Interesting. I have been pondering this. It is one of the less discussed issues of Spinoza since it impinges on Part V which is often ignored. For example V. XXII. & XXIII. open up the issue that there must exist within God the eternal idea of this particular body - so there is some notion of personhood lingering there. And it is quite evident that ideas can be eternal, while motions (& bodies) not so much.I don't have much time this morning, so this'll have to be quick. I agree that for Spinoza every extension has a corresponding idea. This, it seems to me must precisely be both the connection and the distinction between the eternal and the temporal. So, for every temporal extension there is an encompassing eternal idea in God. So, it seems that the eternal is the ideal parallel of the material. This seems to mean that the eternal is mind and the temporal is body; and the dependency logically seems to go one way; that's why I say mind (the eternal) is logically primary. There are probably holes in what I have said here; and I can see that much more thought needs to be given to it; but there it is. — Janus
There is in Spinoza this Gurdjieff-like notion that it is of crucial importance (& urgency) in this life to develop those adequate ideas which are actually what our mind's immortality consists in.This idea, which expresses the essence of the body under the form of eternity, is, as we have said, a certain mode of thinking, which belongs to the essence of the mind, and is necessarily eternal. Yet it is not possible that we should remember that we existed before our body, for our body can bear no trace of such existence, neither can eternity be defined in terms of time, or have any relation to time. But, notwithstanding, we feel and know that we are eternal. For the mind feels those things that it conceives by understanding, no less than those things that it remembers. For the eyes of the mind, whereby it sees and observes things, are none other than proofs. Thus, although we do not remember that we existed before the body, yet we feel that our mind, in so far as it involves the essence of the body, under the form of eternity, is eternal, and that thus its existence cannot be defined in terms of time, or explained through duration. Thus our mind can only be said to endure, and its existence can only be defined by a fixed time, in so far as it involves the actual existence of the body. Thus far only has it the power of determining the existence of things by time, and conceiving them under the category of duration.
Merry Christmas! Well, I meant the same thing as when I say you are objectively aware of something - ie you can judge it and react appropriately to it. So in this case, the computer would be able to multiply the 100x100 matrix once it has stored its properties in memory by another matrix without doing all the calculations one by one - ie it would be able to do exactly the same thing as you would be able to do from a pragmatic point of view.What you call the computer's "being aware of context" would seem to be merely an algorithm though, not a true awareness, and much less a self-conscious awareness. — Janus
It took you quite a long time... >:) >:OYou just figured out I'm right. — charleton
Merry Christmas!So, when do you suppose this very long discussion which I have only noticed getting longer but haven't followed, will move on to the Immaculate Conception and the virgin birth (not the same thing), the proper method of baptism, the closure of divine testimony, and other matters? — Bitter Crank
29 Q: But if a man through no fault of his own is outside the Church, can he be saved?
A: If he is outside the Church through no fault of his, that is, if he is in good faith, and if he has received Baptism, or at least has the implicit desire of Baptism; and if, moreover, he sincerely seeks the truth and does God’s will as best he can, such a man is indeed separated from the body of the Church, but is united to the soul of the Church and consequently is on the way of salvation...
Last one is from here.Baptism of desire can be explicit…The doctrine of the Church also recognizes implicit baptism of desire. This consists in doing the will of God. God knows all men and He knows that amongst Muslims, Buddhists and in the whole of humanity there are men of good will. They receive the grace of baptism without knowing it, but in an effective way. In this way they become part of the Church…"
Merry Christmas!those folk are big on transubstantiation, unlike, say, the Jews and the Muslims. — jorndoe
I haven't checked that thread out (yet), but language functions differently than consciousness. A computer is basically a language processor. All language processing takes time, and it's a cumulative, step-by-step process. There are no "insights". If you give a computer a 100x100 matrix full of 0s with the exception of one non-zero number, the only way it can establish that that matrix has 9,999 zeros is by going through each element one by one and recording how many zeros it finds. That means it essentially must do 10,000 calculations. The computer can also be aware of context, provided it stores it into memory. So if it stores the number of 0s in the matrix in a variable, or it notes the row and column position of the non-zero number as well as its value + the total number of rows and columns, then it could be aware of the context. Then, if it has to multiply that 100x100 matrix by another one it could simplify the process, now being aware of the internal and external structure of the matrix.Yes the difference between computers and humans (as well as animals) is the ability to grasp context. An interesting point I noticed in the 'Lions and Grammar' thread is that the grammatical structures of symbolic language allow context to be separated from the world and imported into language itself. However this is still dependent on the original animal ability to grasp context in the 'umwelt' sense; that is common to both humans and animals. — Janus
Non sequitur. This literarily has nothing to do with what you've quoted.I was talking about Hinduism (which includes some polytheist varieties), Christianity (Catholics, Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses), Islam (Sunnis, Shias), Mormonism, Scientology, you name it. All those there that people get assimilated by and start taking seriously. — jorndoe
So I'm supposed to take you seriously because you've shown an aptitude to populate your posts with irrelevant links?Seems the Muslims have taken over, where the Christians left off? — jorndoe
What? :sBut I wasn't referring to achieving omniscience, rather, that the authority (deity) set the record straight among ... — jorndoe
There is no record to set straight. The mystical kernel is very similar amongst the religions, with differences being, for the most part, just differences of expression. Man has had a relationship with the divine from the very beginning of times.But I wasn't referring to achieving omniscience, rather, that the authority (deity) set the record straight among ... — jorndoe
Yeah, I'm not that mystified that some call it "snow" others call it "schnee" or "neige" or even "雪". What's the big deal with that?You start talking about something you call "Yahweh", you don't show Yahweh, Yahweh doesn't show, all that's left is your talk. Others talk about something they call "Vishnu", they don't show Vishnu, Vishnu doesn't show, all that's left is their talk. Yet others talk about ... Exactly as if Yahweh, Vishnu, etc, are fictions. I wonder why... Don't you? — jorndoe
What makes you think there are multiple entities? That would indeed be absurd. I think you really do have a first-grade understanding of religion. It's really becoming pathetic. You're like a child trying to speak a language he cannot understand. It's better to stop doing that, and try to understand only one religion deeply first. That might give you the insights you need to understand the rest too. You're like a little boy who has learned a few words in French and thinks he's now able to have a conversation in it.I also observe that there are little-to-no means of differentiating existence of all these entities (and their characteristics, plans, demands). It's all equally dubious. Exactly like grandiose stories told by fallible (obsessed) humans. — jorndoe
Yeah, apart from you thinking they are fantasies, you haven't provided any other evidence. Your inability to become aware of certain aspects of existence isn't shared by everyone else.Differentiating fake and real fantasies, on the other hand, ... :D — jorndoe
I have a hard-time believing in technologically advanced aliens for some reason. Seems to me much like believing in ghosts - it's certainly possible, just very unlikely. I mean what could they understand that allows them to have such technology? How could they travel faster than light, when the speed of light is an absolute limit in the Universe? Etc.I would really like to know how earthlings would respond psychologically to an alien visitation. — Bitter Crank
Yeah, but we have no reason to think we are alone or unique in the sense that there are no other intelligent creatures out there, or that Earth is the only life-bearing planet in the Universe.we are, in fact, not alone. We are not as unique as we thought. — Bitter Crank
Our territory, obviously. If aliens exist, then either they are spiritual creatures (aware of spiritual realms), or not. They may just be intelligent, without having a spiritual nature. If that's the case, then they wouldn't have any religion. Or they may be spiritual creatures, in which case they would have their own religions. The Bible represents Creation story in-so-far as it concerns man. It is only reasonable that different creatures would have a different role to play in Creation than man, and thus may even have different moralities. These creatures may be polygamous for example.What territory do earth-bound religious cover? — Bitter Crank
Yes, He would have to. But that jurisdiction may not resemble our own religion in many regards - though it would, in at least SOME regards, have to resemble it.Does the God of Israel (or whatever gods one follows) have jurisdiction over a planet 10 light years away? — Bitter Crank
By New Years' Eve or Christmas, it will have tanked, that's my prediction. Until then, it may reach 20-30K. Or it may tank sooner. The reason I'm saying that is that most people want to cash out for the holidays ;) - they don't want to be playing stocks on Christmas Eve. — Agustino
Ah okay, I see what you mean. The term "familiarity" threw me off a bit initially, couldn't quite grasp what you meant. I've written on this in the past but this sort of familiarity can often be cashed out in the form of practical knowledge. And many times we gain practical knowledge about something by doing, and only later translate it into discourse. And in fact, discourse alone can never be sufficient to completely reveal the practical knowledge from which it emerged. Rather discourse offers signposts, but it's up to the listener to creatively appropriate the signposts as he is trying to practically do - he still needs to relate these signposts, the words, to elements from within his own experience.The kinds of knowledge (In the Biblical sense of familiarity captured in the Biblical expression for sexual intercourse: "a man knows his wife") I was referring to just are "affective insights or intutions". — Janus
Do affective insights and intuition require faith to happen in the first place, or does faith arise as a result of them? I'd think it's a bit of both. You certainly need some faith - or at least openness to the experience - otherwise, it's impossible to have it if you harden your heart against it. But then meditation, prayer, asceticism etc. are preparatory for such affective insights and intuitions - they do not generate them, but they make the participant open to them - they come by grace as it were.But I don't think those operate independently of faith. (i.e. meditation, prayer, ascetism, etc will not work absent affective insight and intuition and the faith they give rise to). — Janus
That means you want me to do work. Which means you'll have to wait >:)No, please explain to me in your own words what you think the difference is and quote any particular passages you think are of relevance. — Sapientia
I don't use FB anymore and haven't for quite a while :POf course, because Mark Zuckerberg is getting a bit strapped for cash, I hear he's having trouble gold-plating his fifth yaught, so let's all haul over there and bump his advertising revenue a bit. — Inter Alia
Okay... where was I claiming that easily converging on similar notions makes them right? All I said was countering your notion that theologians don't have a decent understanding of what God is, an understanding that is adequate as far as reason can go, but no further.The point is we're an easily led species who generally tend to converge on similar notions, doesn't make them any more right. — Inter Alia
you should really speak to the hundreds of theologians who been trying to find out what God is for the last 2000 years — Inter Alia
So... do the nurses have to provide hand relief when that happens?These poor men walking around the old folks home, with a boner they wished they had in high school and no one to share it with. Nurses have to LOVE that! (N) — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Yeah, if you bothered to read like 5 of those theologians, you'd realise that their understanding of God was actually quite close in most regards. Of course, when things get mystical, you have to drop your dualistic mind, you may find that hard to do.I didn't realise you knew God personally, you should really speak to the hundreds of theologians who been trying to find out what God is for the last 2000 years, I can't believe you've kept it to yourself for all this time you mischievous devil. — Inter Alia
He might be, why are you telling me?! I've never backed MU's argument for that matter, and I haven't even followed it that closely. I do agree with him on some of the shorter points I've seen him make and which I've read.Spoiler: he's still making the same errors that he has been making from the beginning. — Sapientia
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05572c.htmAs the instigator of this discussion, I think that I have greater authority than others when it comes to what we're supposed to be talking about here. And, contrary to the rather misleading impression that you create, and as the preceding discussion demonstrates, not only is my definition of transubstantiation in sync with that of the Eastern Orthodox Church and Catholicism — Sapientia
If meaning is use, dictionary definitions are meaningless. You said you accept that meaning is use. So read how the term is used by the Church.I put the matter to rest twenty pages back and ten days ago by copy-pasting from two different dictionaries and giving an example. I don't recall getting any disagreement. — Sapientia
Sure. You're not talking theologians here, you're talking about divinations and other forms of peasant claptrap. If anything, Christianity is largely responsible for the elimination of this type of superstition. Nietzsche understood as much, hence he labelled Christianity as nihilistic.I have no particular reason or obligation to take the countless human claims of supernatural deities, their elaborate plans, what they want, require or demand, etc, seriously. — jorndoe
Where oracles are concerned it is certain that they had begun to lose their credit well before the coming of Jesus Christ, since we can see Cicero striving to find the cause of their decline. [C] These are his words: ‘Cur isto modo jam oracula Delphis non eduntur non modo nostra ætate sed jamdiu, ut modo nihil possit esse contempsius?’ [Why are oracles no longer uttered thus at Delphi, so that not only in our own time but long before nothing could be held in greater contempt?]
But there were other prognostications, derived from the dissection of sacrificial animals – [C] Plato held that the internal organs of those animals were partly created for that purpose – [A] or from chickens scratching about, from the flight of birds – [C] ‘aves quasdam rerum augurandarum causa natas esse putamus’ [We think that some birds are born in order to provide auguries] – [A] from lightning and from swirling currents in rivers – [C] ‘multa cernunt aruspices, multa augures provident, nnlta oraculis declarantur, multa vaticinationibus, multa somniis, multa portentis’ [the soothsayers divine many things; the augurs foresee many; many are revealed by oracles, many by predictions, many by dreams and many by portents]; [A] and there were other similar ones on which the Ancient World grounded most of their undertakings, both public and private: it was our religion [Christianity] which abolished them all.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (p. 41). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
>:O - as if the deity was like a bearded human living in the Sky. So pathetic. Again, we're not discussing the peasant understanding of God. You have to step up your game.If some deity of theism existed and wanted me to know it did, or had critically important messages for me, then it would have no problems what so ever letting me in on that. — jorndoe
If a deity told you the Truth, then what free will would you have? None. To know the Truth is to act the Truth - and that must be a free choice. So when God "hardens the hearts" of unbelievers, it simply means that He does not reveal Himself to them, in order to allow them to freely choose their unbelief. If he revealed Himself, He could force them to believe. As Pascal said:Isn't that what qualifies something as a deity in the first place (omnipotence, omniscience, omnibenevolence, non-deceptive, trustworthy, etc)? And, ex hypothesi, such a deity would be the only authority on its messages. It's not like I'm strangely "resistant" or anything, and such a deity would know that already. — jorndoe
In faith there is enough light for those who want to believe and enough shadows to blind those who don't. — Blaise Pascal
Yep - again this is the common-folk superstition that you're talking about, not theology. Nobody told you to accept that.Meanwhile, I'm certainly not going to take all the incompatible, ambiguous, inconsistent, spurious words of fallible humans for it. Why would anyone? (Could anyone, even, given all the incompatibilities, ambiguities, inconsistencies, ...?) Requiring other humans to indoctrinate me isn't something I'd expect of a worthwhile deity. No, that's just gullible, biased, non-thinking tomfoolery. (Perhaps akin to delusion, as mentioned by Harry Hindu.) — jorndoe
The simplest coherent explanation is that there would be no fake doctors if there were no real doctors.Where does that leave things? Those claims can't all be right, but they could all be wrong. What's the simplest coherent explanation? — jorndoe
Thanks for your response, and my apologies for the delayed response.First, it suggests that the theist has some superior method of understanding God, as if the skeptic lacks the capacity at the same understanding — Hanover
I did suggest this, but the truth of this claim is quite evident for two reasons:that the skeptic hasn't spent just as long as the theist in considering these issues — Hanover
It's also very wrong to think that there is some monolithic thought process among theists, ignoring that the definition of God that one theist might have from another may vary widely even in the same church and same pew on any given Sunday. — Hanover
EDIT: ooops I forgot to respond here.And, of course there are very different views from one church to the other, one denomination to another, and certainly one religion than another. — Hanover
My assertion isn't that, it's simply that I have a more accurate notion that the atheist, that's all. So my knowledge is probably terrible - but that terrible is still much better than your average atheist.Your assertions that you know exactly what God is — Hanover
I agree with you to some extent, hence why rational knowledge that can be achieved of God is only partial and never close to complete.as I see one's relationship with God as personal, subjective, unprovable, and unverifiable by definition. To present God as this object fully subject to a complete knowable definition candidly feels to me like you have no idea what god is, but are instead just trying to define another object. — Hanover
No, the bread is precisely not the same in substance. The doctrine claims that there is a change in substance, but not in the properties. Here is what substance means:By literal change, I mean not symbolic. The bread is the same in substance than it was before and after the prayer. — Hanover
Hence why the mystical experience of which I have spoken of at first is absolutely necessary to understand transubstantiation. The substantial change is of a mystical nature - the inner nature of the bread and wine changes, in other words, their significance. But to perceive that, you must experience the mystery - there is no other way. It is useless to put it into words when the experience is lacking. Words can only be taken on faith.By the very fact that the Eucharistic mystery does transcend reason, no rationalistic explanation of it, based on a merely natural hypothesis and seeking to comprehend one of the sublimest truths of the Christian religion as the spontaneous conclusion of logical processes, may be attempted by a Catholic theologian.
That's a fallacy called selection bias in philosophy (or alternatively cherry picking). You've shown to be quite proficient at that. But you have to look at the overall number of crimes, vs the overall number of non-crimes which could have been crimes.If you really can't see how the fact that within seconds I can list 17 major crimes by some of the biggest companies in the world, indicates that business is not about honesty and integrity but about making as much money as possible by whatever underhand, deceptive and cutthroat means available, then there is little point in continuing. — Inter Alia
It's not about listing them, it's about telling me what the proportion is of crime to non-crime.You're basically saying that unless I can list more than a trillion crimes there's no case to answer. We should just presume the best. That's as ridiculously self-immunised an argument as your stance on religion. — Inter Alia
Right, but that was mostly with regards to what I was responding to.You said "honesty is important in business success" and "but by all means, these are not the majority, nor are they the most successful businesses." — Inter Alia
It is because price is dictated by supply and demand that there is an ethical problem with the actions companies take to artificially inflate demand and restrict supply (especially in essential commodities). Companies exploit the momentary gap between the consumer's estimate of value and their realisation of it, they exploit the monopolies law to artificially restrict supply, they trade in commodities without using them which artificially inflates demand. All these things have ethical consequences, but they're missed if you presume there's some 'real' value that's just a mathematical certainty. — you
So out of trillions of transactions, your evidence is that there are illegal practices in 17 of them - and that's what you use to combat my claim that "these are not the majority [of business practices]".So I listed the top 17 crimes in 2015 all perpetrated by some extremely successful businesses. These are just the top crimes in one country in one year. At the very least they disprove your argument that dishonest and unethical businesses are not the successful ones, but I also think they go some way to indicating what general practice is in big business. — Inter Alia
>:O - I heard from some doctors that Viagra is good for old people in terms of heart health.And now, enhanced with Viagra X-) — Wayfarer
Evidence of what? I thought we were talking of artificially inflating demand (didn't know that was illegal) or artificially controlling supply. We certainly weren't talking about not meeting certain regulatory standards with regards to environmental pollution, marketing tactics, etc.Evidence — Inter Alia
I don't follow exactly what you mean here.But I would argue that both mystical experiences and works of revelation may yield knowledge in the "Biblical' sense of familiarity. — Janus
Yes, I agree that mystical experiences are affective, and sentiment grounds faith - a religious skeptic would agree to that. But I think they'd refuse to agree that this constitutes any kind of knowledge whatsoever, the same way they refuse philosophy's ability to arrive at metaphysical knowledge. So here, for example, Montaigne argues against philosophy and dialectical disputation:And I would say this kind of knowledge is affective; we are affected by it, and this affection is the motivator of faith. I mean who would have faith in something they felt nothing for? — Janus
And there was another man who rightly advised the Emperor Theodosius that debates never settled schisms in the Church but rather awakened heresies and put life into them; therefore he should flee all contentiousness and all dialectical disputations, committing himself to the bare prescriptions and formulas of the Faith established of old.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (p. 360). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
(Philosophy, says St Chrysostom, has long been banished from the School of Divinity as a useless servant judged unworthy of glimpsing, even from the doorway when simply passing by, the sanctuary of the holy treasures of sacred doctrine);
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (p. 361). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
A bishop has testified in writing that there is, at the other end of the world, an island which the Ancients called Dioscorides, fertile and favoured with all sorts of fruits and trees and a healthy air; the inhabitants are Christian, having Churches and altars which are adorned with no other images but crosses; they scrupulously observe feast-days and fasts, pay their tithes meticulously and are so chaste that no man ever lies with more than one woman for the whole of his life; meanwhile, so happy with their lot that, in the middle of the ocean, they know nothing about ships, and so simple that they do not understand a single word of the religion which they so meticulously observe – something only unbelievable to those who do not know that pagans, devout worshippers of idols, know nothing about their gods apart from their statues and their names.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (pp. 360-361). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
[A] The real field and subject of deception are things unknown: firstly because their very strangeness lends them credence; second, because they cannot be exposed to our usual order of argument, so stripping us of the means of fighting them. [C]
Plato says that this explains why it is easier to satisfy people when talking of the nature of the gods than of the nature of men: the ignorance of the hearers provides such hidden matters with a firm broad course for them to canter along in freedom.
And so it turns out that nothing is so firmly believed as whatever we know least about, and that no persons are more sure of themselves than those who tell us tall stories, such as alchemists and those who make prognostications: judicial astrologers, chiromancers, doctors and ‘id genus omne’ [all that tribe].
To which I would add if I dared that crowd of everyday chroniclers and interpreters of God’s purposes who claim to discover the causes of everything that occurs and to read the unknowable purposes of God by scanning the secrets of His will; the continual changes and clash of events drive them from corner to corner and from East to West, but they still go on chasing the tennis-ball and sketching black and white with the same crayon.
In one Indian tribe they have a laudable custom: when they are worsted in a skirmish or battle they publicly beseech the Sun their god for pardon for having done wrong, attributing their success or failure to the divine mind, to which they submit their own judgement and discourse. [A] For a Christian it suffices to believe that all things come from God, to accept them with an acknowledgement of His holy unsearchable wisdom and so to take them in good part, under whatever guise they are sent to him.
What I consider wrong is our usual practice of trying to support and confirm our religion by the success or happy outcome of our undertakings. Our belief has enough other foundations without seeking sanction from events: people who have grown accustomed to such plausible arguments well-suited to their taste are in danger of having their faith shaken when the turn comes for events to prove hostile and unfavourable.
As in the religious wars which we are now fighting, after those who had prevailed at the battle of La Rochelabeille had had a great feast-day over the outcome, exploiting their good fortune as a sure sign of God’s approval for their faction, they then had to justify their misfortunes at Moncontour and Jarnac as being Fatherly scourges and chastisements: 3 they would soon have made the people realize (if they did not have them under their thumb) that that is getting two kinds of meal from the same bag and blowing hot and cold with the same breath. It would be better to explain to the people the real foundations of truth.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (pp. 242-243). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
It may be plausibly asserted that [C] there is an infant-school ignorance which precedes knowledge and another doctoral ignorance which comes after it, an ignorance made and engendered by knowledge just as it unmade and slaughtered the first kind.
Good Christians are made from simple minds, incurious and unlearned, which out of reverence and obedience have simple faith and remain within prescribed doctrine. It is in minds of middling vigour and middling capacity that are born erroneous opinions, for they follow the apparent truth of their first impressions and do have a case for interpreting as simplicity and animal-stupidity the sight of people like us who stick to the old ways, fixing on us who are not instructed in such matters by study.
Great minds are more settled and see things more clearly: they form another category of good believers; by long and reverent research they penetrate through to a deeper, darker light of Scripture and know the sacred and mysterious secret of our ecclesiastical polity. That is why we can see some of them arrive at the highest level via the second, with wondrous fruit and comfort, reaching as it were the ultimate bounds of Christian understanding and rejoicing in their victory with alleviation of sorrow, acts of thanksgiving, reformed behaviour and great modesty.
I do not intend to place in that rank those other men who, to rid themselves of the suspicion of their past errors and to reassure us about themselves, become extremists, men lacking all discretion and unjust in the way they uphold our cause, besmirching it with innumerable reprehensible acts of violence.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (pp. 349-350). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
The first charge made against the book is that Christians do themselves wrong by wishing to support their belief with human reasons: belief is grasped only by faith and by private inspiration from God’s grace. A pious zeal may be seen behind this objection; so any assay at satisfying those who put it forward must be made with gentleness and respect. It is really a task for a man versed in Theology rather than for me, who know nothing about it.
Nevertheless, this is my verdict: in a matter so holy, so sublime, so far surpassing Man’s intellect as is that Truth by which it has pleased God in his goodness9 to enlighten us, we can only grasp that Truth and lodge it within us if God favours us with the privilege of further help, beyond the natural order.
I do not believe, then, that purely human means have the capacity to do this; if they had, many choice and excellent souls in ancient times – souls abundantly furnished with natural faculties – would not have failed to reach such knowledge by discursive reasoning. Only faith can embrace, with a lively certainty, the high mysteries of our religion.
But that is not to imply that it is other than a most fair and praiseworthy undertaking to devote to the service of our faith those natural, human tools which God has granted us. It is not to be doubted that it is the most honourable use that we could ever put them to and that there is no task, no design, more worthy of a Christian than to aim, by assiduous reflection, at beautifying, developing and clarifying the truth of his beliefs. We are not content merely to serve God with our spirits and our souls: we owe him more than that, doing him reverence with our bodies; we honour him with our very members, our actions and with things external. In the same way we must accompany our faith with all the reason that lies within us – but always with the reservation that we never reckon that faith depends upon ourselves or that our efforts and our conjectures can ever themselves attain to a knowledge so supernatural, so divine.
Montaigne, Michel. The Complete Essays (pp. 491-492). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.
No, but many believed that the deliverances of mystical experiences were affective insights or intuitions that could be conveyed to others through means other than faith (like meditation, prayer, asceticism, etc.)I am not convinced that the great mystics believed that their writings presented knowledge in any ordinary discursive sense. — Janus
I think that the problem is that some people cannot distinguish between religious beliefs and actions of certain groups, and political beliefs and actions. Quite often the Catholic Church, for example, isn't just involved in religion, but also in politics - and the two aren't the same.Not true; all ideologies come with their share of evils. Socialism, Nazism, Neo-Liberal Democratism, or whatever; people do evil things in the names of all of them. — Janus
Well sure, if you count the presence of a brand name written on it as being a different T-shirt... As I said, technically different, but really the same. I for one don't count a branded product to be different from a non-branded product just because there's a name on one and there's no name on the other.That's your presumption, I've not seen any examples in the real world. All the expensive shirts I've seen have either been made of better materials, associated with some famous designer, worn by a famous actor. I've never seen two identical shirts, one in mayfair selling for £50 and one in the supermarket for £5, not the same shirt. — Inter Alia
Exactly. That's all that matters. We're in the business of getting sales. Getting their attention is the first step. This isn't to say that you don't have to follow up with the quality, but the quality is irrelevant if you cannot get their attention to begin with. So price of $200 loses in the scenario provided previously. Regardless of the quality that the person could provide - it may be the best quality out there, doesn't matter.All they're doing is estimating the quality of the product using price — Inter Alia
There are lots of industries where "theft" is common. In the internet world, SEO optimization companies will many times take your money and you'll never hear from them again.if a product turns out not to be the quality they were expecting it will very soon lose sales and become a loss for the company, they will reduce it's price to meet the actual demand for such a low quality product. — Inter Alia
It's almost the fundamental assumption of market economics that the market will correctly value stocks (and other assets) in the long run. So everyone takes this on faith, more or less.It wouldn't be of any interest to the investment firm that the stocks were undervalued unless they expected them to soon return to the value they expect. — Inter Alia
:s I've never seen nor heard about an investor or a businessman "guessing" what the supply/demand led value will be. These are very abstract concepts, investors tend to use more practical tools in decision making. There are also different types of investing. Value investing is certainly interested in whether an asset is undervalued or overvalued for example. Looking at balance sheets, P&L statements, DCF analysis, and other such tools may be used to determine whether a stock is undervalued or overvalued. Certain forms of stock trading may, on the other hand, simply be interested in different forms of technical analysis that may reveal price patterns that can be exploited in the short-run.They're not accessing some mathematical calculation for 'real' value, they're just guessing what the market, supply/demand led value will be, sometimes they get that guess wrong, but it soon becomes apparent. — Inter Alia
Nope. It doesn't work that way. The quality of the website is really irrelevant since they just want to use it to get clients. Getting clients is what's relevant. So the website can be as bad as it gets (within reason of course). The employer wouldn't give a damn in this case - so long as his results are coming. So the value isn't in the quality of the website - it's about getting clients. In the end, that's all a business cares about - sales. If that's going well, everything else can be fixed.You might sell a £1000 website to your oil tank firm, despite the fact that it's the same one as the £5 coffee shop site, but if they buy it they will be doing so expecting it to be of sufficient additional quality to justify the investment. When it turns out it's no better than the £5 coffee shop version they will not buy from you again. enough such transactions and you will either have to lower your price or raise the actual quality of your premium version. — Inter Alia
From my experience, this is not how businesses function for the most part. I won't say that there aren't such businesses, but by all means, these are not the majority, nor are they the most successful businesses. Honesty is important in business success.It is because price is dictated by supply and demand that there is an ethical problem with the actions companies take to artificially inflate demand and restrict supply (especially in essential commodities). Companies exploit the momentary gap between the consumer's estimate of value and their realisation of it, they exploit the monopolies law to artificially restrict supply, they trade in commodities without using them which artificially inflates demand. All these things have ethical consequences, but they're missed if you presume there's some 'real' value that's just a mathematical certainty. — Inter Alia
I don't mean it always happens for all products. In the example I gave though, it's absurd to say that the demand for one shirt is greater than the demand for the other based on Bayesian probability. They're the same kind of shirt afterall. It's more likely that the difference is psychological given that they are the same kind of shirt than that one is demanded more than the other.I get that it's a possibility, what I'm not getting is why you think it's definitely what happens. — Inter Alia
They do want the shirt, at a price they can afford. I'm not talking about fictive and impossible wants now, but real ones. And I'm sure economists do much the same.I don't agree that poor people don't also want the expensive shirt — Inter Alia
Psychologically this seems to be the case. If you study consumer psychology, you'll understand that we're quite certain that it IS the case in fact.I don't agree the the higher price is what makes the difference — Inter Alia
You're confusing things. It doesn't go at a higher price because the demand for it is higher than the demand for the other shirt. For all intents and purposes, the demand could be the same, for instance, but the supply curve would be lower. Or it can be psychological as I've explained.'something' about the shirt isn't what makes it 'high demand' — Inter Alia
Again these are grey waters here. In some situations and in some forms this is illegal, in others, it isn't. Maybe we don't agree on it, but rather the salesman and I become partners in a new LLC, and that LLC sells the water. What's the problem then? Or maybe we each sell one water at the price of half his wealth each.In America the Sherman Antitrust Act 1890 prohibits restraint of trade and abuse of monopoly power. In the UK the Competition Act 1998 does much the same thing but with more restrictive powers, but in both cases, yes it would be illegal to do what you're suggesting the water salesmen do. — Inter Alia
I think it's wrong to think that this would represent demand. I think rather that poor people would want one at the price they can afford one. That's where they are found on the demand curve.(poor people would like one too, they just can't afford it). — Inter Alia
Oh sure, but psychologically what really makes it a different product is its higher price :P£1000 shirt has something about it that makes it a different product from the £5 shirt, maybe a label, maybe the prestige of being associated with a famous person, the demand is not created by being rich (poor people would like one too, they just can't afford it). — Inter Alia
It doesn't make it "high" in demand. Rather that, if you go back to the basics of the demand curve, you see that some people (fewer people) are willing and able to spend more for Tshirts, and some people (more people) are only willing and able to spend less for it.even a rich person would not buy the same product for a hugely inflated price for no reason, there still has to be something about that product that makes it in high demand. — Inter Alia
>:) - Peter Thiel wrote a good book on economic philosophy and monopolies called Zero To One.I'm not sure if this is true; but, most business entrepreneurs aim for being a monopoly. Sometimes it's the most efficient means of resource allocation for some specific type of good or service. This is particularly true for the technology sector. Don't quote me on that. — Posty McPostface
Hmmm... are they really illegal, or are there in truth legal and illegal forms of the same thing? For example, take airplane seats. Business class gets a slightly bigger chair and slightly different food. Is that worth +$1,000 compared to economic class for a 2 hour flight? I don't think so. So clearly this is market segmentation - a legal form of what is very similar to price discrimination.It was an example, not meant to be taken literally, but it's why in the real world monopolies and market fixing are illegal. The point is, presuming they are in competition with each other, they would not both work out what the price 'should' be and then "may the best man win", they undercut each other to get the sale until the lowest possible price was reached. — Inter Alia
Thanks, I will be having a look :)
>:OYeah, rational agents aren't all that rational. Too bad, or good, depending on whether your a consumer or producer. — Posty McPostface