It is easy to end up partaking discussion about the existence of God and end up thinking of some abstract search and lose sight of Jesus, and the whole message of love. — Jack Cummins
There are several mysteries which seem essential to the philosophical quest; the existence of God, free will and, life after death. These seem to be central to philosophy. Endless books have been written on these subjects — Jack Cummins
But there can be no logic about God. — Anand-Haqq
There is love about God, love for God, but no logic about God. — Anand-Haqq
Thoughts? — Benj96
. It exists to the extent we live it. and I think love is like this, it is something we can do at a cost to ourselves, not something that is already how things work. — unenlightened
The God of love is not reliable and does not prevail; He gets crucified — unenlightened
Me:
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
I don't think this is backed by any observation. Therefore it contradicts itself. — John Chlebek
No exceptions taken there. However, what about the proposition : All events must have a cause. Assuming that is a classic synthetic a priori proposition, can you put that into context? — 3017amen
I do not like defining things in terms of causes because the term is ambiguous, and one must also distinguish between physical causes and mental causes, because they are not the same, for one involves spatial relations and the other does not. The mere existence of physical causation is an assumption, yet hitherto, philosophers have thought it reasonable to ground their philosophies in the supposed truth that "all events must have a (physical) cause." According to my understanding, this proposition must be changed to "all events must have a mental cause," and this is because subjectivity in itself is transcendent of space. This means that all physical causes are mental causes in disguise. — TheGreatArcanum
And, what are you thinking is transcendent of perception? — 3017amen
the essence of subjectivity in itself is transcendent of perception. — TheGreatArcanum
a synthetic a priori proposition is a proposition which is not true by definition and does not have its origin in perception. — TheGreatArcanum
a priori propositions are possible because the mind in itself is immaterial and possess the inherent ability to know itself, meaning, of course, that the mind, in using propositions to conceive of its own structure or essence, is formulating a priori propositions. they cannot originate in the perception because that which is immaterial is necessarily transcendent of perception, which necessitates space. — TheGreatArcanum
synthetic a priori propositions are possible because the subject in itself is immaterial, and also, free (in the sense that a subject, by its very nature, has free will). — TheGreatArcanum
Kant's Metaphysics — 3017amen
Mentioned. — Mww
Have you checked-out Kant's Metaphysics? For instance: How are the synthetic a priori propositions possible? — 3017amen
Yes, and I think that I have successfully answered this question. — TheGreatArcanum
Specifically, I’m looking for my information on the immateriality of subjectivity because I find both Kants philosophy to be primitive in this sense. — TheGreatArcanum
Using simple English, to be human is to be an action verb--human Being. Time is required for our existence. Things are constantly moving, changing, et.al . as required to sustain life. Eternity (no time) seems unimaginable. — 3017amen
It occurred to me that I really didn't address this: Heraclitus 's world of flux, one has to ask, why is this exclusive of affirming the present? WE are the ones who look at the stream on time as a logical succession, but the term "stream" belies this, for it possesses no boundaries at all. The law of the excluded middle is a positivist's way of misapprehending the world entirely — Constance
We live in time, I would argue, such that past and future are subsumed under the present, or, rather, such that our experience of the past moving into the future is a reality in the giveness of the presence. — Constance
Here, in my opinion, is more evidence of the American ppl’s lack of wisdom. Carter was a discreet mixture of traditional and progressive values; his successor was a precursor of Trump, a Hollywood celebrity who steered the country into materialism, away from buckskin and into Brooks Brothers. Carter probably fell out of favor only after the long Iran hostage crisis ended rather unsatisfactorily...which was not his fault. — Todd Martin
For my part, if I meet wisdom, in a man or group or institution, I consider it a permanent quality they possess that can be generally counted on. When Solomon was said to be wise there was no implication that he would someday become foolish—aren’t lifetime appointments for judges based on this idea?— after all, it was a wish granted by God...though one might suspect his promiscuity and choices with regard to women. — Todd Martin
You mean these same checks and balances that Trump undermined during his administration? — Todd Martin
Had he exercised more foresight, calculated more than just reacted, he might have gained himself a successful ride on that hobby-horse our founders feared our future leader might. — Todd Martin
By thinking about the future, which is done in the present. Is there REALLY a past or future AT ALL? No. — Constance
That’s my point, Mr. Amen: how do we extol the wisdom of a ppl in rejecting an unfit president when it was the same ppl who voted him in in the first place? — Todd Martin
Did the American ppl suddenly become wise after four years? — Todd Martin
If we were truly wise, would we have elected him to start with? — Todd Martin
Isn’t wisdom a permanent and timeless virtue? — Todd Martin
What virtue, then, of a wolf, were we seeking as the primary quality in a leader? — Todd Martin
He only got fired after he had to admit that the election was lost... — Todd Martin
Barr was jettisoned after his usefulness ran out, but he had been very useful up until that point... — Todd Martin
In other words, might he had fired and hired top brass so as to install his minions, in the wake of the coup attempt, so that, after it had succeeded, he could trust in them to support him? — Todd Martin
Was it by wisdom that the masses voted him in in the first place? We let the wolf in the door...and he wasn’t even dressed in sheep’s clothing! We all knew what he was when, through our wisdom, we voted for him in 2016. Why then did we vote for him? — Todd Martin
wonderful was it, that it was a wonder anyone wondered why Trump put Bill Barr in as Attorney General; that wonder wonderfully dissipated as soon as Barr gave his public summary of the Russia Collusion Investigation. — Todd Martin
All I am saying is that Trump was in a position, on January 6, that he could have led his army, instead of just trusting in them to do it all for him, to the Capitol, put all his chips in, and, not just gambled (which activity I suppose he is familiar with, especially on the golf-course) in the contest, but participated in it...and not just participated, but could have been the main character, the chief, the general, THE MAN...and either won or lost his cause, to remain perpetual leader of the greatest country in the world, by his own merits... — Todd Martin
but he didn’t have the balls to do what was needed to insure that bet. By withdrawing, he insured his safety at the cost of the cause. He still hoped the cause would be achieved, but because he valued his own personal safety more, he risked less, and, though hoping for more, nevertheless got exactly what he risked.
I think he thought he had to hole it in from the fairway, so he wasn’t willing to bet on it...
...but maybe he just had to sink a 15 foot putt. — Todd Martin
Ye I think the book Frankenstein applies to all of use. We are fashioned by the gods (evolution?) in ways we really don't understand. We approach the world with love, expecting acceptance, but we find things happen to use that don't make sense (Camus's "absurd") and we become resentful and doubtful. We don't know who is to blame for the whole situation but we feel like we shouldn't be on this earth in this condition. We feel like the world owes us more. In the final analysis, we oscillate between pure idealism ("I create reality") and perfect realism ("only matter exists"). I think this dialectic is what "phenomenology" means. — Gregory
Militant Moderate". Perhaps I should have used a smilie icon after that remark, to indicate that I was kidding. :joke: — Gnomon
As bruised & battered Rodney King plaintively pleaded : "why can't we all just get along". — Gnomon
Actually, I am mostly apathetic about polarized politics. That's because, in most cases, "I don't have a horse in that race". So, I don't have emotional attachments to the "things of this world". Ironically, my fundamentalist religious upbringing inadvertently gave me one philosophical meme useful for dealing with the chaos of the crazy world : "I am in the world, but not of the world". The image that suggests to me is of "hovering above the fray". — Gnomon
My position on most topics is vaguely somewhere in the middle of the range. I am OK with some Conservative positions and with some Liberal positions, but not with their polarized extreme end-states. Unfortunately, when the shooting starts, I get caught in the crossfire. :cool: — Gnomon
Aquinas thought existence actualizes what some thing is (form) to makes its existence in reality (essence as accidents and substances). But doesn't a form have to exist in a sense before being actualized? — Gregory
the courage to lead his mob/army into the Capitol in order to gain control of electoral ratification. That is what I meant. — Todd Martin
Human nature hasn't changed so much, but human culture has made war & conquest a less attractive way to obtain resources, than peaceful trade. :smile: — Gnomon
That's why I am a Militant Moderate. — Gnomon
Since they were violent and were aimed at government, were these insurrections to you? — NOS4A2
Sidney Powell — praxis
We have come to demand that Congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated — NOS4A2
The actions of those who broke into the capitol, the definition of insurrection, legal precedent and history. What occurred simply doesn't resemble an insurrection. — NOS4A2
So what did you base your insurrection theory on, if not someone else's thinking? — NOS4A2
force and fear — Todd Martin