Not quite sure what you mean, but it sounds comedic. :lol: — Janus
↪thedeadidea
That is quite a program.
Who will execute it? — Valentinus
Lazy edgelord rubbish.
— @StreetlightX
What on earth is "edgelord rubbish"? I mean, I'm guessing it's bad... — Isaac
It's begun being laid to establish common sense conclusions about existential dependency and timeframes. — creativesoul
It's also quite useful to tame down rhetorical drivel regarding claims and/or implications/entailment that any and/or all 'definitions' and/or conceptions are on equal footing. The groundwork has already been put down to conclude that we can get some definitions wrong in a vey specific sense of being "wrong". — creativesoul
The analogy doesn't quite take out endeavor into proper account. I like watching people play games even sometimes when I do not want to play. — creativesoul
Funny you say that. There are other benefits of establishing a universal criterion. It comes in quite handy when we talk about how to compare/contrast competing conceptions. — creativesoul
You just like the extra teeth. — Terrapin Station
You just like the extra teeth. — Terrapin Station
and then I repeatedly kick it while it was down some-more, yet still you persist in trying to revive it. for this reason, I don’t think you’re actually capable of proving anything, because the context in which those proofs are being formulated, is faulty beyond repair. — TheGreatArcanum
but the novelty is holding your attention just to see if it gleans anything new and trustworthy/dependable/convincing. — creativesoul
What I'm doing is attempting to establish an adequate basis of true statements about morals, including their origen as a means to provide the best universal basis from which to establish a moral code. — creativesoul
We still need to discuss power over people and further parse out the necessity of our being interdependent social creatures. Those who write the rules have tremendous power. Legitimized moral belief. — creativesoul
What do you find that still needs parsed prior to comparing/contrasting which rules ought be maintained and/or implemented and which ought not? — creativesoul
Good. We are involved in ethical conversation and it is not prescriptive... yet! Groundwork is crucial. We are getting there. — creativesoul
You are a brave soul, Merk. — praxis
Dumbfounding is indicative of an implicit evaluation or conditioned response that is beneath conscious awareness. — praxis
Regarding the source of morals, a distinction might be made between our innate condition, early pre-linguistic childhood conditioning, cultural conditioning (part of childhood conditioning), and whatever conditioning we might intentionally impose on ourselves. — praxis
You claim that there can be no "same thing" from T1 to T2. But if T1 is of arbitrary span then, within that span, of course there can be. Your argument depends on the reification of a serial or linear model of mathematically determinate time. — Janus
Evolutionarily... I would think that amoebas are incapable of either. — creativesoul
Hume skirted around an important aspect of thought/belief.
Expectation. Seems to be adequate for concluding belief and drawing some line between stimulus/response and behaviour 'driven' by thought/belief. — creativesoul
In this scenario, this particular state of mind (the morally dumbfouned) is in relation to the particular state of mind of the other(s) [...] Ethical conversation is always prescriptive, the ought. "True" doesn't matter, only reason. — Merkwurdichliebe
Ethical conversation is always prescriptive, the ought.
— Merkwurdichliebe
That's not true. We've been involved in descriptive ethical/moral conversation throughout. I think that that may be where some of the issues are arising from. I'm talking about moral things as a kind, and others are talking about moral things as a manner of expressing their approval/agreement as compared/contrasted to immoral. — creativesoul
If democracy were about the governed having a say in how they are governed, they why are children not allowed to vote? Are they not 'governed'? — Isaac
All experience is existentially dependent upon a thinking/believing creature. — creativesoul
Well, just ask an athiest is God has meaning, then ask if God exists.
— Merkwurdichliebe
I would answer yes to both. The explication would satisfy both questions. There is no difference between belief in and/or about God and God. — creativesoul
I'm simply saying that if one makes true statements about the source of their own moral convictions then s/he cannot be sensibly said to be morally dumbfounded... — creativesoul
Is that different than having meaning? — creativesoul
I'm simply saying that if one makes true statements about the source of their own moral convictions then s/he cannot be sensibly said to be morally dumbfounded... — creativesoul
Prefixing "truth" with the term "the" doesn't make sense on my view. — creativesoul
Where is the correspondence to what happened?
Correspondence is not the sort of thing that has a spatiotemporal location. Thus asking where it is is misguided. — creativesoul
That said, I thought we had already effectively situated the presupposition of correspondence to what's happened and the attribution of meaning within thought/belief formation itself.
All thought/belief presupposes it's own truth somewhere along the line. All thought/belief is meaningful to the thinking/believing creature.
That is the rough general - very common sense - criterion and/or outline for what pre-linguistic and/or non-linguistic thought/belief must be able to satisfy. We arrive at that criterion(although this arrival has not yet been argued for) by virtue of looking towards statements of thought/belief as a means for assessing the common denominators of them all, regardless of the particulars. — creativesoul
I cannot remember. I do remember some very odd language use. — creativesoul
When talking about moral dumbfounding, we're talking about what we've named, some particular state of mind. — creativesoul
Maybe not. Probably not. Fear and Loathing? — creativesoul
I'm suddenly reminded of Russell's Why I am not a Christian. — creativesoul
Rational?
How about true? — creativesoul
Those are not different names for the same referent on my view. Unnecessarily multiplying entities is against my religion. — creativesoul
Was that the case with Plato's own personal superhero? — creativesoul