Far better just to do political philosophy properly, which involves developing a philosophical system by reasoning your way up from first principles. — Virgo Avalytikh
if one is opposed the initiation of force and the invasion of private property, as the libertarian is, then one is committed to all of the positions just mentioned. — Virgo Avalytikh
Are you really appalled by the idea of equality of height? Imagine if you could wave a magic wand and from here on out all the men would be 5'10 and all the women 5'4. I understand that the actual real life means to achieving this could be objectionable, but the goal itself is hardly something that makes someone recoil.
It would level the playing field if all men were the same height. That's where equality of opportunity comes in. — BitconnectCarlos
My main question is why does the discussion have to stop here. — BitconnectCarlos
You never really hear major social inequality of height, intelligence, or charisma in the world. — BitconnectCarlos
Its the implication for thise living in that binary choice... — schopenhauer1
Its not asking for improvement plans, its giving the scenario. — schopenhauer1
The millionare analogy is not apt as in that case someone wants to be a millionaire. — schopenhauer1
all I want to know is how he understood me when I asked him to. — Mww
there are people that simply don't like the premises of life, no matter what. It's not that they don't think they can't "improve" some goals in this or that (by simply living, one has to do that in some way, so that's not really in question), but the OVERALL game itself- the fact that this improvement is or has to even taking place. All of it is not liked. — schopenhauer1
How does correspondence survive Quine's Word and Object? — frank
You're taking my argument as an argument (and not a good one) supporting the existence of those things. — Coben
(if I ask every rational English-speaking body in NYC to point to his foot, they will all point to the same place) — Mww
Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. — Coben
An analogy might be something like a game. If you were on a game that you can't get out of except through death, well there are a couple options. Some people "accept" the game (what many people including you suggest), and then offer ways to get better at certain aspects of it. But then there are some people who simply don't like the premises, the very game itself. Yes, they know there are people with ways to "improve" how to play it, but they don't like the fact that they are dealing with the game, whether improving it or not, in the first place. — schopenhauer1
I said that Quine makes no room for degrees in his dismissal of the analytic/synthetic divide. You seemed to disagree and treat my statement as a claim that needed backing. — frank
So you point to the word "blurring" and mention of a knowledge spectrum from particular to abstract. And further, you note that Quine seemed to understand some difference between science and philosophy, and therefore you conclude that Two Dogmas is about matters of degree of difference between analytic and synthetic statements. — frank
I realise the main importance of Quine is the extent to which he declares no difference (no difference in type), but here I'm referring to the difference he does acknowledge, the difference in degree. — Isaac
You used system in regard to a strict, singular, deterministic; I used method. The method is the rules, the system is the use of the rules. No matter the particulars, the brain (the system) obeys the laws attributed to natural forces (the method). — Mww
should would be destructive, insofar as if the conditions under which the method is used determine the method, the method is no longer rule-based, therefore not a proper method. — Mww
If we can suffice with just “thought”, which I advocate as being the case, why do we need more than one method for it? — Mww
You're putting a lot of weight on the meaning of "blurring." — frank
If the brain operates under a strict, singular, mechanically deterministic method, however complex it may be, why wouldn’t the merely philosophical operate under some method as singular, strict and logically deterministic, with some arbitrary corresponding complexity? — Mww
the conditions under which a method operates, shouldn’t determine the rules of the method. — Mww
There's no "matter of degree" to it. — frank
I’m reluctant to admit we have methods of thinking corresponding to the plethora of subjects being thought about. — Mww
The first quote is:
"Science is a continuum extending from History and Engineering at one end, to the more abstract pursuits like mathematics and philosophy at the other" - W.V.O. Quine — Isaac
This is saying that knowledge pertains to particulars, abstractions, and combinations of the two. — frank
Quine is rejecting that special room. We posit stuff via our theories. — frank
Elsewhere you asserted logic is simply a method of thinking.
Are there more? — Mww
I think you're smushing the two quotes together to get a spectrum. The quotes don't actually fit together in that way. — frank
But what was the point you were originally making? That science and philosophy are kindred? Of course they are. — frank
Emojis are fine with me at this point, considering you just keep moving the target and pretending you didn't say what you did say. — Artemis
The quote you provided doesn't indicate that Quine put physics on one end of a spectrum and philosophy on the other. — frank
Do you have another quote? — frank
Where in either of those quotes does he say anything whatsoever about opinions??? — Artemis
Quine doesn't put them [the fields of physics and philosophy] on a spectrum. — Artemis
it's how people are motivated or not. They are motivated to clickbait in their timeline and that's a reality that doesn't care about your moral judgment. — Benkei
The companies' financial statements you mention beg to differ about the ownership of the means of production. Apart from Facebook, none of them have a intangibles-to-total asset ratio above 10%. Facebook's 15%. Alphabet has about 2% total intangible assets, .5% is patents. Amazon's is 7%. etc.
Plenty of ownership of production then. — Benkei
people are usually too busy with (their own personal) problems that are at hand and directly affected by their actions rather than abstract problems that are not noticeably influenced by personal choices. — Benkei
The productivity-pay-gap has increased largely because policy choices were made on behalf of those with the most income, wealth and power. — Benkei
I think the real issue isn't revenge or vindictiveness but the realization the exorbitant wages some managers make is out of proportion (talk about the entitlement generation). — Benkei
The only 'woo' involved was his observation that the subject was always aware of the distinction between being manipulated by the surgeon and his or her own volitional actions. — Wayfarer
I would be interested to know how that subjectively-observed difference could be validated with respect to neural data. — Wayfarer
the point which intrigued him is that the subjects always knew when it was something that was being done from them, and could distinguish it from something they themselves were doing. — Wayfarer
Quine doesn't put them on a spectrum. It doesn't make any sense to put them on a spectrum. They are not the same category of thing. — Artemis
Without getting into your misinterpretation of Quine — Artemis
If there was a spectrum (which I would debate) then anything at the far end with physics would no longer be "just opinion" now would it? — Artemis
This. Also even within the same field but different subfield. "What you're doing isn't history/anthropology/linguistics/psychology..." — fdrake
You cannot maintain both things at once. — Artemis
