Number one, in the US government, does not tell the people what to do. The people tell government what to do. This is the meaning of a patriotic defense. Only when we accept a war is our patriot duty and the will of God does our congress agree to a war. Schools and the media were used to get US citizens to agree to the war. — Athena
The Prussians took control of Germany following the 30 years war, and they central public education and focused it on technology for military and industrial purposes. The US did not have the typist, mechanics, and engineers need for modern warfare, because our education was about citizenship, and Americanizing immigrants, not vocational training. We did not have the trained manpower for a modern war. — Athena
I am spent years studying this stuff, and because what I say is not in agreement with what everyone knows, I the person who doesn't know what she is talking about. — Athena
Do you see a difference between colonial behaviors and the major powers paring for war against each other? — Athena
Would an idea disappear if two things happened: humans disappeared, or we no longer collectively believed in the idea. So the US Constituition exists because we all agree to accept it as fact, though it is obviously not a fact. It’s an agreed upon fiction.
An idea is a fiction. — Brett
Ideas must have evolved over time. What an idea is itself must have evolved. — Brett
The idea that what we think comes from the mind helps in creating a sense of stability, but it’s neither true or stable. The mind’s reflection on itself is inherently unstable and so too the ideas as a result. — Brett
By this I guess you’re suggesting that the mind is the source, or core, of what we are. But that doesn’t do it for me because the mind is still an idea. You equate “self” and “mind” in your quote by Descartes. Are they both the same thing? — Brett
There is no way the US would have entered the first world war if schools and the media had not convinced the population that the US had to defend democracy. The US was isolationist and did not want to get involved. The US was protected by an ocean in the west and an ocean on the east and did not feel threatened by a land invasion. The technology for airfare was not well developed. It did not have enough trained typists, engineers, mechanics for war and didn't have that many people enlisted in military service. — Echarmion
Please share your source of that information so it can be discussed. There was a lot of defending of colonies but that was far from being prepared to fight off an invasion with an army equal to Germany's army. — Athena
That seems a strange thing to say. We would be speaking German if at the beginning of WWI we had not rushed to bring our nation up to the level of German military technology and this includes bureaucratic technology that has radically changed politics! In 1916, our education had nothing to do with technology and vocational training. It was all about literature and culture. So here we are in lulla land totally unprepared for modern warfare, and Germany was swallowing up one country after another. This technology is as much about bureaucratic technology as it is about weapons. — Athena
Charles Sarolea wrote a book warning the world Germany was mobilizing for war and his book was ignored until WWI began. — Athena
I do believe in animal welfare though. It is morally ok for us to eat meat if the meat is properly sourced and the animals are not simply being locked up in cages and being fed nothing but steroids. — Grievous
Buddhas of Bamyan: The Taliban were good at cancel culture — jgill
How can technology be part of the outside world? The perception and truth of the outside world has changed with our mind’s perception of things. Technology is an idea. — Brett
That’s not quite what I said. The collection of fictions refers to my thoughts on technology. — Brett
That’s my point. All things we think of are fictions. What else could they be? — Brett
In fact it’s like there’s nothing there in the human mind at all. The idea, the fiction, is not the mind it’s a creation of the mind. So even the mind is a creation of the mind, another fiction. — Brett
I don’t recall that phrase exactly from Kant, so can you elaborate on that? — Pfhorrest
So "You should drive on the left" is a moral claim? — Isaac
I want to start a discussion here on these two competing views of moral philosophy, does the action matter more or do the consequences matter more. This varies from scenario to scenario but I think it is still a fun discussion to have. — Grievous
We know what we know because we think what we think. — Outlander
I mean, would you rather be slaughtered by people who destroyed everything you know or live with others who did and do nothing but take care of you in exchange for labor? — Outlander
If the victim topples the other group in spite of that, is that bad? What if they do so but you found out I was lying and the victims were really the oppressors who already had control of their educational system and knowledge of history basically. — Outlander
Is it even possible to insure ordinary joes from being blown up by the system or its savviest manipulators? What is the philosophy that upholds such a volatile situation, and can it be changed? — Enrique
In short unless your a millionaire or one of the lucky few happy with your life, you'd be much happier as a squirrel or elephant. — Gitonga
On a decent forum, folk would have immediately pointed out that the OP commits the naturalistic fallacy. — Banno
You were proposing that it was logical that human consciousness exists through logical necessity. And so, what else exists through logical necessity? — 3017amen
So it sounds like you believe in logical necessity then, no? — 3017amen
I see. But I still feel that the probability of all 20+ parameters coming out in life supporting ranges by accident is very likely incredibly remote. Just an estimate. — Devans99
- If 100 come out 6, I loose 100 dollars
- If 99 come out 6, I gain a million dollars
- Any other result is neutral (?)
I would take the wager. — Devans99
It's 20+ separate parameters... it has to be some huge number. All I'm saying is it must be huge. — Devans99
Well I prefer to make a rough estimate rather than just saying 'I don't know'. I think a rough estimate is sufficient in this case - the number in question is huge - it hardly matters precisely how huge. — Devans99
As I stand to lose nothing, I'd take the wager. — Devans99
I am just estimating the chances - what else can I do? I'm not a quantum physicist! — Devans99
There are about 20 separate parameters. Conservatively assuming there is a 50% chance for each to be in life supporting range, then we have 50%^20 = 0.0000953674316% chance for the universe to be life supporting by chance. — Devans99
I am afraid that I cannot give you any more than wild guesses on the actual probabilities of specific parameters being within life supporting range. But there are just so many things that need to be right for life to be supported that I hope you will agree the resulting combined probability that the universe is life supporting by chance has to staggeringly remote. — Devans99
1. It could have attractive, repulsive or attractive and repulsive action. The 3rd is required for life. There is a 33% chance of the third — Devans99
2. Its strength must be correct so that electrons orbit the nucleus, not flying off or falling into the nucleus. I'll have to make a guess here, maybe the chance of the strength being right is 25%
3. Its range must be correct - again I'll guess at 25%. — Devans99
having nothing original, interesting or remotely sophisticated to say just pops up every couple of days to repeat the party (White House) line — Baden
So that's going to come out to some sort of huge number like billions to one. — Devans99
vandalism, the violence—this is a conformist putsch — NOS4A2
The chances of [1] happening are billions to one, — Devans99
Maybe the more obvious question would be, why are there laws of physics/patterns in the universe v. the unrestricted chaos of a lawless universe? — 3017amen
The right to own property and that it cannot arbitrarily taken away from you is one of the basic institutions necessary for a functioning society. If this institution isn't upheld, like if I just can bribe a judge and come with a paper that the land that you have lived all your life is actually mine, there are huge problems in the society. In many Third World countries the lack of these institution of property is a major problem. Which indeed itself is a great topic when discussing communism. — ssu
If you've witnessed a black hole or alien world in person or through a telescope or something, then sorry. Rather can find one- right now- to show an independent observer. You're right. And I apologize. — Outlander
If you are unable to do so, I'd assert the odds remain 50/50. — Outlander
I'm assuming we can replace positive with assertive or irrefutable? — Outlander
That's a fact. So. By the same logic, it is not discounting the possibility. Therefore, er, yeah. When you're talking about things like parallel universes, black holes, and alien worlds the "possibility of God" becomes much more on par with the inverse. — Outlander