Is logic detrimental to evidently self driven organisms? With limited computing power, and environmental complexity leading to endless permutations, it is impossible to derive any logical way of living in any environment, that is not based on fundamentally irrational conclusions that happen to lead to reproductive success. Can logical systems exist within fundamentally illogical conclusions? — Grey Vs Gray
Humans tend to own/justify actions taken and thoughts had in retrospect. This apparent illusion, which you can notice if you pay attention, possibly causes us to believe that ought statements exist. Are there any oughts? — Grey Vs Gray
I do not believe that anyone can provide a reason for me not to end my life tomorrow (hypothetically, I'm not suicidal by any means), other than "because you may aswell live". In my personal opinion the length of one's life is not a factor when determining whether the ending of it was negative or not. — JacobPhilosophy
It took me a couple of posts to get no one seems to appreciate matriarchy is female domination, female leadership, and there are some really good things about matriarchies. — Athena
One proof that females think differently is the skyrocketing number of bills passed to take care of children. — Athena
Anthropology is one science that studies animals and humans to get at what is natural, and also anthropology does cross-cultural studies. I don't know what the name of the field that studies hormones but that certainly should be taken into consideration in a study of human behavior and gender differences. — Athena
Is it possible that women may think fundamentally different from men, unless they are pressured to think like men, and that that difference is important to humanity? — Athena
But I don't think this argument actually supports his point. In fact, I think this argument actually leads towards anarchism. For if we have this natural distrust of our fellow man, and further if the natural state amongst men is that of perpetual war, then placing another man or group of men in power over us would not actually waylay the state of perpetual war. Indeed, all this would do is intensify it greatly. For while there may allegedly exist a state of 'peace' amongst the ruled, there would still be the state of perpetual war between the rulers and the ruled; in fact, it would only be magnified, since the ruled are now in a totally asymmetrical position. — Alvin Capello
This is of course interesting. A significant reduction in the standard of living because you can buy less cheap crap. But what would a society win if it has a strong manufacturing base? That really depends on what it would look like of course. What if it comes with increased respect for the working class, better working conditions etc.? The "less stuff" may be outweighed by intangible benefits. — Benkei
Yes, but that means those options available to you are, in your eyes, equal in value. Had it been that some options were more valuable than others, then you would prefer those over others and so, since the choices you make are determined by the value of the options, you are, in every sense of the word, compelled to make those choices. No freedom there. — TheMadFool
In other words morality is meaningless if one is obligated to be moral. — TheMadFool
Given this is so, any moral theory that builds itself up on the premise that people should be obligated to do good and prohibited from doing bad is self-refuting for it amounts to coercion and this, in the worst way possible, nullifies moral responsibility which I referred to in a previous paragraph. — TheMadFool
Therefore, my insistence that we must be free from any and all obligations and therefore my attempt to tease out a distinction in the meaning of ought. The actual moral ought that we should be guided by is the one that expresses simply a wish/desire which doesn't carry the weight of duty i.e. isn't an obligation; we should be wary of the other moral ought which is, good intentions notwithstanding, of the obligatory kind that, as I've mentioned, voids a fundamental moral principle, the principle of moral responsibility. — TheMadFool
So, the moral freedom I recommend isn't random in the sense that there are absolutely no guidelines to morality and we act on whims, but is based on moral oughts that are nothing more than the wishes/desires of people to be good and not bad, possessing no power to force our hands to be moral and not immoral. — TheMadFool
I didn't think I'd have to explain to anyone that our economic system is as far from capitalism as can be. I've seen it described as corporate socialism. Not to pick one example over another but just the other day I ran across a story. Capital One ("What's in YOUR Wallet?) made a horrible bet and lost a billion dollars. If they had to declare the loss their stockholders would be wiped out. Don't worry, though. The government did some financial chicanery to protect them. — fishfry
Are you being disingenuous? Trump has reconfigured our trade relationship with China using strong words during his campaign and tariffs now that he's president. If you're unaware of these ongoing developments, President Xi certainly isn't. — fishfry
Read your Chomsky. Or maybe this is the first time anyone told you that the CIA writes the news you read. What kind of magic fairyland do people think we live in where everything's like it's supposed to be in high school civics, which I hear they don't even bother to try to teach anymore. — fishfry
Why have the media declared a national hysteria? — fishfry
n another post I suggested that it's not out of the question that the response is part of a larger globalist plan. But for me, "not out of the question" is never confused with "I know." I do like to speculate, and to try to put current events into the historical context of powerful people doing nasty things for their own benefit. — fishfry
So it's not out of the question that a nasty flu came around (even Dr Fauci is now admitting that the death rate could be more like 0.1%, rather than the ten-times-worse 1% he announced last week) and the powers that be said, "This is it, tell the country to shut down all commerce, tank Wall Street AND Main Street, and Trump will be thrown out of office). I not only believe that's possible, I regard at as strongly possible. I'd go so far as to say likely. — fishfry
But point being that I DO believe certain powerful interests wouldn't mind a huge financial crash this year; and certainly we didn't shut down the economy in 2016 when 80,000 Americans died of the flu (official CDC number). — fishfry
So with that in the back of my mind, I said the hysteria was planned when in that particular context, declared made more sense. What I mean is, why didn't the media declare a hysteria in 2018? I'd really like a rational answer to that. 80,000 dead is a lot. I never even heard about it till the CDC announced the number in 2019. Why not? I'm curious. — fishfry
I don't want another 8 years of Obama. And neither, let me point out, did the American people. — fishfry
You say disaffection and anger. Over what? The Dems will tell you it's anger over minorities and gays. That's bs. — fishfry
he Dems won't come to terms with the consequences of their own economic policies. — fishfry
The Dems hate the country they claim to want to lead. Strong words. I'll stand by them. I've been seriously radicalized watching the Dems in action lately. — fishfry
Your sophistry does not turn lies into true statements. — Nobeernolife
I am NOT surprised.... — Nobeernolife
Yes, this is often invoked for both cases. Where is the line drawn then? Who gets to draw the line? When can one culture tell another one what to do? Is it being culturally insensitive and when does that not matter anymore? — schopenhauer1
The "both sides" refers to pro and anti statue. — Nobeernolife
I would have made a snarky remark about your reading comprehension, but after watching a few of Dr. Karlyn Borysenko video, I am starting to understand the TDS sufferers better. With your distorted filter, you really do see a different world than those of us who are not afflicted. Hope you get better sometime. — Nobeernolife
He said:
"And you had people -- and I’m not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists -- because they should be condemned totally. But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists. Okay? And the press has treated them absolutely unfairly."
So clearly you did not not read the transcript. Well, maybe making fake claims if par for the course for believers of the fake media. Anyway, I am not your babysitter. Do your own homework. Just stop lying. — Nobeernolife
He says it is illegal for unwashed to read Wikileaks. But he at CNN can. — Nobeernolife
If you had seen the original raw footage (removed by Youtube) you would see the Hollywood production that CNN staged, complete with directions and pre-printed placards. Still the link I posted show some of it. — Nobeernolife
Nope, not an opinion. If you read the transcript, you clearly see that Trump was talking about good people on both sides of the monumet debate, not on both sides of the neonazi / antineonazi fights. This is a blatant lie by CNN, and one of the most despiccable ones. — Nobeernolife
An honest title would have been "2 idiots die from drinking fish tank cleaner". Instead of that, the fake media turned that into something like "people die from following Trumps Corona medicine recommendation" (not verbatim, but different variations of that). Trump had said that Hydroxychloroquinine could be a "game changer", which it is. — Nobeernolife
He NEVER said people should drink fish tank desinfectant contining Chloroquininesulpate, with "NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION" printed on the package. — Nobeernolife
Randomness essentially doesn't favor any option among those available and freedom too means all options are equal in value. — TheMadFool
The difference between randomness and a good person and a bad person is in the first case, good and bad are equiprobable at 50%, in the second case probability of good is > 50% and in the third case the probability of bad > 50%. What do you think? — TheMadFool
That, in my humble opinion, is freedom. Rejecting a valuation system that makes you have a preference. — TheMadFool
1. ought: simply expresses a desire/wish but lacks force in the sense it implies a certain course of action. For instance "it ought to rain" expresses the simple desire or wish for rain as expressed as "wish it would rain" — TheMadFool
Why are moral oughts not, as I claim here, obligatory; they are, at best, simply our wishes/desires for something better. This is because an essential aspect of morality is responsibility and to be responsible for one's actions, one must be free; in other words, there can be no obligations to act or not to act in certain ways in morality. To be morally responsible, we must be free. To be free, there mustn't be obligations. If there mustn't be obligations, the oughts of morality mustn't be obligatory. Ergo, to be morally responsible, the oughts of morality mustn't be obligatory. — TheMadFool
Ergo, if one wishes to construct a moral theory that makes us obligated to do good and not bad as all moral theories so far have tried to, it would effectively relieve its adherents of any moral responsibility since they would lack the freedom to do anything but good. — TheMadFool
The measuring event is the act of you (or the measuring device you use) measuring the speed of the passing car. Let’s say that you use a laser speed gun, which basically measures the rate of change in distance relative to direction. — Possibility
if the laser gun was attached to a police car heading in the opposite direction, it would need to take into account the rate of change relative to direction of the police car in relation to the passing car, in order to determine an accurate speed of the passing car. Otherwise it’s just a relative speed. — Possibility
The resulting measurement is reduced to two-dimensional information and then a one-dimensional value in relation to a value system or language (ie. km/hr), without which this value has no meaning in relation to me. So any fifth and sixth dimensional information is also assumed to be constant, and need not be taken into account if you then communicate that speed value to me. — Possibility
So a first question can be if it is neccessary for something to be / to exist in order to be viewed as a "thing"? If we answer affirmatively we will have to bear in mind that there are fictitous "things": we all agree that they belong to the world of fiction and thus are not "real", but that being the case is not a cause for them to lose their status of being "things"! — Daniel C
No mathematical concept needed. That dimensions are necessarily spatial is an assumption; they’re a relational structure, applicable to all information. — Possibility
They do have an observer - or measuring device, really - when/where the measurement is taken. But a measurement (once taken) loses a dimensional aspect: time, distance, etc. It’s confusing, but as a measuring event, it’s four-dimensional, but as a recorded measurement, it’s only three-dimensional information at best. — Possibility
Perhaps the reason for the misunderstanding is that we nowdays use the term meta- quite trivially. For example, we use the term metatext, a text that describes or discusses text. And that of course is totally normal text and nothing to do with metaphysics. Or then there's metaprogramming, where a computer running a program treats other programs as data. Again, that is an ordinary computer program. — ssu
Hence just to talk about science, use the scientific method to study the process of people making science isn't anything meta at all, and totally misses the point of metaphysics. — ssu
The measurement of ‘time’ that we know is a value attributed to the interval between two events. So when we measure time, this is two-dimensional information: change in relation to this ‘time’ value.
Observation takes into account the relative position of the observer in spacetime, hence the ‘extra’ dimensional aspect. We can observe events in relation to ourselves and in relation to each other.
And the fifth dimension is where I believe metaphysics comes into play. This is basically potential, probability, value: both quantitative and qualitative. It takes into account not only relative distance, direction, speed, trajectory, etc (all reducible information), but also the relative perceived value/potential of an experience. It is the fifth dimensional aspect of reality that enables us to talk about an experience that hasn’t happened — Possibility
The possible benefit of this whole situation is that less developed countries can now clearly see what happens if you don’t stop the spread early doors. Hopefully Europe and North America’s mistakes can help those much more vulnerable countries act quickly - I really hope so because they just don’t have anything like the kind of healthcare in place that they do. — I like sushi
What makes you say that? — Shawn
Metaphysical information is not JUST human experience - it is from human experience, however, (ours and others) that we source our metaphysical information. — Possibility
inclusive of interoceptive affect, qualitative evaluation and quantitative potential. — Possibility
Measurement is one, two or three-dimensional information, — Possibility
observation is four-dimensional and experience is five-dimensional — Possibility
It is the irreducible five-dimensional information - the uncertain, subjective and relative details of an experience - which pertains to metaphysics in particular. — Possibility
Interpreting scientific results draws once again on metaphysical information in relation to the experience, but this is not doing metaphysics as such. — Possibility
And you're trying to claim that many people will think the WHO has "blood on its hands", and won't escape THE HORRIFYING SCANDAL OF THE MINOR SPREADSHEET ERRORS AND AMBIGUOUSLY WORDED TWEET because you're completely supportive of the WHO and its track record for providing excellent advice on how to deal with a pandemic. — fdrake
But the hysteria out there frightens me. So WHY has an official national hysteria been planned? — fishfry
How do people think THAT's going to work out? The Hillary/Obama wing of the party back in power with a weak president who will do anything they say?
I regard that as a very frightening and very real possibility — fishfry
I regard this as a fatal loss of vision and integrity that's led to three futile years of childish hysteria, culminating in the likely nomination of Joe Biden as their presidential candidate. That's your answer to "Trump lovers?" Joe Biden? If you made an effort to understand Trump's popularity you might have found a decent candidate. — fishfry
I used to be a globalist. t's only recently that I've started to question it. Globalism was a good idea for a while but now it seems to be just a mechanism for the elite to stripmine the wealth of society for themselves. — fishfry
To seriously renegotiate our relationship. I don't see anyone on the political landscape who I'd rather have doing this. — fishfry
but rather because powerful interests planned it that way for their own benefit, and to the detriment of the country. — fishfry
Those who interpret scientific explanations are invariably not doing science - mostly they’re armchair scientists and dilettantes, popular science journalists or philosophers. It’s often like a literal reading of the Bible, devoid of context. But interpreting scientific explanations is not metaphysics, either. — Possibility
The scientific method followed to conclusion is a process of reducing metaphysical information to what is measurable. Metaphysics comes before science, interpretation comes after.
The main source of metaphysical information is human experience. The human mind has been employing the ‘scientific method’ long before it was acknowledged as such, and has developed the capacity to integrate the uncertainty of metaphysical information - which scientific measurement does not - by distinguishing and relating between measurable/observable, potential/valuable and possible/meaningful information on multiple dimensional levels. — Possibility
Relative to perceived potential/value. — Possibility
How does it implies the existence of anything? Premise 2 simply says that for any x, if x should be done, then x can be done. It doesn't even imply that there is something that should be done, nor that there is something that can be done. It is simply a universally quantified conditional sentence, without existential implications. — Nicholas Ferreira
It seems to me awkward to say that science is devoid of metaphysics. — Shawn
We have the simulated reality hypothesis, that is seemingly unverifiable yet makes total sense from a scientific perspective. — Shawn
Thus, is science really devoid of metaphysics? It would seem to me that no, science is not devoid of metaphysics, and also has some theories that pertain to the domain of metaphysics. — Shawn
This means that those who interpret scientific explanations often remain ignorant, isolated or excluded from the metaphysical information available — Possibility
Science is based on phenomenology rather than metaphysics. Science deals with phenomena; in other words, science studies things as they appear to us. you can practice science regardless of what your metaphysical commitments, or lack of commitment, look like. — Janus
In my view, the structure of metaphysics is relative, subjective and uncertain — Possibility
Ok. So do you think it's reasonable to speculate that the Dems might try to replace him? Or is Michael Goodwin simply trafficking in idle speculation with no basis in reality? — fishfry
I didnt say all they do is lie. Is that what you read in the part you quoted? I said “they lie”. If I say “they sleep” does that mean thats all they do? Lol — DingoJones
Anyway, I watch CNN too. I dont hate CNN. I realise now that I should have been more clear about how general I was being, its not CNN constantly spreading misinformation, its the media in general. — DingoJones
Within a week it went from suggesting it meant he thought it was fun to sexually assault women to calling him an admitted rapist. — DingoJones
Lol, yes! That is their job, not going “we hate this guy, lets just go with close enough”. Its actually very important to get it as accurate as possible, to recognise distinctions between lies, errors, ignorance etc.
Those are important distinctions and again, not being accurate or open about those distinctions is costly for any kind of anti-trump agenda. It plays into his hands, it lets him accurately claim “fake news”, which obscures the truth and any lies Trump actually does tell. It allows Trump To muddy the waters. — DingoJones
I said they lie about Trump, and mischaracterise Trump. To use your term, they spread falsehoods. Thats what I interjected to discuss. — DingoJones
It will be interesting though, because 'the State' in question belongs to Trump, whose balls these same people enjoy sucking on. Normally the response would be then to blame local government, except it's clear that local governments have done far more than the incompetence of the federal government. Not that they've ever let facts get in the way of a good narrative. It will be incoherence all over. — StreetlightX
All politicians spout political hyperbole. If you count that as "lying", they all lie all the time. — Nobeernolife
Now lies I that I am concerned about are lies that have catastrophic results, such as the lie that the Bengazi jihadis were a popular, democratic uprising against Gaddafi. For examople. — Nobeernolife
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQllunHssEk
You might want to check before rushing to the keyboard — Nobeernolife
The original complete clip has been removed by Youtube and Twitter (what a surprise), but you can still find parts of it. Watch it tell us how truthful CNN is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g62_UMiv6wY — Nobeernolife
He said "good people on both sides" about the pro/anti statue protesters, and NOT about the neonazis. Very clearly. Which you would know if you actually read the transcript, instead of listening to the fake media lies. The fake media narrative is a total lie, and one of the most shameful ones. — Nobeernolife
No, it did NOT. Trump NEVER recommended drinking fish tank cleaner, like these two idiots did.
The misrepresentation by the Guardian et al is patently fake news. — Nobeernolife
I’m sorry to hear about your grandmother contracting the virus, friend. I suspect we’ll all have it soon enough. — NOS4A2
So what do people think about Trump's new idea: — ssu
Your claim "If the nature of the universe is established via the scientific method, whatever is the result must be finite", seems fair enough if it's a claim about the finitude of the current results of scientific method at any point in history, a claim about our knowledge. — Cabbage Farmer
Such a claim would resemble Zelegb's claim to have provided "proof that there is no infinity". Both claims purport to aim beyond what is empirically knowable. At most you can claim to show that our knowledge of the world is finite. But you cannot claim to show -- or how would you show? -- that our knowledge of the world gives us a perfectly complete account of the world as it is in fact.
By my account, those claims of yours and Zelegb's amount to speculation beyond the limits of empirical knowledge, and seem motivated by unwarranted conceptions of the relation of knowledge and reality. — Cabbage Farmer
By contrast, I have not claimed that the world is infinite. Rather, I say
(i) it seems we cannot know whether the world is finite or infinite in the relevant sense
(ii) surely the fact that our knowledge of the world is finite, or that "the world as we know it" is finite, is no proof that the world itself is finite
(iii) your claims seems to contradict both (i) and (ii). — Cabbage Farmer
Don't you agree that what is in the fact the case is in fact the case, whether or not we know it? Or do you suppose our knowledge creates reality in every regard? — Cabbage Farmer
Our knowledge of what is in fact the case is informed by experience and is made rigorous by scientific method. That does not entail that experience and scientific method establish what is the case and create or determine the whole world. — Cabbage Farmer
”Japanese and Taiwanese epidemiologists and pharmacologists have determined that the new coronavirus could have originated in the US since that country is the only one known to have all five types – from which all others must have descended. Wuhan in China has only one of those types, rendering it in analogy as a kind of “branch” which cannot exist by itself but must have grown from a “tree”... — Amore