the OHCHR warned that their data is not reliable statistic but a count a minima. — Olivier5
Causing people to be is the moral problem if it leads to X, Y, Z negatives.. That is the argument at hand — schopenhauer1
Causing it to be is the "force" I am talking about.. There is no strict use of force.. but it usually means in these cases, "imposing your will". — schopenhauer1
it has no merit to the claim that causing someone to be (forcing, making a life start that entails suffering, it DOESN"T matter the phrasing), is the point at hand. — schopenhauer1
Doesn't matter. You caused a soldier to be. — schopenhauer1
Doesn't matter. You caused a soldier to be. — schopenhauer1
It is that there was a state of affairs thus that you made a soldier. — schopenhauer1
A wait time between the initial action and the outcome (a person) somehow makes the imposition null? How? Why does it have to be the exact immediate affect of conception and not the result 9 months later? — schopenhauer1
An action led to a person existing. That person existing has entailed necessary conditions. — schopenhauer1
In the examples we discussed the moral agent doesn't cause anything and therefore does not bear responsibility. — Tzeentch
It is imposing the state of affairs that entails that necessary condition. — schopenhauer1
According to your fake 'statistics' — Olivier5
If you mean that, then no, I don't think you can mind read. — Hanover
Under 1 it is impossible to be wrong about anything. — Isaac
You can be wrong about things other than your mind existing, e.g. God. — Michael
Let's say that a number of coins are hidden in a house. I search the house and find 10 coins. If there are only 10 coins then I know where all the coins are, but I don't know that there are only 10 coins. As far as I know, there may be an 11th coin that is still hidden. Whether or not there is an 11th coin is independent of the 10 coins I have found, even if there are only 10 coins. And I'm wrong if I claim that there is an 11th coin. — Michael
Again, consider the two scenarios:
1. Only my mind exists
2. Only my mind and God exist — Michael
Demonstrate time for me. — Hanover
Because I don't think time and space are simply physical laws, but they are part of a most fundamental conceptual framework that nothing can be understood without their presumption. Existence is not a property of something and time and space are fundamental components of existence. If you have a dog without hair, you have a hairless dog. If you have a dog outside space and outside time, it exists no where at no time, meaning you don't have dog at all.
And this is part of the bigger question about objects generally in terms of how much is the physical object and how much is imposed by our perceptions and conceptual framework.
So, the reason you can't have an existing mind that does not occur in space or time is because such a mind is by definition not in existence. — Hanover
we don't read other people's minds. — Hanover
I repeat: — Olivier5
There is a bit of an equivocation there though, the expanded conscription in that instance is a response to invasion, and so the trade off ought turn on the disruptive consequences of unresisted or successful invasion rather than the steady state of an established government's qualify of life statistics. — fdrake
Can you think of a case where conscription wouldn't be unjust? — fdrake
How much of that is a romantic attachment to a culture being rationalised remains to be seen, in each case (like _db and their Graeber quote said — fdrake
They claim that if God exists then he is external to their mind, and they claim that God exists — Michael
Of course they can. If scenario 1 is the case then God doesn't exist and so their claim that God exists is false. — Michael
If the distinguishing characteristic of spooky stuff is that which cannot be seen or touched, then your worldly examples of space and time would actually be spooky stuff. — Hanover
You assert without explanation why a thing that is constrained by some physical forces must be constrained by all physical forces. — Hanover
for a mind to exist, it must exist in space and time, but because it shares the requirement with brains that it exist in space and time doesn't mean it is subject to all the same scientific descriptions. — Hanover
The parents willfully initiated a process which they knew would result in a person being born and thus forced to live. — Tzeentch
I only pulled a trigger, I never shot the gun. It's the bullet that killed him, but I am innocent! — Tzeentch
If my mind is the only thing that exists then "God exists" is false. If my mind and God are the only things that exist then "God exists" is true. The solipsist doesn't know which of these two scenarios is the case. — Michael
That's a false dichotomy. I've shown that with the example of God's existence. Under 2, whether or not God exists depends on my mind, which is false. But we don't then say that if God's existence depends on the existence of some mind-independent entity then God's non-existence depends on the existence of some mind-independent entity. — Michael
If war is 24 times less deadly than a regular peacetime environment, then it is a minor nuisance. — Olivier5
They do, — Michael
The epistemological solipsist rejects the part that says "all that is the case is in our minds". They only say "all that can be known to exist is in our minds". I've made this clear several times now. — Michael
Can one be born without being alive? — Tzeentch
what difference does it make? Clearly an act of force took place. — Tzeentch
The solipsist can claim that God exists, and that he is wrong if God doesn't exist. — Michael
To be born is to be forced by one's parents to live. — Tzeentch
What mind-independent object needs to exist for me to be wrong? — Michael
Whence the religious language? Angels? Soul? You are arguing with your fantasy of what I have been saying. — unenlightened
my mind pours out here and drips onto your screen, to be absorbed by your mind — unenlightened
Without embodiment there would indeed be nothing but a sea of mind — unenlightened
mind is like water; each of us has their separate cup of water, some muddy and some salty and so on, but the separation is temporary, and somewhere is the Great Sea of Mind whence we all came and to which we all return. — unenlightened
I don't need a mind-independent object to exist for me to be wrong when I claim that God exists. — Michael
It is implausible that God exists in my mind, therefore I know that God exists independently of me.
Obviously this is wrong. — Michael
ou say 'talking meat', I prefer 'embodied mind'. It's not exactly controversial or even original. — unenlightened
What's the problem? — Michael
The epistemological solipsist claims that we can't know that other minds and mind-independent objects exist. He doesn't claim that other minds and mind-independent objects don't exist. That would be ontological solipsism. — Michael
Why would God be in their mind? — Michael
No, they could honestly believe that God exists. They're just wrong if he doesn't. — Michael
A falsehood isn't a lie. — Michael
Am I talking to a piece of meat here? — unenlightened