I think that Kant is the greatest epistemologist ever to have set foot on this earth. I also consider him to be the first epistemologist to have made real progress after Plato and Aristotle. As far as I am concerned, after him, there are only Karl Popper and Edmund Gettier to have contributed meaningfully. Epistemology is a field with very few names to mention. There have been lots of philosophers but only a handful of them have managed to do something meaningful in epistemology.
5 hours ago — alcontali
Things outside of time do not have a temporal start or end, they are not created or destroyed, they just ARE. — Devans99
I don't think that we can just assume determinism though. At least not in a "proof." — Terrapin Station
There are also quite a few other arguments that the universe cannot have existed ‘forever’:
— Devans99
What's the alternative?
9 hours ago — Brett
a system’s initial state determines all subsequent states. 'Forever' has no initial state so is impossible.
— Devans99
So, there is no such thing as forever, because it doesn’t have an initial state. And if it did it wouldn’t be forever. — Brett
You (meaning "god must be atheist" by "you") don’t read very carefully. The above statement I made was confirming to Devans99 what I believed he was saying. I’m not pushing any argument. As I said I’m just exploring ideas. — Brett
Yes, that is true, but initial state does not have to be a start state. It could be any point in a continuing series of states. If today's state is taken, then we could deterministically calculate the state as of tomorrow, AND still have a state preceding today's state, such as yesterday, last year, ten billiion years ago, any time ago.a system’s initial state determines all subsequent states. — Devans99
Firstly, Immanuel Kant pointed out in his Critique of Pure Reason that the practice of solving visual puzzles, as in Euclid's Elements, could not possible be considered pure reason, because it rests on fiddling with visual input, while pure reason must be language only, entirely devoid of sensory input. — alcontali
there is no such thing as forever, because it doesn’t have an initial state. — Brett
Right there is the crux of your fallacious reasoning. For you everthing starts with god. In another attempt you failed to prove god existed. Now you try to prove that creation happened.We can imagine as a thought experiment an eternal god.. etc — Devans99
I think one should live authentically. Whether you are religious, spiritual, or philosophical.
— Corra
What does that mean? — Marchesk
My posts keep getting deleted, why? I’m not swearing or insulting anyone. — aRealidealist
But there is a wider American culture, and more narrow ones — Bitter Crank
How familiar are you with the broad American culture??? — Bitter Crank
"You have to draw the line somewhere" is itself the problem. When you don't have a common measure, just how are you going to draw the line somewhere? You simply need that common measure to draw the line somewhere. This is similar to ↪god must be atheist where just assumes Calculus, but forgets what it means not having a common measure — ssu
The issue won't transmit so easily, because notice the definition of incommensurability: two or more quantities having no common measure. — ssu
It's as wrong as to try to put infinity, as a number, or an infinitesimal, as a number, on the number line. You simply cannot do it. And thus people don't regard either as numbers. Yet both are extremely useful in mathematics, so there isn't anything wrong with them. — ssu
This again is a fallacy here, because you simply deny the existence of incommensurability. Think about it: if you have a heap of sand and a mountain of sand, what then is the middle, really? It would be something like "an amount more than a heap and less than a mountain". Is that useful? Likely not, and still you don't have any idea when a heap turns into 'more than a heap and less than a mountain'. The laws you refer to don't really solve the issue at all. — ssu
This again is a fallacy here, because you simply deny the existence of incommensurability. — ssu
Also God might have morally justified reasons for these actions that your limited, fallible, finite mind doesn't have access to. — GodlessGirl
In order to talk about mathematical functions, you do need the number system and arithmetic to calculate functions. With heaps it isn't so! — ssu
That's how you just get to the paradox: you are insisting that an exact number of sand grains determines what a heap of sand is. — ssu
I can’t help think the negative reaction today towards Christianity is a reaction of logic towards a threat to its hegemony. — Brett
I don't want to put words in your mouth. You said you distrust logic, because it flatters you; so you distrust things that make you feel good? Or is it only logic, the one thing of many that makes you feel good, that you distrust? for instance, you trust your chocolate cheese cake, you trust your lover, you trust your children, they all make you feel good, (I'm assuming that... substitute anything else that makes you feel good) but some, including logic, you are distrustful of.We’re impressed by the logic and convinced how right we are by our mastery of logic. — Brett
"1. Is revenge a hopeless path to follow, and if so, 2. what will become of someone who is unable to carry out the act?" — Etzsche
↪god must be atheist
This is a shift that logic and reason can't bridge.
— god must be atheist
In that case, maybe logic and reason is sometimes looked too highly upon. — Etzsche
I tend to agree. Sometimes I feel a nagging distrust of logic. — Brett
As a human being are we supposed to just let this one slide under the rug? — Etzsche
While revenge is a form of justice, most of the time the average person isn't at liberty to carry out justice as they please. {edited for logical correctness.} — Etzsche
While justice is a form of revenge, most of the time the average person isn't at liberty to carry out justice as they please. It still leaves you waiting and hoping for justice to be served. Are people just supposed to sit by and hope that one day justice will be carried out? That leads to such an unpleasant way of living. — Etzsche
What’s the difference between dignity and self respect? — TheHedoMinimalist
Yeah, they leave a lot and it hurts even more when they leave and are reminded of how their love is not present with them physically. — empathy