Hmm, interesting. If it's true, then it may merely be because most people are religious (to some degree) and also that most people are quite stupid when compared with the very intelligent. We could note that heterosexuals are not necessarily two-legged, but most two-legged people are heterosexuals. That example brings out the lack of logical connection. The statement is true merely because most people have two legs and also most people are heterosexual.
3 hours ago — Cuthbert
We are suffering from an increasingly dehumanizing bureaucratic structure over our lives. — Athena
We are a mechanical society just like our world war enemy because we have adopted its bureaucracy and education. — Athena
Why should the “subtly nuanced” understanding of the theologians matter? — Art48
Zen koan? — Agent Smith
I'm sure there's someone out there who qualifies as a saint or a bodhisattva, but so long as him/her robbing a bank doesn't violate the laws of nature, there's nothing impossible about that i.e. the probability of a heist isn't 0%. — Agent Smith
There is no paradox. 1 is synthetic. 2 is analytic. — Hanover
Long before we have run ourselves into oblivion, we may have spoiled the earth to a degree that we will have all died off. — Bitter Crank
Yes, it is a dogmatic conviction. You can show me to be wrong by providing an argument for what you have just asserted. — Bartricks
Causation does not imply change (I said above that I do not believe that causation entails change). — Bartricks
Following a rule is not interpreting a rule; it is, rather, an act. Hence the "meaning" of the rule is found in the use to which it is put. — Banno
Sure, interpretation is part of understanding a rule. Wittgenstein's point is that interpretation is insufficient. — Banno
and understanding the rule requires the interpretation of the rule.
— god must be atheist
Nuh. — Banno
↪god must be atheist Seems that on your logic, because there are additions which you have not interpreted, you do not understand addition. — Banno
Nuh. Understanding a rule requires that you are able to implement it. A child demonstrates that they understand "2+2 = 4" not by interpreting it as "Two plus two equals four" but by moving blocks around, colouring in squares, and arguing over shared cakes. — Banno
Nuh. Understanding a rule requires that you are able to implement it. — Banno
To me, the complication is the use of the same word "woman" to mean "female + trans women" and "female but not trans women" in different places. — Paulm12
Following a rule is not interpreting a rule; it is, rather, an act. Hence the "meaning" of the rule is found in the use to which it is put. — Banno
This was our paradox: no course of action could be determined by a rule, because any course of action can be made out to accord with the rule
If anything, religion provides an accessible, "practical philosophy" for how people are to live their lives and treat other people. — Paulm12
Not so. He was an officer on the front lines, decorated several times. — jgill
Where did I say there can be causation without change? I think there can be, but I never said any such thing. — Bartricks
What you're doing is taking the dogma that causes precede their effects and applying it to this case and getting the conclusion that the ball is not causing the depression. — Bartricks
But that is my point as well. — Hanover
) and a number of us got this same from @StreetlightX(Yeah, that's really about Must, isn't it. — Banno
)Again, the capacity of white people to turn a discussion of centuries of racial opression into one about their feelings will never not surprise me. — StreetlightX
So, you don’t like him? — Wayfarer
I couldn't disagree more. Most religions have some canonical figure or text(s) that forms the basis of their religion. Take Christianity-I'd say with very good confidence that there probably was someone named Jesus who lived, died, and taught stuff which was written down and was at least similar to what we see in the New Testament, etc. Even if you reject any of the miracle claims it certainly has something to do with observed reality. — Paulm12
A Wittgensteinian answer to this question would that there is no such thing as physical causation as is generally understood in modern science, but that physical causation is an a priori intuition, which is useful for hypotheses, but which tells us nothing about the world in-itself or its meaning.
If you insist that there can be causation without change, then you could say that an object existing without change keeps on causing itself form moment to moment. Which is absurd.
Kant used a famous example of a ball on a cushion. The depression in the cushion is being caused by the ball on the cushion even if both call and cushion have been in that arrangement for eternity. — Bartricks
In some cases, I've heard that theology is a specific branch/subset of philosophy of religion. In this case, theological posts would therefore belong on a site like this. But to me, how would we differentiate a theological post/claim from a philosophical one? — Paulm12
All theology I've read starts with belief in God. Philosophy does not start with such assumption. — Jackson
The only meaning it serves for me is that science can't provide the reason. It gives meaning to my being. A reason for me being there. — Haglund
A reason for me being there. Which science can't provide — Haglund