It is argued that eternal forms could not interact with temporal bodies. But as Aristotle showed, so long as the two distinct substances are represented as actual, therefore active, there is no problem with interaction between dual substances. The appearance of a problem is a result of representing one of the two substances as necessarily passive, by being eternal, outside of time. This indicates that the understand of time which is involved with the concept of "eternal forms" is faulty. — Metaphysician Undercover
Could someone explain if the picture is accurate and explain what this problem of interaction is more thoroughly? — Dannation99
Even animals who can communicate ideas, orally or gesturally, must translate their internal flow of non-verbal feelings into forms that can be expressed symbolically. When your dog or cat paws at you to get your attention, they are expressing a feeling common to mammals. — Gnomon
So you when you are in the original position proposed by Rawls, — Jasmine
Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law. — Echarmion
c.i. Is never claimed to be a universal law — Mww
GR should never be claimed, logically, as a universal law; a rule is never a law nor universal. It isn’t, for good reason, called the golden law. — Mww
All you are saying is that we use images and sounds to refer to other sensory impressions which can include other visuals and sounds, or even other scribbles. — Harry Hindu
Here you demonstrated perfectly what you need ot deny: that words (scribbled or uttered) have meaning.↪god must be atheist All sensory impressions have meaning to them. Red of an apple means the apple ripe. Hearing you speak English means you know how to speak English. The smell of coffee means coffee is being brewed, etc. — Harry Hindu
We all think in images, or sensory impressions.
Words are scribbles and sounds. To say that you think in words is to say that you think in scribbles and sounds. — Harry Hindu
We all think in images, or sensory impressions.
Words are scribbles and sounds. To say that you think in words is to say that you think in scribbles and sounds. — Harry Hindu
We all think in images, or sensory impressions. — Harry Hindu
No one, then, is going anywhere under present understandings of physics. — tim wood
I don't think in words or language
— god must be atheist
How do you ever decide what to say or write? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think in images, then? Or is there just no internal conversation? Do you have to always use an external medium? I tend to work with people who need visuals to understand. It drives me a little bit insane, as I'm not a very visual person. — Marchesk
Descartes’ argument that we cannot have an idea of a supremely perfect being without there actually being a supremely perfect being — Philosopher19
Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law. — Echarmion
Complexity clouds the obvious. — MondoR
In simplicity one gains clarity. Complexity clouds the obvious. A idea needs only one sentence. The Internet is a manifestation of junk debris. Better to look at a pond. — MondoR
The ancients observed life more clearly. — MondoR
when somebody finds out that I’m a linguist, the first question they ask me is how many languages I speak. — Olivier5
This somehow expresses a disagreement of how I worded CI.Kant doesn't talk about benefits or disbenefits when establishing the groundwork for the CI. And it's also important to consider that the CI is not a tool to judge outward actions.
There are several layers to analysis within the CI. The question of whether a maxim includes an implicit or explicit contradiction, i.e. whether it can theoretically be universalised, and the question of whether you would want it to be universalised.
Only the second part is directly reminiscent of the golden rule, and the conceptual basis is different. — Echarmion
I'm in agreement with you regarding the categorical imperative - it basically says that if the answer to "what if everybody did x (an act)?" is something odd/strange/absurd in some sense then x is wrong and if the answer is not like that then it's right. — TheMadFool
My understanding of the CI is "do any action if and only if you think everyone in the world would not disbenefit from it, even if all and everyone did the same action."You're arguing against The Golden Rule, not the CI. They are not one in the same. — creativesoul
A slave without a master is a slave nonetheless. — Tzeentch
I don't think that Kant made any reference to viewing the categorical imperative from a male or female point of view, — Jack Cummins
5.3k
LET God = the most important thing, person, idea, or principle in your life.
IF you exist the most important thing, person, idea, or principle in your life exists.
You exist.
THEREFORE God exists. — unenlightened
You destroy my arguments like I was making them for real, rather than parodying your arguments. — unenlightened
You seem not to have noticed in your urgency to win, that we do not even disagree. — unenlightened
I am sorry. So the first quote in this post, where I quoted you, was made in jest, as a parody? How would I know that? Because I certainly disagree with the conlcusion of the first quote. I assert that that argument is not valid. So... you wrote it as a parody? — god must be atheist
Good grief! That is a really terrible way to do philosophy. I will not engage with you further. — unenlightened