It is ok to prevent the harm of someone else if their negative ethics is being violated by a third-party. The autonomy of the person has already been violated. Violating non-aggression is not bad if one's autonomy is going to be or has already been violated from another's aggression. — schopenhauer1
I'd like to add that a possible justification for negative ethics is its association with autonomy. By violating a principle, autonomy is being violated. By forcing or harming someone, it not respecting their autonomy. — schopenhauer1
For all we know, we may be in the same situation. Although we are more aware than that vegetable-like person, a lot of things escape us, and we could always make an effort to be more aware. Who knows what you might have done to the delivery boy last time you ordered something. — Congau
It is manifest in the way we perceive and/or understand it. Why would energy be potential? Because it is assigned a certain degree of probable capacity for work. Therefore, the potential of any energy is manifest with respect to activities and the conditions they take place in. — BrianW
‘Survival is unnecessary’ - is this statement true or false according to Reason?
— Possibility
Obviously that would depend.
Do you think it is true? If you think it is true, does that entail that it is true? If not, why not? — Bartricks
Which is easier, evolving creativity or creating evolution?
At present the arrow of truth seems to be pointing toward the former, evolving creativity. The surest evidence I can think of is us - evolved creative beings who have difficulty creating evolution. — TheMadFool
Agreed but no art is more complex than the artist him/herself. That's what I mean. — TheMadFool
There is a difference between creativity and evolution but if one subscribes to Darwin's theory, the former evolved from the latter. We now ask which is a better tool in terms of ability to produce "endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful", creativity or what has been termed blind evolution which is self-explanatory?
We have the following to go with:
1. The evident fact of simplicity evolving by what is a random process into complexity
2. Evolved human creativity and intelligence, arguably the dream team in the area of "endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful"
So we have a situation which is simply that blind chance
has managed, against all odds, to evolve creative and intelligent humans yet humans endowed with these advantages have failed to produce anything that approaches such complexity.
It's akin to a blind man with zero skills creating a masterpiece while at the same time a man with 20/20 vision, trained in the arts, fails to even produce something that can be considered a poor counterfeit.
Of course there could be other reasons for this state of affairs like time and incomplete knowledge and so this argument is applicable only to the present. — TheMadFool
No it is not circular. As a young child I lived in a very cold house (ice on the inside of the windows). We had no central heating, just an open fireplace in the living room. I constantly had a cold in the winter. However it didn't bothered me all that much because I thought that this was perfectly normal. Now I live in a centrally heated home but whenever I am anywhere where it is cold I feel miserable. Knowledge has a huge influence on perception. — ovdtogt
Humans suffer more because they know they suffer. — ovdtogt
How a dog 'sees' the world with his nose is beyond our comprehension. — ovdtogt
To find simplicity in complex 'reality' is the essence of 'knowledge'. We are looking for building blocks not for buildings. Try to find a definition of life in 1 sentence and work your way up from there. — ovdtogt
I think you would first need a physical structure, similar to an exoskeleton (porous rock or calcium deposits?) in which a certain (natural) chemical process takes place. Possibly a process that makes lipids which in turn creates a substitute skin. Do you know of a chemical process capable of making lipid from inorganic compounds? — ovdtogt
It is just that because their sense of smell and hearing is so vastly more acute than ours we will never understand it's 'world view' apart that it wants to eat, shit, sleep and fuck like we do. — ovdtogt
I am more concerned with the difference in it's perception of 'reality'. Our truths are more or less 'predetermined by the ability and dis-ability of our senses. — ovdtogt
Because you and I share the same machinery I have far less of a problem comprehending how you operate. Society is built on the fact that as humans we are capable of empathizing with other humans. — ovdtogt
life: a replicating chemical reaction. Is this an accurate or even useful definition of life? — ovdtogt
And if so are we able to speculate how such a self replicating system could come into existence? — ovdtogt
Even comprehending how a dog views 'reality' will just remain an educated guess. — ovdtogt
well I'm not so sure that concludes anything. — ep3265
If a non-human observed something out of our comprehension, there's absolutely no way of telling and we would never even realize it. — ep3265
I think this forum would benefit from a 2 sentence maximum rule. — ovdtogt
That's the only one that matters. Everything else is ego and posturing. — Bartricks
Now, it seems to me that you are thinking that if some people of limited cognitive abilities and/or a stubborn conviction that I am wrong about anything and everything, object to some argument I have made, then that shows that the argument is not sound, or not valid, or that I am not reasonable in rejecting or ignoring what they have said. — Bartricks
Can you also explain to me what you mean by 'evidence'. For example, how can any sensation constitute evidence without an appeal being made to Reason? — Bartricks
So, explain to me on what grounds you think you know something, if it is not by appeal to reason.
It seems to me that you are not remotely reasonable. But of course, that's not a vice, is it, by your book?
You just know that some things are true, and furthermore if the reason of you and others seems to contradict you, that - for you - is not evidence that you are wrong.
There's a name for that: it is called 'dogmatism'. — Bartricks
No, you seem to misunderstand me. I'm not saying that potential energy is not actual energy; it is. Potential energy is actual energy. However, its potentiality is relative. For example, both kinetic and potential energy are energies; but the difference is with respect to the state in which they are manifest. 'Potential' and 'kinetic' are expressions of the conditioning of the energy, and thus potential energy can translate to kinetic and vice-versa. In both cases, it is impossible to negate the aspect of them as being 'energy' even when the conditioning changes. My point is, the perspective of reality as energy is all-inclusive, because it can be applied to all components of reality. — BrianW
How on earth can one reason without appealing to reason? — Bartricks
What is the 'no true Scotsman fallacy' and how have I committed it. Remember, I'm a dumbo so I not be understanding this stuff. — Bartricks
Have I made a false assumption? No. I have assumed this: I have assumed that all reasonable people will agree that they have acquired the true theory of truth when it is clear to the reason of all of them that the theory in question is asserted by Reason. Is that assumption false? Well, you've said precisely nothing - nothing - to challenge it. You don't seem even to be aware of it. But it is true, is it not? I mean, what more could a reasonable person want before they will be assured of the truth of a thesis?
I have also assumed this: that if all reasonable people will be satisfied that they have acquired the true theory of truth when and only when it seems clear to them all that Reason asserts it to be true, then - other things being equal - it is reasonable to suppose that this is what truth itself consists of. That is, that truth itself is composed of Reason's assertions, given that this and this alone is what assures us we have it. — Bartricks
Life requires an agency capable of discovering the most efficient processes to perpetuate itself with the ability to choose these processes in order to do so.
In fact it could be said that if nature is truly efficient it would favor directed evolution which necessitates an agent with intelligence AND free will rather than just leave everything to the vagaries of chance. — TheMadFool
We're in a catch 22 situation. The ability to choose - free will - combined with intelligence would favor life but then there would be no choice but to follow the most efficient processes.
Perhaps we could frame the issue in terms of intelligence alone not being adequate because then there would be nothing to make a choice to follow the most efficient processes to perpetuate itself. There is a need for the ability to choose (free will) even if in the broader context these choices are limited by NE. — TheMadFool
Address the argument I gave. You're not humble if, when confronted with overwhelming evidence that a proposition is true, you continue to take seriously that it is false.
That's what religious people are like. You show them that the evidence indicates their god does not exist. They then pretend they're the reasonable ones if they continue to take seriously that the god does exist.
No, they're not being reasonable - they're just ignoring evidence.
Now, perhaps their god does exist - perhaps there's excellent evidence their god exists.
the point, though, is that a reasonable person does not ignore evidence and keep playing the 'but let's be reasonable and accept the possibility the view is false". That ain't being reasonable, sonny boy, not when evidence has been given that it is true.
Now, engage with that evidence - that is, try and refute my argument. — Bartricks
You're granting too much... even here. The 'ole chap is not even using the term "Reason" in accordance with it's original usage. — creativesoul
What else is there other than our experience and observation of what is and isn't? — ep3265
Reason has her perspective of what is true - it’s a limited perspective, but she’s not aware of this - and she ignores and excludes new information that cannot be reduced to logical argument.
— Possibility
Flagrantly question begging. Reason constitutively determines what's true - that's what my argument appeared to demonstrate. Now, if you think otherwise engage with that argument - challenge either its validity or one of its assumptions. Don't just state a different view, as if evidence counts for nothing. — Bartricks
But know that you're not doing philosophy when you do that. — Bartricks
What if happy man is man who is slave all of life and does not know better? What if culture not have words for "unfair" or "exploit"? — Spirit12
Is being in state of denial not a form of suffering? Here I observe man to be happy. I don't know though. He could be happily walking into ambush with three attackers down street. Maybe even I tell him about attackers but he choose not believe and is wilful ignorance which in this case could be seen as someone who just is not suffering yet? — Spirit12
If we define the universe as everything humanly capable to comprehend, and the AI is able to learn and learns everything, possibly more than human comprehension, and is able to communicate everything that it has learned to humans, then it itself should be defined as human comprehension, thus making it the universe. — ep3265
This raise question, can a happy man be suffering? — Spirit12
