How about "a four sided triangle?"
Or..."a circle with corners?" — Frank Apisa
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST...that the existence of gods is impossible;
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST...that gods are needed to explain existence;
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't. — Frank Apisa
You're not responding to the argument I made. — Coben
Like off the top of my head Newton, say. And there are many modern examples who not only are smarter than your summation, but smarter than most of the participants in this forum, like, say, Gerhard Ertl. — Coben
This doesn't fit my argument either. I am saying that if an agnostic makes the positive claim: God is capable of existing, that is an extremely strong ontological statement. — Coben
Is an incredibly convoluted belief to have. — Coben
That 'agnostic' would have an extremely complicated positive belief about ontology and metaphysics. — Coben
Wow! How does one know that the universe or reality is such that gods are capable of existing? — Coben
that a deity is capable of existing. On the other hand the agnostic can say 'I cannot rule it out. — Coben
To say that they believe a deity is capable of existing means they have a positive beliet that given the ontology of deities and the make up of reality, God's are capable of existing. — Coben
Its not arbitrary because it never changes, — DingoJones
one awesome person on the internet. — Michael
I define myself as the ultimate moral arbiter and everything I command is objective because I say so. Now kneel. — Aleph Numbers
Read my latest post and tell me what's wrong with it. Please. — Aleph Numbers
don't think either hedonism or the satisfaction of appetite provides that. — Wayfarer
many of the items on your list are not emblematic of pleasure so much as of happiness, — Wayfarer
Compare Freud: to him, this principle was libido. That too has a narrow meaning - sexual appetite - but also a broader one, which manifests in all kinds of ways, as it is something like 'the will to live'. But the main reason Jung broke from Freud was exactly because he felt Freud's 'libido' was too narrow to account for human drives generally. — Wayfarer
Or in other words, there doesn't seem to be some hard limit imposed on the field of philosophy in regards to question asking of a nonsensical order, or not? — Shawn
I do not know how rabbits would view that application. -- Russell. — CeleRate
I guess, all of this, religion, war is simply a reflection of how corrupt humans are and while we may have been gifted with rationality, our animal nature still reigns supreme sometime. — StarsFromMemory
This is a common folk or cultural myth, and a rather naïve and superstitious one at that; in reality, however, it's highly debatable that whatever the inherent traits which manifested themselves in "religious" wars are, that they exist solely within a "religious" contest, often simply using a simplistic, superstitious, or nonsense definition of "religion" to begin with and reinforced via circular reasoning.
It's arguable that there was a strong profit motive in every war, whether marketed as "religious" otherwise, much, as how most wars in civilized, 1st world nations are motivated by national pride or ideology (e.x. nationalism, capitalism, communism, socialism, etc), rather than "resources" as ignorant and false childish myths about war tell people or insinuate (it's "resources" for the war, not "war for resources) - there isn't arguably any practical difference between a war in the name of a "religion", and won in the name of any other type of ideology or political stance.
Given that scientific fields such as evolutionary psychology, as well as most of the philosophies of major law and legal systems or institutions (e.x. Common Law theory; Zimbardo's Standford Prison Experiment) more or less confirm that warfare and violence among men and women is an innate part of who we are (not a good one to devolve into, but a part of one nonetheless), such as having roots in biology, I would like to think that silly and archaic notions such as the above would be extinct rather than continuing to be blindly repeated. — IvoryBlackBishop
Probably more accurate to say that religious belief and education are inversely correlated. — Pinprick
It's hard to say what free will is. It's hard to even get people to think seriously about the question: they would rather argue endlessly about "free will" than think about the question that ought to be addressed before anything else. — SophistiCat
My question is this:
If I have a good basic understanding of Nietzsche; does this mean that Nietzsche saw everything as bleak, meaningless and harsh? Another question is: Would his overman would end up being an iconoclastic narcissistic brute who carves out his own meaning for himself on his own terms? — Agathob
The better Nietzscheans here can answer your questions better. Until they do:
One thing I can say confidentally: Nietzsche wasn't looking to supplant one (Apollonian) with the other Dionysian). He thought both were necessary.
He also, definitely, didn't think we should create new values from scratch. He didn't want us to repeat old values, sure, but the process of creating new values isn't sketching on a blank canvas. — csalisbury
And the difference being? — TheMadFool
if we adopt the principle of universality: if an action is right (or wrong) for others, it is right (or wrong) for us. Those who do not rise to the minimal moral level of applying to themselves the standards they apply to others — Chomsky
Because while you busy yourself with procedural details of how to reduce morality to a utilitarian optimization, you don't ask what any of that has to do with being moral. What are the criteria of success (other than aping the superficial trappings of science)? How do you jump the is-ought gap? — SophistiCat
Religious people are not envious of atheists. — alcontali
Religious people are not angry at atheists. — alcontali
Anger is anger. — 3017amen
The question becomes what should one do with that anger. — 3017amen