can Consciousness really go all the way down to level of bacterias and virus?
    What differentiates one consciousness from another - leaf, branch, tree, forest... each grain of sand or the whole beach - what is conscious?Zelebg

    Good question. Possibly Tononi's phi. I like to think of the IIT as a theory of identity rather than a theory of consciousness.
  • Can Consciousness really go all the way down to level of bacterias and virus?
    If that were the case and consciousness were a property of matter rather than a large, functioning nervous system, then consciousness would persist post-mortem.Txastopher

    It would, but identity would not. The units would change.
  • Can Consciousness really go all the way down to level of bacterias and virus?
    However, if panpsychists want to insist that virus are conscious then it is up to them to demonstrate their claim. This they haven't done.Txastopher

    It's right to ask panpsychists for positive demonstrations of course. But it is also interesting to consider what the 'default' position actually is. It is arguably more parsimonious and reasonable to assume panpsychism on the grounds that the only body we know about for sure is conscious, namely my own (and similarly for each of us). So then we have to consider whether there are two kinds of bodies in the world, conscious and non-conscious, or just one, conscious. If all other things are equal, it seems to me that the default position is that there is one kind of body.
  • Anxiety and Causality
    Sorry, maybe I've misunderstood. If the exam is the cause and the anxiety is the effect, then the exam is cancelled, then we have an effect without a cause, rather than a cause without an effect.
  • Anxiety and Causality
    We now have a cause (anxiety) without an effect.TheMadFool

    I don't think you meant it that way round.
  • Spam PM messages
    Yes I got one just like that. He quoted some bible stuff at me. I've PMd Baden.
  • Can Consciousness be Simulated?
    Panpsychism is vague, ambiguous, untestable, without even possibility of ever giving any prediction, confirmation or explanation.Zelebg

    Panpsychism predicts that stuff happens. Things do, verily, happen. Panpsychism is confirmed. If panpsychism were not the case, nothing would ever happen. Things do happen. Therefore panpsychism.

    What do you find fruitful about it?

    It places consciousness at the only point in reality that doesn't involve insurmountable difficulties, namely, at a fundamental level. The antithesis of panpsychism is emergentism. But emergentism is so problematic that we should reject it. One reason is that consciousness is not a vague concept. There are no borderline cases of it. Emergentism requires borderline cases..
  • Reification of life and consciousness
    Darwinian materialismWayfarer

    Does Darwin have an interest in this topic? An what is Darwinian materialism?
  • What does Kant mean by "existence is not a predicate"?
    Existence is a property, it's just not what is wrong with the ontological argument.
  • We are not fit to live under or run governments as we do in the modern world.
    Monarchy - mono archy, or one rules over all.

    Oligarchy - Oligs rule (I don't know what an olig is.)

    Plutarchy - rule by many (I think... now I wish I never skipped those Ancient Greek Language classes)

    Patriarchy - rule by a male originator of the klan

    Matriarchy - rule by a female originator of the Klan

    Anarchy - rule by nobody (an- is a prefix that negates a noun's meaning.)
    god must be atheist

    It would have been so easy to look these up before posting.
  • What God is not
    How is that different from atheism?jorndoe

    This is a rhetorical question.
  • Explaining multiple realizability and its challenges
    compositional fallacy180 Proof

    I've never come across a panpsychist saying a whole must be conscious because some of the parts are (although no doubt there will be such people, I may even be one of them, although I don't recall making an argument of that form). If you are fallacy hunting, wouldn't the fallacy of division be more apt? Namely that the parts must be conscious because the whole is?

    I could understand you crying foul in terms of a divisional fallacy. Are you sure that's not what you mean?
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    Or maybe there is a loving God who isn’t all powerful, because there is an evil God competing with him...leo

    That's another possibility, although it's a non-standard concept of God.

    Not quite. When all things move towards unity, from any point of view all things are seen to move towards us. When all things move towards separation, from any point of view all things are seen to move away from us.

    Now if you agree that unity is correlated with feelings associated with good (love, happiness) and separation is correlated with feelings associated with evil (hate, suffering), then good and evil aren’t relative, they are absolute. In many situations one can be mistaken for the other, but there are situations in which the two cannot be mistaken because they appear the same from all points of view.

    That's interesting, but I think beside the point. I think your theory of good and evil has some merit, but that doesn't stop people taking on self-defeating values, and defining good-for-them and evil-for-them in self-defeating ways. So God might, in a sufficiently revelatory mood, remind us that good is unity and evil is separation, but we can still disagree, no matter how foolishly. And in the act of disagreement, we create our own values. And God himself must value separation, or we would not exist (on the assumption of a creator God of course).
  • My posts are being removed. I wish to know on what grounds.
    I hope he stays. Best way to react to moderation is to treat it as valuable information about the values of the forum and adjust accordingly. He can still offer his theories if done in a more engaging way that people might want to respond to.
  • My posts are being removed. I wish to know on what grounds.
    As a regular user I am glad the mods took action. I was considering reporting his stuff.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    That is not an uncontroversial claim, and typically it is people leaning more toward theism who are most likely to object to it. People who think there's a God usually also think there's an objective moral standard, and that that standard is God's standard, so on their account if God approves of toddlers getting gang-banged and the toddlers disagree, well the toddlers are just wrong.Pfhorrest

    That's true
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    I think all but the most fortunate and either self-centered or ignorant people would find that pretty absurd though.Pfhorrest

    No contradiction follows from people having different values though, even if one of those people is God. Evil is always evil-from-a-point-of-view.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    Theists fall all over themselves to make excuses for why the world can be as shitty as it is and yet God can still somehow be all-knowing, all-powerful, and most of all all-loving.Pfhorrest

    Whatever exists that seems evil to us must be good from the point of view of an all powerful being, otherwise it wouldn't exist. No comfort there for us, but it's consistent. This entails that the theist must embrace the fact that from God's point of view, any kind of suffering is good. It's hard to love God, if loving God is even a coherent concept.

    On the subject of philosophers disagreeing, I guess there is no method that forces agreement, except perhaps the 'logical method' but that's a bit patchy, as you need clear premises that everyone agrees on. In science, agreement is eventually forced by a consistent build up of more and more evidence, and the success of technology based on scientific theory, and even then some people still hold out.
  • Is Preaching Warranted?
    Is this a question about law? If so moderate proselytising is warranted in most countries where human rights are respected AFAIK.

    I think people should be free to try to persuade others of anything at all, as long as they don't do it in an overly coercive or abusive way. And they obediently fuck off when told to.
  • Explaining multiple realizability and its challenges
    180, are you approving of Pfhorrest's panpsychism or of his functionalism regarding the content of consciousness? Or both?