Usually they go in for thanks and perhaps the needs of others. — iolo
They might, though. To say ‘miracles can’t happen’ as matter of principle verges on superstition of another kind, as it put scientific orthodoxy in a role previously assigned to religious authority. — Wayfarer
It’s weird, yeah, but that’s because we don’t usually talk about empty sets, because there’s almost no practical need to. — Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest, at some stage one has to suppose that the unwillingness to learn displayed here is wilful. When one reads:
Years of indoctrination in the wrong logic hasn't touched me. I hope it never will.
— god must be atheist
the only sensible thing to do is to walk away. — Banno
Which means, in effect, that nothing happens that science cannot explain in principle. That's how it works out. — Wayfarer
‘Miracles are not against nature, only what we know about nature’ ~ St. Augustine. — Wayfarer
Wouldn’t it be fair to say, though, that despite being forced to live “as if” they never gave up their faith, never gave up what they were hardwired for, despite being forced to live a lie. — Brett
You seem to be desperately hung up on gods and dictionaries. I'm not. Very few of those who have gone in for prayer have been asking for anything for themselves, surely? Look in your dictionary for thee word 'may': we are all free to use it. — iolo
Which means, in effect, that nothing happens that science cannot explain in principle. That's how it works out. — Wayfarer
Just like if you look at a photograph of the statue of liberty, you have not actually experienced the statue of liberty in its essence. You have only seen an image of the light reflected from it. — Yohan
Socrates famously argues that all wrong is done through mere ignorance of what is right; everyone means to do right, they just might be wrong about what that is. Though my position is subtly more nuanced, I lean in that direction myself. Weakness of will is I think the only factor Socrates misses; we sometimes do things we think are wrong out of weakness to do what we mean to do, too. — Pfhorrest
Yes, I do believe as well that we are moral creatures.Yes. But can it only be “as if”? Can one live it as real and override what you’re hardwired for? Assuming we’re moral creatures (you may or may not agree) were quite capable of not acting morally, so going against what we’re hardwired for. — Brett
If someone, with full knowledge and full consent, does something against their true conscience, the only way to get out of the situation is to do something good that is greater than the evil done. If you put your crime on someone else (Jesus) and sing Amazing grace, or put your crime on everyone else and watch the movie Home, you are screwed — Gregory
This I never thought would be printed. But everything under the Sun comes to pass, I reckon.fundamentalist Catholic — Gregory
He is a fundamentalist Catholic who thinks all philosophies that don't agree with Thomism can be lumped into one theory. — Gregory
The assumption isn't that wearing a dress makes you a woman. T — Harry Hindu
It's interesting, yes. But I do worship matter. Every object around is my idol. It's fun! — Gregory
I think the universe is about justice. — Gregory
but during death there <a href="http://can.be.an" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">can.be.an</a> eternity. Paradoxes — Gregory
↪Mapping the Medium I found the study here — frank
How about shared hallucinations? — Athena
I think there is much to be said for such an activity if you don't ask for anything. — iolo
I frankly don't understand your question. That's why I dodged it the first time.So, for instance, an apparatchik of the communist party is overriding his hardwired beliefs in individualism and cooperation and choosing party ideology. Or is that ideology hardwired in him?
— Brett
So then, back to the beginning. — Brett
"there is no escape from the fact that one’s presuppositions lead either to a transcendental, participatory philosophy or theology, or else a nihilistic philosophy that creates its own counterfeit theology" — Gregory
Kinda left of center observation. — Yohan
So, no such thing as a communist, just an opportunist. — Brett
"Either of the two sexes (male and female), especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones. The term is also used more broadly to denote a range of identities that do not correspond to established ideas of male and female." — Baden
So, for instance, an apparatchik of the communist party is overriding his hardwired beliefs in individualism and cooperation and choosing party ideology. Or is that ideology hardwired in him? — Brett
And yet we know of unprovable truths. (IN mathematics - ed.)
Epistemology is broader than computability. — Banno
Well, in Critique of Pure Reason, Immanuel Kant pointed out the existence of a type of knowledge that is not empirical. It is synthetic a priori. At the same time, he rejected classical Greek geometry as NOT being synthetic a priori, because it is highly visual, as it is an exercise in fiddling with visual puzzles. — alcontali
Perhaps you confuse being true with being justified. There are obvious empirical truths - such as that you are reading this post. — Banno