So, the question presupposes a grander purpose than whatever your parents were trying to achieve. The purpose of you being here is not, then, conferred by your parents, but someone else. And so to wonder why you're here, is to acknowledge at some level that someone - someone a little grander than your parents - has put you here for some end. — Bartricks
Something that's been on my mind quite a bit lately is something some people devote their entire lives to, the question of what space is made of if anything. — Paul S
Why does God have the Israelites march around the walls of Jericho once a day for six days and seven times on the seventh day before the walls fall? There doesn't appear to be any particular significance to doing this as far as I can tell, in fact there are a lot of other things that people are told by God to do in the Bible that don't appear to have any real reason or relation between them. But the people almost always seem to do the things without any apparent question even among themselves as to why doing A is supposed to lead to B.
Did people in those days simply not think so critically about these things or did they just blindly obey orders (by "God")? Because to be honest it is NOT a good thing in any case to just blindly obey orders, even by someone who you trust, because it means that you will essentially do anything that you are told and without knowing why, even if it is a bad thing to do. The Nazis were in fact trained to do just this, and to just do things that they were "supposed" to do without knowing or asking why or knowing if it was a bad thing. I would argue that some of them likely did not even know what a "bad thing" was. — BBQueue
The object of the classic debate is to win the argument, not to get to the truth. However, if there was a generally accepted set of steps to demonstrate due diligence in countering bias, such as the ones I have proposed, part of the debate could be the need for each opponent to demonstrate that they have gone through them. Negligence in doing this, or refusal to do so, could automatically disqualify the debater loosing the argument by default. — EusebiusLevi
I've only been here for a short time, and I've already noticed the same tendency as many other open forums on the internet.
Negativity. Nastiness hiding behind anonymity. Chest-beating. Condescension, ad hominem attacks. (Note the difference between these things and a good "heated discussion.")
I'm not bemoaning it, in fact I'm used to it, but since this is a philosophy forum I'm wondering "why?" when the opposite could just as easily true. And asking for input. To make it official here's my question:
"Why do human interactions on the internet tend to skew negative, as opposed to positive? What does this say about human behaviour?" — GLEN willows
When she's thirsty she goes to the place where she drinks. She knows how to get there. If she found it empty, she'd go elsewhere. — creativesoul
The aquarium was not meaningful to the cat until the cat drew correlations between the water in the aquarium and the satisfaction of her own thirst that drinking water can provide. Now, the cat goes to the aquarium whenever she wants a drink of water. — creativesoul
I'm suddenly reminded of being charged with using an unnecessarily complicated framework. — creativesoul
This looks like of those times where the narrative gets meta and the authors lose sight of the ground.
The very notion of possible meaning is existentially dependent upon language use. Where there has never been language use, there could have never been anyone hedging their bets upon another's meaning. Possible meaning is only attributed within a language game. Cookie does not play such games. — creativesoul
The cat is neither you nor I. — creativesoul
The life sustaining role is not recognized by her for she does not have the language in order to be able to draw such complex correlations. The relation is meaningful to us, and significant to her by virtue of being life sustaining. She has no clue. — creativesoul
Not all things significant to her are also meaningful to her. Unless something becomes part of a correlation drawn by a candidate under consideration, it is not meaningful to them. That same something may be significant to her without her ever becoming aware of the significance that it has. — creativesoul
Significance is not equivalent to meaning. — creativesoul
The aquarium plays a life sustaining role in my cat's life. Since water is life sustaining and the aquarium provides water, the aquarium is a significant part of my cat's life. That is never considered by the cat. The aquarium's life sustaining role in my cat's life goes completely unnoticed by my cat.
So, meaning is not that significance. — creativesoul
Not all things significant to the cat are meaningful to her. All things meaningful to the cat are also significant to her. — creativesoul
There is a naturally occurring process by which all meaningful things become so. — creativesoul
Significance and meaning are distinct. — creativesoul
Some things that make significant impact upon what happens next are not at all meaningful to the creature being significantly impacted. — creativesoul
I believe that awareness of our biases is very helpful in arriving to accurate knowledge. It informs us of the need to, as you say, ameliorate, or compensate for them. That is why I believe a process, a method, with some essential steps to go through is required. I think that the steps I proposed are the bare minimum. They don't assure that we will arrive to an accurate conclusion, especially when the evidence we have is lacking or defective, but it will surely help. — EusebiusLevi
That sort of comparison - if warranted - ought at least be accompanied by some real life example that somehow shows a lack of explanatory power inherent to the position I'm advocating here. Ptolemy's position failed to be able to account for observation. — creativesoul
I use "things" and not "objects" for good reason. I reject the subject/object dichotomy/framework as well as a few other inherently inadequate, but nonetheless commonly used ones. — creativesoul
As far as the last statement goes, I would tentatively agree, but it's quite a bit more nuanced than that, especially after language use has begun. Along the evolutionary timeline, there are situations where some prior meaning is a precondition for some potential thought. But, as a matter of initial emergence, meaning and thought are co-dependent upon one another. — creativesoul
I guess that's a possibility but it becomes complicated because answers vary with constantly changing conditions that give rise to questions. — synthesis
I would concur that the fact that an omoeba alters direction until it is traveling along a chemical gradient does not render an omoeba capable of drawing correlations between different things, the chemical gradient being one of those things... — creativesoul
Ok. But do you agree that existence, as a necessary precondition of becoming meaningful, has at least the possibility of a relational effect/affect prior to its own meaning?
— Possibility
The question makes little to no sense on my view. Not all things that exist are meaningful. Some causal and spatiotemporal relationships exist in their entirety prior to ever becoming meaningful to any individual creature capable of attributing meaning. — creativesoul
Our knowledge of that which exists in it's entirety prior to becoming meaningful and/or prior to our becoming aware of it is certainly limited. — creativesoul
I would also not call existence "a relation" or a relationship that exists in it's entirety prior to becoming meaningful.
— creativesoul
What would you call it then?
— Possibility
Having an effect/affect. A necessary precondition of becoming meaningful and/or becoming part of a causal and/or spatiotemporal relation. — creativesoul
“Existence is a relation to the possibility of non-existence. In its entirety, and prior to becoming meaningful, the possibility of existence is inseparable from its negation.”
That looks like an attempt at a logical rendering to me.
Here's my issue with it...
When something exists in it's entirety prior to language use, there is no possibility that it does not, and there is no negation.
Considering whether or not something or another exists; parsing existence in terms of the possibility of non-existence; claiming that existence is inseparable from it's negation presupposes that negation itself exists. Negation is entirely existentially dependent upon language use. Existence is not. Hence, as above, when something exists in it's entirety prior to language use, there is no possibility that it does not, and there is no such thing as negation. — creativesoul
Interesting. It reminded me of para-consistent logic or rejecting bivalence or rejecting the LEM. Have you no issue with explosion? No use for truth? — creativesoul
This might be our main point of contention. It seems to fit fine to me, without ending in incoherency, equivocation, or self-contradiction. — creativesoul
The wonderful thing about thinking is that nobody knows anything about it (although you would never ascertain that gem from reading many of the contributions on this forum). And (of course) nobody really knows anything about anything, but I would like to add my specimen to the pile by suggesting that contrary to the accepted order of things intellectual, the answer must be known before the question posited. After all, how could you possible know what to ask without this knowledge? — synthesis
I would also not call existence "a relation" or a relationship that exists in it's entirety prior to becoming meaningful. — creativesoul
It seems that perhaps your framework will not allow us to say something about that which exists in it's entirety prior to meaning, without ending in self-contradiction, but that inevitable result is - I strongly suspect - due to the inherent flaws within that framework. — creativesoul
Why the scare-quotes around the terms truth and existence? The words are part of a relation, so if that's what you're saying by calling them both relations, I would concur. However, as parts of language use, they are meaningful, so it doesn't make sense to say that both exist in their entirety prior to becoming meaningful. — creativesoul
‘Truth’ is an example of this, and so is ‘existence’. Both of these relations exist in their entirety prior to becoming meaningful, and the relations that we construct within the bounds of language are more accurately understood as an incomplete perspective (an approximation) of the possible relation in its entirety. — Possibility
↪Possibility We have some agreement.
In my view, this ‘evil’ is more the cornerstone of institutionalised religion.
— Possibility
Kenny sets out faith in terms of adherence to "acceptance of the testimony of a sacred text or of a religious community" - top p.394.
I would drive the nail deeper and suggest that no sooner are religious notions articulated than they become false. This also follows from such talk being understood as metaphor. — Banno
If it was completely indeterminate, we couldn't rule out horses the size of buildings. — frank
How is a universal indeterminate? Do you mean because horses come in a range of sizes? Isn't that range a determinate property of the idea of a horse? — frank
Does this argument work? — frank
”...and signs and the signs of signs are used only when we are lacking things...”
Re "Thoughts actually exist physiologically as Patterns or Arrangements of brain cells inside of human heads. Those brain cells produce tiny electrical currents that can be detected." — Ken Edwards
Memory is simply the mind's record of the past and these records maybe of absolutely anything one has experienced but the one I'm specifically interested in is ideas - memory of ideas.
Insight is defined as sudden breakthroughs or eureka moments that one experiences while tackling a usually difficult problem.
What got me thinking is there's no way one can distinguish insights from memories - they're both thoughts. Yes, memories are supposed to be recorded past experiences but I'd like to draw your attention to the fact that in terms of purely mental features, we can't tell apart insights from memories. Both of them have identical mental qualities. — TheMadFool
The million dollar question is this:
If reincarnation is not bound by time i.e. deaths and rebirths are temporally unrestricted (people who die in the future being reborn in the past, the converse scenario being a non-issue) could insights be memories? — TheMadFool
Possibility So you wish to say that you are confident without warrant... Fine. It's the "without warrant" part that is salient here.
your point being...?
— Possibility
Here's the argument in the article, in less than twenty words: add warrant to belief and knowledge; faith is belief that is neither warranted nor known. No reference to tradition. — Banno
I agree with Dawkins that faith, as an irrevocable commitment, is not reasonable when given to a false proposition. But I see nothing unreasonable in believers having the degree of commitment to their church, synagogue or mosque that they might have to a political party or social community.
It is the degree of commitment involved in faith, rather than its religious object, that is what is really objectionable;
A bit more on the faith aspect...
It is too much to say that faith requires no justification: many religious people offer arguments not just for belief in God but for their particular creed. What is true is that the kinds of arguments they offer cannot be claimed to have anything like the degree of warrant that would justify the irrevocable commitment of faith. It is true that faith brooks no argument, not in the sense that the faithful are unwilling to offer responses to criticisms, but that no argument will make a true believer give up his faith, and this is something he is resolved on in advance of hearing any argument.
Faith is unshakable belief in spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. The saying goes "walk by faith not by sight". The key point above is the last statement. One with faith has already made up their own mind that nothing will change what they already believe, and they've done so - many times - quite deliberately, consciously, and knowingly. To do so in Christianity is held up as one of the most admirable qualities, if not perhaps the most admirable that a believer can have. — creativesoul
Clearly, he is showing tradition insufficient. — Banno
Yes - but in terms of relational possibility, not just logical possibility.
— Possibility
Not in terms of what it takes in order for something to become meaningful(existing meaningfully)? — creativesoul
we can think about it, and it’s at least possible that we can relate to it prior to language use, beyond the necessity of significance or potential, perhaps even meaningfully - exploring possible distinctions and relational structures between significance and meaning. — Possibility
I don’t think we can say anything about ‘relations that exist in their entirety prior to meaning’ within the bounds of logic.
But if we can say something that appears contradictory...
— Possibility
More self-contradiction. — creativesoul
To be clear...
Are you suggesting that there ought be no rules governing human behaviour? That there ought be no such thing as an enforceable clearly written code of acceptable/unacceptable behaviour?
:worry: — creativesoul
Why isn't that shifting the topic? No, he's referring to faith. He doesn't mention tradition. — Banno
In the Judeo-Christian tradition for instance... — Banno
"God said 'fear', but meant 'trust'"...?
Not convincing. — Banno
