Here I think it’s clear: while climate change, for example, is existential— it is, ultimately, a symptom: a result of a political and economic decisions, motivated by greed. Capitalism, then, is indeed the “infrastructure” that needs to be undone. — Xtrix
From where I'm sitting, the most important "problem" facing humanity is a lack of inner awareness. — Bret Bernhoft
Too bad Europeans killed most of those indigenous people. — Benkei
The difficulty of reading Xenophon lies in its simplicity. — Fooloso4
Ethics is the examination of principles that govern the moral behavior of an individual. — L'éléphant
I haven't read the original argument made by Aristotle - Wikipedia offers only a rough sketch. It seems as though Aristotle considered real/actual entities as those that had an end; consider the process of constructing a chair. It begins (wood, nails, glue, etc.) and ends (a chair). If one is unable to complete the task, we have a potential chair and not an actual one. The same goes for ∞∞, it, by definition is endless. — Agent Smith
Are you aware of any decent books describing their ethics? — Benkei
Is there a sensible way to extend the application of eudaimonia to the environment and future generations? And I mean not in a way that a healthy and nice environment increases my own eudaimonia but that I have a duty to have the environment flourish, like a caretaker? — Benkei
We mold clay into a pot, but it is the emptiness inside that makes the vessel useful. We fashion wood for a house, but it is the emptiness inside that makes it livable. We work with the substantial, but the emptiness is what we use. — Gnomon
Indeed and the speculative constructions and reinventions can go on forever. But why? — Tom Storm
You clearly don't believe God exists. In this and other posts you look for psychological reasons why people believe as they do. E.g. Pre-science and scientific mentality; Dormant mind; Faith vs. Intelligence. Your ideas are expressed in condescending language which shows a lack of respect for religious believers. — T Clark
1. I clearly do believe that God exists — Art48
A powerset of some set X is composed precisely of itself and all its subsets — Kuro
But the cardinality of P(E) can only be greater than E's if there exists elements in P(E) that are not members of E. — Kuro
That there is a man who is "the way" is a myth. A man who is "the truth" is a myth. A man who is "the life" is a myth. That "no one comes to the Father except through [this man]"is a myth. If you argue that Jesus is not just a man, then you accept the myth.
— Fooloso4
Jesus is speaking figuratively. — ThinkOfOne
If you accept what you say, then every impossible thing Jesus said is "figurative", and only those that we accept today are literal. — god must be atheist
Jesus is speaking figuratively. — ThinkOfOne
I don't know if Jesus thought he was the or a messiah. — Fooloso4
Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. — Fooloso4
That there is a man who is "the way" is a myth. A man who is "the truth" is a myth. A man who is "the life" is a myth. That "no one comes to the Father except through [this man]"is a myth. — Fooloso4
One thing is clear, although John's Jesus, Paul's Jesus, and the Jesus of the Synoptic gospels have a common thread, the Messiah, they are not the same Jesus. — Fooloso4
You ALSO can't reasonably conclude that Jesus DID NOT say X, Y, or Z. This is the point you seem to fail to grasp. — ThinkOfOne
I would like to know what people think of C.S. Lewis's argument for the divinity of Christ
— Dermot Griffin
It's a terrible argument, because it treats elements of Gospel narratives as established fact. Anyone who accepts the Gospels is already convinced. Anyone who doesn't accept them will reject the premises that Jesus made the statements. — Relativist
That there is a man who is "the way" is a myth. A man who is "the truth" is a myth. A man who is "the life" is a myth. That "no one comes to the Father except through [this man]"is a myth. — Fooloso4
I would like to know what people think of C.S. Lewis's argument for the divinity of Christ. — Dermot Griffin
No, it is not Christ who founded Christianity. (... etc.) — Alkis Piskas
Also, for philosophical purposes, it seems arbitrary to confine this question to a particular species at a particular point in history. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But I don't know that there is a limit on how long there will be conscious beings. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Do you not agree that this would be advantageous? — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't know whether there is a limit on how long there will be conscious beings. — TonesInDeepFreeze
since I have no idea whether there is a greatest number that anyone (and let's include any conscious being in the universe now or ever) would ever need. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Same here. The possibility exists that god exists. Despite all probabilities that arise from what we (as a species) know.As for atheism, I don't have to "take a plunge". I consider myself already an "atheist", since I don't believe in God, esp. the God that is created by Judeo-Christians-- or any supreme being in particular. But this does not mean that I exclude the existence of some Supreme Being or Supreme Power, in general. — Alkis Piskas
↪Alkis Piskas I believe we're on the same page albeit on different paragraphs. We're cool. — Agent Smith
So what? We agree that 186000 is not the greatest number. Nor is 186000 x 1000, which is the speed of light in milliseconds. Etc. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I changed my reply. I didn't notice that it was you who posted and not the other poster. Then I realized that you were making the same point as I was. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Siddhartha Guatama (founder of Buddhism) — Alkis Piskas
Siddhartha Guatama (founder of Buddhism) opts to remain tightlipped about God, neither affirming nor negating god's existence
— Agent Smith
That's why I like Buddhism! — Alkis Piskas