Of course atheism and theism are untenable since their 'truths' can't be shown, and it gets worse, though, than indefensible, in that it is the height of intellectual dishonesty to proclaim them. — PoeticUniverse
"What is there to exploit in people who are not working?" Are you kidding? Reagan's vast expansion of the prison system that revved up in the 1980s and has continued ever since, has made billions upon billions for all companies involved in constructing and administrating prison systems. The projects also "make" billions of dollars for other people. — uncanni
Can you clarify what you mean by a system growing, you seem to be saying, sui generis? That's not sounding very Marxian to me. — uncanni
No. I stopped drafting it after probably half an hour or so, and then left it like that. — alcontali
They express their (utter) dislike for this lemma. — alcontali
What is the difference between "having 0 gods" and "not having {1,2,3,4,5} gods"? Isn't that the same possibility? — alcontali
I am not sure that it can work like that. For the number of gods, you assume a set that looks like this: {0,1}. You do not assume, for example, {0,1,2,3,4,5}. Therefore, you implicitly use information that you do not mention, something like, "There is only one God". — alcontali
Shake your head and walk away...
Some who call themselves "atheists" are just as fundy as religious ones. — creativesoul
Language. It is not interpreted; it is understood.
— god must be atheist
Language is not "understood"
— god must be atheist — creativesoul
According to the paperwork factory, his setup must either satisfy Kolmogorov's axioms or Cox' theorem. — alcontali
Cox wanted his system to satisfy the following conditions:
Divisibility and comparability – The plausibility of a proposition is a real number and is dependent on information we have related to the proposition.
Common sense – Plausibilities should vary sensibly with the assessment of plausibilities in the model.
Consistency – If the plausibility of a proposition can be derived in many ways, all the results must be equal. — Arnborg and Sjödin
The axioms of Kolmogorov. Let S denote a sample space with a probability
measure P defined over it, such that probability of any event A ⊂ S is given by
P(A). Then, the probability measure obeys the following axioms:
(1) P(A) ≥ 0,
(2) P(S)=1,
(3) If {A1, A2,...Aj ,...} is a sequence of mutually exclusive events such that
Ai ∩Aj = ∅ for all i, j, then P(A1 ∪A2 ∪···∪Aj ∪···) = P(A1)+P(A2)+
··· + P(Aj ) + ···.
The axioms are supplemented by two definitions:
(4) The conditional probability of A given B is defined by
P(A|B) = P(A ∩ B)
P(B) ,
(5) The events A, B are said to be statistically independent if
P(A ∩ B) = P(A)P(B).
This set of axioms was provided by Kolmogorov in 1936. — undetermined
:smile: I'm just groping in the dark. — TheMadFool
So, no, you cannot just say, "you do not understand it". — alcontali
It is just a game and you must hit the diagonal.
[(false,false)(false,true)(true,false)(true,true)][(false,false)(true,false)(false,true)(true,true)]
The first example predicate, "isEven", will return true if a number is even and false if it is odd.
In this game, you can use whatever logic sentence you want, but if it is true, its number must be even. If it is false, then its number must be odd. You must stay on the diagonal! — alcontali
The commandment is a Christian one and should be interpreted as such — Janus
Language is understood. — Janus
the correct interpretation is clear in the context of the Christian faith — Janus
You cannot use probability theory for this problem. — alcontali
Some interpretations are better informed than others; that should be obvious. — Janus
How can you understand "Love thy neighbour" without interpreting it? — Janus
You need to understand the commandment in light of Christian thought and teaching. It is an ethical injunction; it tells you how to live in the world with others. It simply tells you to act towards others with kindness and fellow feeling. And that is obviously not "a stupid imperative", unless you happen to be a sociopath. — Janus
The question is; if truth is a native of our ideology and not an accurate representation of REALITY, why do we rely on people for the truth, when their truth is based on observation? — True Point
Progressive reality is what all aspects of nature presents to us.
— True Point
No idea why you're calling that "progressive," but okay. — Terrapin Station
The sense of the commandment is to act towards your neighbour in a loving way. It doesn't matter what you feel; the commandment is telling you to act a certain way despite whatever feelings you may or may not have. — Janus
So what is your belief or opinion based upon? — 3017amen
Yeah, I agree with that. I'd say that part of what that particular emotion entails is that you perform certain sorts of actions towards the object of the emotion, otherwise you don't really have that emotion. — Terrapin Station
In context, I suggest to you that the commandment "Love thy neighbour" is not a command to have an emotion, but a command to act. — unenlightened
that's because you don't recognise a valid argument when you see one. — Bartricks
"None of these have to do with theism or atheism."
Yes they do. They are Existential analogies to highlight your flawed logic.
They are important questions that have puzzled philosophers throughout the years. And no one has yet answered those.
So it begs the question, if Atheism can't answer those deep, pragmatic questions of existence, how can it prove that God doesn't exist?
A pretty simple point, no? — 3017amen
I'm asking you direct questions. And you are politically deflecting them. — 3017amen
And obviously, it (love) is not an emotion. — unenlightened
1. I'll keep asking you to prove your point. How does consciousness and subconsciousness work together, as you keep saying(?).
2. What is Love?
3. This statement is a lie. (True or False.) — 3017amen