It makes something which is fundamentally human and tries to make it mechanical. Morality is a matter of human values. — T Clark
Unique readability affords definition by recursion, and definition by recursion affords the method of models, which provides that every statement has exactly one meaning per a given model. — GrandMinnow
But then the problem is that these other scientists don't see you as one of them if you don't think within their paradigm, and so it becomes hard to be acknowledged and for your ideas to be considered by these peers, and so it's not necessarily the cream that rises to the top, rather it's a system that perpetuates itself while accepting little influence that it sees as coming from outside, and then the more complicated the theories within the paradigm are the harder it is to make the system evolve, and I submit that this is why fundamental physics has become pretty much stagnant for the past decades. — leo
"the life in question is to be lived honorably, and so as not to bring disgrace on humanity. "The moral life is at an end if it is no longer in keeping with the dignity of humanity.... The moment I can no longer live inhonor but become unworthy of life..., I can no longer live at all.... The preservation of life is, therefore, not the highest duty" (Immanuel Kant) — tim wood
Proving unique readability is necessary for proving the definition by recursion theorems. — GrandMinnow
Meanwhile, mathematics is usually written in a combination of formal and informal notation along with natural language. — GrandMinnow
This is not ordinarily problematic, since it is usually clear enough how one would formulate such semi-formal writings into pristine formalization (permitting proof of unique readability) if one wanted to do that. — GrandMinnow
Is assisted suicide for adult people who wish to die, immoral? Are there good arguments against assisted dying? Or should people have the right to die a relatively painless death if they wish to do so? Why should you keep living if life becomes unbearable and does not get better? Why do some people perceive assisted suicide as immoral? What would assisted suicide make immoral if the person really wants it? — Baskol1
In my experience of talking with scientists about philosophy, I have found that many times most scientists seem to look down on it like if it were just speculative non-conducive discussions about random thoughts that anyone can make up. — Shushi
as though my only options are choosing between endorsing this or that form of aggression — Virgo Avalytikh
Since I am sceptical of the State tout court, it is little comfort that there may be ways of keeping the power of this coercive monopoly ‘reined in’. — Virgo Avalytikh
I don't feel the need to choose between aggressive States or aggressive soon-to-be States. — Virgo Avalytikh
Yes, it is not a problem in itself to refer to 'games'. If is fair enough to say that Hilbert took mathematics, in a certain regard, as concerned with symbol games. But it is egregiously incorrect - blatantly against the clear evidence of Hilbert's writings - to claim that Hilbert took mathematics to be merely a matter of symbol games. — GrandMinnow
Since I am sceptical of the State tout court, it is little comfort that there may be ways of keeping the power of this coercive monopoly ‘reined in’. I would say, cut out the middle man, and do away with it. — Virgo Avalytikh
Why is it significant that Taleb does not differentiate between the various salafi sects and pays lip service to his political allies?
You may well be sceptical of some alternative way, but I would argue that, since the State exists in violation of the ‘perimeter of lowered aggression’ which it is allegedly responsible for maintaining, I could scarcely imagine how a system of private justice could do a worse job. — Virgo Avalytikh
But they simply are salafi movements — ssu
Al Qaeda, Boko Haram, Al Shabaab and ISIS are Salafist movements. — ssu
Reductionism in ethics is a total folly. — RW Standing
Mathematicians will sometimes speak of 'beautiful' equations. — Wayfarer
The issue here is an uninteresting semantic one. 'Aggression' has a specific meaning in the context of libertarianism: it is the initiatory (in distinction from 'defensive') use of force; hence 'non-aggression principle'. — Virgo Avalytikh
you can know something is truly beautiful or not by thinking about it, but not by feeling or seeing. — Sameer
All that it really has going for it is that it happens to be the status quo. — Virgo Avalytikh
But there is no reason to think that this has to be a State. — Virgo Avalytikh
So the inner-dynamic of the gang demonstrates why the leap that you make to Statism is unwarranted — Virgo Avalytikh
Each individual treats peacefully with everyone else, because if he doesn’t, he has the rest of the society to answer to; at the very least, they will not associate with him thereafter. — Virgo Avalytikh
Your solution to the problem of criminality, it seems, is to place our trust in a criminal gang of unparalleled scale — Virgo Avalytikh
Nature is just as responsible for producing peaceful cooperation as it is for animalistic aggression — Virgo Avalytikh
Someone who knows, can do something with that knowledge. — Pantagruel
So my first question is: Is an authoritative source sufficient evidence? Does the person who has experimentally verified an hypothesis have "more knowledge" than a person who has read about and understands those experimental results? — Pantagruel
Versus a person who does not understand the experimental results but obtains information from what he or she believes is a reliable source? — Pantagruel
One may conclude, having levelled one such objection, that the legitimacy or at least the necessity of the State, or of collective ownership, is thereby vindicated. — Virgo Avalytikh
perhaps there really are problems which would plague a system of private ownership and non-aggression, and that it would be genuinely extremely difficult to deal with the problem from within that system. — Virgo Avalytikh
How do you know it is widespread? — Moliere
How do you know it is widespread? — Moliere
In mathematics an axiom is produced and stated to serve some purpose, and accepted because of its usefulness — Metaphysician Undercover
So, into science creeps unsound premises, from mathematicians, which are accepted because they are extremely useful. — Metaphysician Undercover
On the other hand, take engineers: mechanical; electrical; chemical; civil; aeronautical; genetic et cetera. These fields all rely on the same empirically proven laws and principles. — Denovo Meme
My original post was an appeal for someone to say what philosophy uses to gain credibility? — Denovo Meme
Investigating what science is and what philosophy might meta-be does not help Joe Average to put food on the table. Joe wants to know how to use science and philosophy to pay the electricity bill. — Denovo Meme
I really do wish to know why we should listen to philosophers. — Denovo Meme
When I read or discuss a bit of philosophy I become frustrated with the way people quote a philosopher as if the philosopher has the answer. — Denovo Meme
Science has fundamental laws and principles by which we obtain a 0.05 answer. — Denovo Meme
What is the philosophical equivalent? — Denovo Meme
There is no epistemic standard for spiritual beliefs that I’m aware of. — Noah Te Stroete
You should read Quine's two dogmas. He makes a good case against apriori justification. — aporiap
Of course. To say that their knowledge is not-scientific is not the same as to say that their knowledge is not-valuable. — Moliere
In which case the kind of scientism you are arguing against would be unjustified. — Moliere
What do you think of my notion that scientism is not a set of beliefs as much as it is a character trait -- the trait of feeling too strongly about science? — Moliere
Would you say that the methods of a plumber, a machine operator, a lighting technician, or a cook are based on his criterion? I wouldn't. — Moliere
So to you "science" is knowledge specifically, it seems. Yes? — Moliere
Let's put this to you, then: You wouldn't call theoretical discussions scientific knowledge. But would you still count theoretical publications in physics as doing science? It is still science, even if it is not knowledge, right? — Moliere
I'm afraid I do not believe what Karl Popper believed about science. — Moliere
And if there be more to science than just these qualities I'd wonder -- how would you differentiate theoretical discussions on the existence of the ether from, say, discussions on the existence of God? — Moliere
Generally mathematics is grouped in with the sciences. — Moliere
A mathematical problem underlying fundamental questions in particle and quantum physics is provably unsolvable, according to scientists at UCL
I never would claim that science is omniscient and I myself am a critic of scientism. But it's implausible to deny the fact of scientific discoveries and principles. So we have to be able to grant science the considerable credit where it's due, without at the same time claiming that it is all-knowing, even in principle. — Wayfarer
