• Singularity started Big Bang?
    "Universes" don't exist as moving objects in a space that can collide like black holes do. Also, black holes don't explode when they collide, they just merger. (Black holes do eventually explode, after an unfathomably long period of time, as their "evaporation" accelerates as they get smaller).

    The inflationary model (well, the eternal inflation model, which seems to be what's proposed here) is that the natural state of most of the universe ("multiverse") is to be accelerating everything away from everything else ridiculously faster than the speed of light, but then quantum fluctuations can cause a small part of that to decelerate, converting enormous quantities of that dark energy into other forms, filling that little decelerated pocket with energy. Such an event would have been the start of our "universe": we're a little pocket that has temporarily stopped accelerating so much. And now we're on our way back to accelerating apart again, very, very slowly.

    PBS SpaceTime is a great YouTube series with some really good videos on this stuff. I think these are some the relevant ones:





    Also IIRC this one is about black holes colliding, though there might be others too:

  • On the existence of God (by request)
    I'm not sure what you mean by noncognitivist... .3017amen

    I mean theological noncognitivism, which I described in the OP:

    I am of the opinion that ontophilia is the proper referent of the term "God" as used by theological noncognitivists, who are people that use religious terminology not for describing reality per se, but more for its emotional affect. Most theological noncognitivists do not identify as such and are not aware of this philosophical technicality in their use of language, but it it evident in expressions such as "God is love", whereby "believing in God" does not seem to mean so much a claim about the ontological existence of a particular being, but an expression of good will toward the world and of an expectation that the world generally reciprocates such goodness. It seems also plausibly equatable to the Buddhist concept of "nirvana", or the ancient Greek concept of "eudaimonia", which were the "meanings of life" of those respective traditions.The Codex Quaerentis: On Practical Action and the Meaning of Life

    TL;DR: there is a real feeling that corresponds to the non-cognitivist meaning of "God", and it is the greatest and most important thing in life, and doing the things that bring about that feeling is kinda like to "become [one with] God", but the occurrence of that feeling really isn't good ground to say "God exists", and doing so just causes unnecessary confusion with people who don't already do that, even people who are intimately familiar with that feeling.Pfhorrest

    In other words, are some if not all, of those metaphysical concepts or features of consciousness confer any type of meaning to lower life-forms? For example, using your definition of will; did the will evolve?3017amen

    Yes, on my account will evolved, as did consciousness, and all of those emotional things we've been talking about, and many of them (or prototypical variants of them) are shared with "lower" life-forms.
  • On the existence of God (by request)
    Perhaps like you (not sure), I personally believe that the will precedes the intellect.3017amen

    It sounds like you understand "will" to mean something different than I do, so I don't think I would agree with those words as stated. But the gist of what I was saying before I think goes along with what I think you mean by those words. I guess I might say "feeling sometimes precedes thought". I think there are both "cognitive and conative" (descriptive and prescriptive) feelings and thoughts each, and thoughts can influence feelings that come after them, but it's not so straightforward that everything we feel is because of something we think. (Nor is is straightforwardly the other way around). Sometimes (often) we just feel things for no good reason (which isn't to say for no cause, but causes aren't always reasons), and then retroactively think of reasons to justify that, without realizing we're doing so.

    I'm not sure I am following that illusionary description there.3017amen

    The idea is that we get this feeling of need first, and then ask what is the thing that we need. But the feeling is not caused by the genuine lack of something, so there is no real answer to that question, and in that way the question is illusory. It's not like we first realize that we are lacking "meaning", and then start feeling bad because we lack it; we first feel bad, irrationally, and then that feeling prompts questions about "what is the meaning of life" as though there is some answer we could be aware of that would resolve that feeling, the ignorance of which is the source of that feeling. But ignorance of "the meaning of life" isn't the source of the feeling; the feeling is the source of the question, and the question, being irrational nonsense, has no real answer. The closest thing to an answer is a method to make the bad feeling go away.

    Ontophobia's illusory demand for meaning is essentially a craving for validation, for a sense that one is important and matters in some way. I realize in retrospect that so much of what I thought were mere practical concerns in my life were probably actually manifestations of this ontophobic craving for validation. My youthful longing for romance was all about feeling worthy of a partner; stress about performance at my job was all about feeling worthy as an employee; longing for an appreciative audience for my various private creative works was all about feeling worthy as an author, artist, etc. It was only once those were mostly all satisfied that the bare emotional motive behind them all truly showed itself, the true existential dread being all about craving to feel like it matters whether or not I, or anyone or anything, even exist at all.

    [...]

    I find that, aside from simply allowing myself to ignore the meaningless craving for meaning that ontophobia brings on, the way to cultivate ontophilia is to practice the very same behaviors that it in turn inspires more of. Doing good things, either for others or just for oneself, and learning or teaching new truths, both seem to generate feelings of empowerment and enlightenment, respectively, and as those ramp up in a positive feedback loop, inspiring further such practices, an ontophilic state of mind can be cultivated. In this sense, it could be poetically said that the meaning of life is to love and be loved, to learn and to teach. Learning truths about the universe, and being the recipient of its goods, shows one how everything in the universe matters, how they fit together into the big picture; and doing goods for the rest of the universe, as well as being a font of truths, makes one matter to the rest of the universe. Learning many great truths and doing many great goods places one in a crucial position in the overall function of the universe, being influenced by as much of the universe as possible through one's experience, filtering true beliefs and good intentions out of it, and then influencing as much of the universe as possible through one's resultant behavior. Approaching such a position is also, on my account, approaching what it would mean to be a god — roughly all-knowing, all-good, and all-powerful — as will be outlined further below. (And that "all-good" aspect, being the only one that could in principle possibly be attained, can be decomposed into an external aspect, inerrancy, the inability to do wrong, and an internal aspect, emotional invulnerability, or the inability to be wronged, which are attained precisely by attaining wisdom and ontophilia, respectively: wisdom correctly guiding the flow of the universe's function through oneself, and ontophilia emotionally shielding oneself from any suffering one might experience in that process.)

    I also find that it helps to remain at peace and alleviate feelings of anxiety and unworthiness by not only doing all the positive things that I reasonable can do, as above, but also excusing or forgiving myself from blame for not doing things that I reasonably can't do. Meditative practices are essentially practice at allowing oneself to do nothing and simply be, to help cultivate this state of mind. A popular prayer (that I will revisit again later in these essays) also asks for precisely such serenity to accept things one cannot change and courage to change the things one can. And the modern cognitive-behavioral therapy technique called Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is also entirely about committing to doing the things that one can do and accepting the things that one cannot do anything about. It is of course very hard to do this sometimes, so it helps also to cultivate a social network of like-minded people who will gently encourage you to do the things you reasonably can, and remind you that it's okay to not do things that you reasonably can't, between the two of which you can hopefully find a restful peace of mind where you feel that you have done all that you can do and nothing more is required of you, allowing you to enjoy simply being.

    Simply connecting with other people in itself helps to cultivate feelings of meaningfulness, as it is precisely that connectedness that constitutes meaning in any sense. The linguistic sense of meaning, too, hinges on the connection between signifier and signified, and between speaker and listener. In artistic works, the meaningfulness of creativity comes from illustrating the connections between what previously seemed like unrelated possibilities, as detailed at the end of my essay on the arts. Mathematics is all about exploring the relations, or connections, between things in that same abstract space of possibilities, as detailed in my essay on mathematics. Even the ontology I have put forward earlier posits that the world itself is constituted by a network of interactions, those connections between things forming the very fabric of reality; the teleology I have put forward taking a prescriptive view of that same network of interactions to form the fabric of morality; mind and will being in one sense of each just a different perspective on that same network; knowledge and justice being about connecting to things as described above; and my philosophies of academics and politics hinging entirely on connected networks of people to constitute those respective social institutes. Even the connectedness of philosophy itself, to every other endeavor, is why I find it to be the most meaningful area of study.
    The Codex Quaerentis: On Practical Action and the Meaning of Life

    I was suicidal at the time. I attempted suicide out in a remote part of the mountains of Colorado.3017amen

    I'm really sorry to hear that. I hope you are doing better these days.

    The heroin example is interesting. What kind of need causes a person to get addicted to drugs I wonder, any clue?3017amen

    I think it's that the drug promises that kind of overflowing high that is the opposite of what the need for the drug causes, but after the high goes away the mind doesn't just go back to the flat normal state it was before, it falls into a pit that then needs to be filled... by more drugs, only exacerbating the problem.

    I've heard that some drugs, like LSD, literally just straight up give you that feeling of meaningfulness, a "mystical experience", and when I've recounted my naturally-occurring experiences to people who've done such drugs, they tell me it sounds like the same thing.

    Does any of that (or the foregoing) separate us from the Darwinian thought process?3017amen

    I'm not sure what this question means.

    Also, I'm still not clear what any of this has to do with God, unless you just mean the noncognitivist sense of "God", which I've already said in the OP that I think exists (it's just this feeling of ontophilia), but I don't think deserves to be called "God", which would make any disagreement between us purely verbal.
  • 3 orbiting black holes can break temporal symmetry
    I wasn't worried about energy conservation due to Heisenberg uncertainty.
  • Mathematicist Genesis
    Interesting, I feel like we're about to get to something I might not already be familiar with.

    Also of interest, the next essay in my Codex Quarentis series of threads will be closely related to this thread, since the writing of it was the inspiration for creating this thread. I'd love your input on it when I post it early next week.
  • 3 orbiting black holes can break temporal symmetry
    Yeah I'm familiar with that (I think it's actually easier to understand in terms of the underlying wave mathematics than position-momentum uncertainty is, honestly). I'm not sure what that has to do with this though?
  • is the we only use 10% of our brain true and if it is how do we obtain higher
    Only a small fraction of our brain (not always exactly 10%) is ever active at once, but it's not like there's just one small part of the brain that's active and the rest is always dormant: all of it gets activated sometimes, just never all at once. And that's a good thing, because when the entire brain activates all at once, that's what we call a seizure. Normal brain function lies in the pattern of activation and deactivation of different parts of the brain. The idea that there's some 90% of the brain sitting unused awaiting to be activated to unlock our superpowers is a common misunderstanding.
  • First and Second Order Reactions
    The central thesis is a dichotomy between two modes of thought: "System 1" is fast, instinctive and emotional; "System 2" is slower, more deliberative, and more logical.Wikipedia on 'Thinking, Fast and Slow'
  • News about God must be atheist -- his partner reporting here
    Best wishes from me as well, and if it's coronavirus or something else contagious, hope you (Eva) are safe while you care for him.
  • What are the First Principles of Philosophy?
    I reckon these to be the derivatives of the first principle, which in turn presupposes a third derivative: the goal. The goal in itself might be and optimally is a first principle to any branch of philosophy.Eleonora

    The rest of your post makes me think that you maybe don't mean what this first part sounds like to me, but this first part sounds like something I would agree with. Those two "first principles" I gave derive immediately from the goal of philosophy:

    The characteristic activity of philosophy is the pursuit of wisdom, not the possession or exercise thereof. Wisdom, in turn, is not merely some set of correct opinions, but rather the ability to discern the true from the false, the good from the bad; or at least the more true from the less true, the better from the worse; the ability, in short, to discern superior answers from inferior answers to any given question.The Codex Quaerentis: The Metaphilosophy of Analytic Pragmatism

    My general philosophy could be most succinctly summed up as the rejection of both unquestionable answers, and unanswerable questions. By this I mean the commitment to questioning everything, and rejecting anything that's beyond questioning, but also to trusting that there are answers to be had, and entertaining the possibility of anything that might be an answer:

    I say to hold that there is some opinion or another that is actually correct in a sense beyond merely someone subjectively agreeing with it, a position that I call "objectivism"; in contrast to its negation that I call "nihilism", by which I mean the view that holds there are no genuinely correct answers.

    I say also to hold every opinion open to questioning, a position that I call "criticism"; in contrast to its negation that I call "fideism", by which I mean the view that holds there are some things that are beyond question.

    I say to freely hold some tentatively opinion or another on what the answer might be even if you don't have conclusive justification to say that it definitely is that, a position that I call "liberalism"; in contrast to its negation that I call "cynicism", by which I mean the view that holds that no opinion should be held until it can be conclusively justified from the ground up.

    And I say to reject any opinion that is not amenable to questioning because it is beyond any possible experience that could test it one way or another, a position that I call "phenomenalism"; in contrast to its negation that I call "transcendentalism", by which I mean the view that holds that there are some things that are utterly beyond the ability to discern from our experiences.

    [...]

    The underlying reason I hold this general philosophical view, or rather my reason for rejecting the views opposite of it, is my metaphilosophy of analytic pragmatism, taking a practical approach to philosophy and how best to accomplish the task it is aiming to do. As explained above: this view, commensurablism, is just the conjunction of criticism and objectivism, which are in turn just the negations of fideism and nihilism, respectively. If you accept fideism rather than criticism, then if your opinions should happen to be the wrong ones, you will never find out, and you will remain wrong forever; and if you accept nihilism rather than objectivism, then if there is such a thing as the right opinion after all, you will never find it, and you will remain wrong forever. There might not be such a thing as a correct opinion, and if there is, we might not be able to find it. But if we're starting from such a place of complete ignorance that we're not even sure about that — where we don't know what there is to know, or how to know it, or if we can know it at all, or if there is even anything at all to be known — and we want to figure out what the correct opinions are in case such a thing should turn out to be possible, then the safest bet, pragmatically speaking, is to proceed under the assumption that there are such things, and that we can find them, and then try. Maybe ultimately in vain, but that's better than failing just because we never tried in the first place.

    [...]

    As Henri Poincaré rightly said, "To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection." (La Science et l'Hypothèse, 1901). Or as Alfred Korzybski similarly said, "There are two ways to slide easily through life: to believe everything or to doubt everything; both ways save us from thinking." I would argue that to do otherwise than to try (even if ultimately in vain) to find answers to our questions, to fall prey to either nihilism or fideism, to deny that there are such things as right or wrong opinions about either reality or morality, or to deny that we are able to figure out which is which, is actually not even philosophy at all. The Greek root of the word "philosophy" means "the love of wisdom", but I would argue that any approach substantially different from what I have laid out here as commensurablism would be better called "phobosophy", meaning "the fear of wisdom", for rather than seeking after wisdom, seeking after the ability to discern true from false or good from bad, it avoids it, by saying either that it is unobtainable, as the nihilist does, or that it is unneeded, as the fideist does. Commensurablism could thus be said to be necessitated merely by being practical about the very task that defines philosophy itself. If you're trying to do philosophy at all, to pursue wisdom, the ability to sort out the true from the false and the good from the bad, you end up having to adopt commensurablism, or else just give up on the attempt completely.
    The Codex Quaerentis: The Philosophy of Commensurablism
  • On the existence of God (by request)
    Can you elaborate a bit more on these intrinsic fears? In other words, how does fear impact our way of Being, as you suggested... .3017amen

    From my experience last year, and my hypothetical projection of that experience onto the experience of other people writing about the Absurd, there can be first a feeling, a wholly non-rational feeling, just a kind of mental illness, whereby someone first feels the symptoms of fear, anxiety, dread, horror, and then finds things to pin that fear on.

    This builds off of already well-established psychological functions of narrative following action: we tend to do things, and then subconsciously look back and construct excuses for why we did them, the way that we would infer in the third-person the motivation of someone else that we just saw do something.

    (You can especially see this in split-brain cases: there are people who've had the corpus callosum that connects the left and right hemispheres of the brain severed, and researchers can communicate with those hemispheres separately because each is connected only to the opposite ear, eye, hand, etc. So they can ask the right brain, through an earpiece in the left ear, to do something with their left hand; and then ask the left brain, through an earpiece in the right ear, why it did that with its left hand, and even though the left brain had no control over the left hand and no connection to the right brain, the left brain will still just invent a reason for doing that, and swear up and down that that reason is why they did it, even though the researchers (and the right brain of the subject) clearly know otherwise.)

    Anyway, I think that this mental illness is the root of concern about "meaning" in life, the "innate spiritual need". And that's not to insult people suffering from it, because I've only just recently gotten over suffering from it myself. But having been both mentally well and suffering from that feeling, in my well state like right now it seems clearly just an illness, and the question of what life means, or the need for meaning, are both illusory.

    It's quite like an addiction: someone suffering from withdrawal from heroin feels a need that an ordinary person doesn't, but it's not because the ordinary person has an adequate supply of heroin, it's because the ordinary person is healthy and not addicted to it, they don't feel a hole in themselves that heroin is needed to fill. I really wouldn't be surprised if it weren't the exact same neurological mechanism involved in both, seeing as how severe anxiety is a common symptom of withdrawal.

    I'm still worried that this will sound insulting, and I really don't mean it to. I'm just reporting on my own personal experience with these feelings. For most of my life I wondered "what exactly is it that you need?" when people expressed that kind of existential dread, and at other times I had this bountiful overflowing of love and awe etc that other people identified as a "mystical experience", and it wasn't until last year that I experienced the opposite of that and realized that that is what people having existential crises are on about. But I see those three states, the bottomless pit of despair that begs to be filled, the normal flat surface that doesn't need anything, and the overflowing bounty of joy and such, as just states of me, and not indicative of anything outside of me, like God.
  • What Exactly do you Make of this Version of Social Justice?
    Hierarchy is bad. Inverted hierarchy is still hierarchy.
  • No Self makes No Sense
    I don't see why that reply was addressed to me. I don't really disagree with any of that.
  • On the existence of God (by request)
    Yeah, I don't have any qualms with any of your examples you gave before. That all sounded pretty fine to me. I just don't see how those topics relate to God.

    As for "do humans have some sort of intrinsic or innate spiritual need", I think there is a state of mind that feels like some gaping un-fill-able hole, some kind of problem to which nothing could possibly be a solution. I call that feeling "ontophobia", but it's basically existential dread:

    It wasn't until decades into my adult life that I first experienced clearly identifiable existential angst like had prompted the many writers on the Absurd for so long. I had long suffered with depression and anxiety, but always fixated on mundane problems in my life (though in retrospect I wonder if it wasn't those problems prompting the feelings but rather the feelings finding those problems to dwell on), and I had already philosophized a way to tackle such mundane problems despite that emotional overwhelm, which will be detailed by the end of this essay. But after many years of working extremely hard to get my life to a point where such practical problems weren't constantly besieging me, I found myself suddenly beset with what at first I thought was a physical illness, noticing first problems with my digestion, side-effects from that on my sinuses, then numbness in my face and limbs, lightheadedness, cold sweats, rapid heartbeat and breathing, and eventually total sleeplessness. Thinking I was dying of something, I saw a doctor, who told me that those are all symptoms of anxiety, nothing more. But it was an anxiety unlike any I had ever suffered before, and I had nothing going on in my life to feel anxious about at that point. Because of that, at first I dismissed the anxiety diagnosis and tried to physically alleviate my symptoms various ways, but as it wore on for many months, I found things to feel anxious about, facts about the universe I had already known for decades (many of which I detail later in this essay) but never emotionally worried about, which I found suddenly filling me with an existential horror or dread, a sense that any sentient being ever existing at all was like condemning it to being born already in freefall into a great cosmic meat grinder, and that reality could not possibly have been any different. Mortified, I searched in desperation for some kind of philosophical solution to that problem, something to think about that would make me stop feeling that, even trying unsuccessfully to abandon my philosophical principles and turn to religion just for the emotional relief, growing much more sympathetic to the many people who turn to religions for such relief, even as I continued to see the claims thereof as false and many of their practices as bad.

    As a year of that wore on, brief moments of respite from that existential angst, dread, or horror grew mercifully longer and more frequent, often being prompted by a smaller more practical problem in my life springing up and then being resolved, distracting me from these intractable cosmic problems, at least for a time. In those moments of respite, I would often feel like I had figured out a philosophical solution to the problem: I saw my patterns of thinking while experiencing that dread as having been flawed, and the patterns of thinking I now had in this clearer state of mind as more correct. But when the dread returned, I felt like I could not remember what it was that I had thought of to solve the problem, and any attempt to get out of that state of mind, simply to not feel like that any more, felt like hiding from an important problem that I ought to keep dwelling on until I figured out a solution to it, even though it seemed equally clear that no solution to it was even theoretically possible. It wasn't until nearly a year of this vacillating between normalcy and existential dread had passed that the insight finally stuck me: the existential dread was just the opposite of the kind of "mysterical experiences" I had occasionally had and attached no rational significance too for my entire life. Just as, during those experiences, some things sometimes seemed non-rationally meaningful, just an ordinary experience of some scene of ordinary life with a profound feeling of "this is meaningful" attached to it, so too this feeling of existential dread was just my experience of ordinary life with a non-rational feeling of profound meaninglessness attached to it. The problem that I found myself futilely struggling to solve, I realized, was entirely illusory, and it was not irrational cowardice to hide from the "problem", but rather entirely the rational thing to do to ignore the illusory sense that there was a problem, and do whatever I could to pull my mind out of that crippling state of dread, wherein I had painfully little clarity of thought or motivational energy, and get myself back into a clearer, more productive state of mind.

    I have since dubbed that feeling of existential angst, dread, or horror "ontophobia", Greek for the fear of being, where "being" here means both the existence of the whole world generally, and one's own personal existence...
    The Codex Quaerentis: On Practical Action and the Meaning of Life

    ...and I already addressed the opposite feeling, ontophilia, in the OP, and agreed that that is the object of the noncognitivist sense of "God", and that...

    ...it is the greatest and most important thing in life, and doing the things that bring about that feeling is kinda like to "become [one with] God", but the occurrence of that feeling really isn't good ground to say "God exists", and doing so just causes unnecessary confusion with people who don't already do that, even people who are intimately familiar with that feeling.Pfhorrest
  • 3 orbiting black holes can break temporal symmetry
    Yeah I gather that, but if the perturbations are in principle unobservable because they're below the Planck length, it still seems like you could end up with something that effectively violates conservation of energy.

    It's like if you're doing some accounting and you keep rounding off to the nearest cent at every step, you might end up with a net excess or deficit of money at the end. (Think Superman 3, or Office Space). The Planck limit is like rounding off of decimal representations of the otherwise continuous laws. If you can change the system by "zero" (less than half a penny / less than a Planck length) and then get a noticeable difference later, it seems like you got or lost something along the way.
  • No Self makes No Sense
    Attachment to self is much like awareness of self. It’s a thing oneself does, but not doing it doesn’t make oneself not exist, though one may if course in the process lose awareness of oneself’s existence.

    Losing self-attachment may well be the way to avoid suffering, but there is still oneself that is the thing no longer suffering.
  • On the existence of God (by request)
    Most of that seems to be about the difference between first- and third-person experience, and I don’t think I disagree with it much if at all (to the extent that I understand it), but I don’t really see an explanation of what you take God to be in there. Perhaps you are saying that only God can have an experience of himself? But that still doesn’t tell me what you take God to be. So far, I get a generally noncognitivist vibe, mostly from the “God is Life” bit, but I’m not sure about that.
  • Have scholars surrendered to nihilism?
    Well you said one thing is more meaningful than another which implies some way of gauging how meaningful the things are, which is all it means to measure something (gauge how much of it there is).

    In any case, it’s far from obvious to me that either of those activities is universally more meaningful than the other, and I don’t see a way of assessing meaningfulness other than how meaningful things seem to people, so if video games and shopping seem more meaningful to someone than hiking and reading, then they just are more meaningful, to them.
  • No Self makes No Sense
    It’s important to distinguish between the self as some separate ontological thing that endures despite changes, the self as a first-person perspective or general awareness, and the self as reflexive awareness (self-awareness). If you distinguish between these things all the problems go away.

    On my account there is no separate ontological thing that endures despite changes, there is just an ever-changing pattern of functionality that (like a everything) only has diachronic identity because of continuity of its function, including in the case of people general awareness, which does not necessarily always include reflexive awareness. So there “is no self”, there is just “the self” that may not always have a “sense of self”.
  • 3 orbiting black holes can break temporal symmetry
    I haven't read the article yet, but given that according to Noether's theorem time reversibility is equivalent to conservation of energy, does this result not imply a violation of conservation of energy? If it does, is energy being created, or destroyed? (NB that it is already known that conservation of energy does not hold universally; dark energy violates it already).
  • Have scholars surrendered to nihilism?
    We all know that it is more meaningful to spend time on things like reading or outdoor activities than on playing video games or choosing luxurious clothes.Rystiya

    Do we really know that? How exactly are you measuring meaningfulness?
  • Have scholars surrendered to nihilism?
    the entire so-called "red people" philosophy which is a minor internet sensationIvoryBlackBishop

    Having a morbid curiosity about dumb internet sensations, I just tried Googling for info about this, and couldn't find anything that looked relevant. Can you link or explain what this is about?
  • Coronavirus
    As disappointed as I am with the hundreds of billions being spent bailing out corporations, from what I've read of the hundreds of billions being spent on individuals that just got approved in the Senate tonight, I'm surprisingly pleased with the outcome.

    I had hoped at best for $1000/mo to everyone for the duration of the quarantines, but what we've got now is $600/week ≈ $2400/mo for the unemployed (which, if that follows state qualifications for unemployment, includes those with reduced hours like me, at least here in California), plus the $1200 one-time payments for everyone.

    Altogether that basically offsets my own losses from reduced hours for like four and a half months, and provides even greater benefits for all those making much less than me, who need it all the more. (I personally could coast for about three years at half-pay before I even needed to touch my IRA, so I was never the most hurt by this, but it's still really nice to not potentially erase years of hard-won progress toward eventual home-ownership).
  • On Rhetoric and the Arts
    I've found that I agree with you 75% of the time or so on the art stuffNoble Dust

    I just remembered this comment and thought I should ping you here.
  • Is singing really only a social thing?
    I love to sing, and I'm told that I'm quite good at it.

    I've almost always got music playing in my mind, and if I'm in a good mood and by myself and not doing anything else linguistic (which, these days, is a rare confluence of conditions, limited only to solitary hikes on particularly good days) I love to sing by myself.

    I used to sing on my own in the presence of other people when I was young and socially inept, but I received lots of negative feedback about that, so my social etiquette routines (that I purposefully trained into myself as a young adult trying to learn to navigate the social world better, but now have become subconscious habit) now have me usually quiet in the presence of other people; if I'm hiking alone and pass another person, I automatically shut up.

    I absolutely love social occasions to sing though, like a karaoke night. And even more when other people join in. One of the things I loves the most about my old RHPS cast was the tendency of the whole group to spontaneously burst into song. (On one occasion at a restaurant after a show, a waiter walked by humming "Lollipop", one cast member made the "POP" sound on the appropriate cue of the waiter's hum, and the entire cast started singing in unison, spontaneously. On another occasion, someone walked through the dressing room humming one line of "Summer Loving", prompting another to sing the next line, which then evolved into a full-on ensemble performance of the song there in the dressing room, again completely spontaneously).

    I think I had a point when I started writing this, but now I've forgotten it.
  • On Rhetoric and the Arts
    Just added a new paragraph to the end of the first section:

    For this reason, some philosophers such as Plato were vehemently opposed to rhetoric, seeing it as manipulative sophistry without regard for truth, in contrast with the logical, rational dialectic that he and his teacher Socrates advocated. His student Aristotle, on the other hand, had a less negative opinion of rhetoric, viewing it as neither inherently good nor bad but as useful toward either end, and holding that because many people sadly do not think in perfectly rational ways, rhetorical appeals to emotion and character and such are often necessary to get such people to accept truths that they might otherwise irrationally reject. I side much more with Aristotle's view on this matter, viewing logic and rhetoric are complimentary to each other, not in competition. I like to use an analogy of prescribing someone medicine: the actual medicinal content is most important of course, but you stand a much better chance of getting someone to actually swallow that content if it's packaged in a small, smooth, sweet-tasting pill than if it's packaged in a big, jagged, bitter pill. In this analogy, the medicinal content of the pill is the logical, rational content of a speech-act, while the size, texture, and flavor of the pill is the rhetorical packaging and delivery of the speech-act. It is of course important that the "medicine" (logic) be right, but it's just as important that the "pill" (rhetoric) be such that people will actually swallow it.The Codex Quaerentis: On Rhetoric and the Arts

    Thanks for the great feedback!
  • On Rhetoric and the Arts
    I think that's accurate, yeah. I used to side with Plato on that in my youth, but now definitely side with Aristotle. I should probably add something to the essay about that facet, on how logic and rhetoric are complimentary to each other, not in competition. I like to use an analogy of prescribing someone medicine: the actual medicinal content is most important of course, but you stand a much better chance of getting someone to actually swallow that content if it's packaged in a small, smooth, sweet-tasting pill than if it's packaged in a big, jagged, bitter pill.

    I think I might just use this post as the basis for that new paragraph.
  • Metaphilosophy: What makes a good philosophy?
    the ability to accomplish greater feats than without it'.A Seagull

    That is the relevant part. "Philosophy is a force multiplier to thought" means that thought is able to accomplish greater feats with philosophy than without it.
  • The Codex Quaerentis
    Thanks for the idea, but that doesn't really seem the right fit. Analytic philosophy is juxtaposed to speculative philosophy, for instance, and the meaning I'm looking for it more like "analytic", though of course I'm trying to replace that word in this instance.

    I don't mean I juxtapose theoretic and strategic as opposite approaches to the same thing, but rather as parallels in different things. Theory is about explaining how things happen, strategy is about planning how to make them happen; one is about beliefs, the other is about intentions. They're both equally well thought-out, but in different domains, and in that way both of them are equally pragmatic, but also similarly... abstract? Analytic? Whatever the word I'm looking for here is.
  • The Codex Quaerentis
    Tonight I made a pretty major reorganization of the start of this whole project. I moved the Metaphilosophy essay to be first, and then the essay on my general philosophy of Commensurablism to come after that, before the four Against essays. I cleaned everything up to make sense of the new order, and also expanded significantly on the Definition section of Metaphilosophy, adding a section about philosophy's relation to sophistry as a counterpart to its relation to religion (roughly correlating with my stances against nihilism and fideism).

    I also realized that at some point in this version of the project I had lost the use of the term "Analytic Pragmatism" for my metaphilosophy, which is why "A Pragmatic Analysis" is part of the title. I think perhaps part of that was because I was unhappy with the word "Analytic" in there, as I mean for it to be sort of the opposite of "Pragmatic", as in concerned with language and ideas in the abstract, rather than practical action. But I can't think of a better alternative, and I'd appreciate some help if anyone can lend it.

    The problem is that:

    Analytic is already the opposite of synthetic.

    Abstract is already the opposite of concrete.

    Idealistic is already the opposite of materialistic.

    ________ is the opposite of pragmatic, but not in a pejorative way, just a way that means something like analytic/abstract/idealistic?

    ("Theoretic" occurs to me, but elsewhere I pair that with "Strategic", so I don't want to reuse that here too).
  • Question about separation of church and state.
    A right to eat meat and a right to kill animals aren’t the same thing. If you can’t do the former without doing the latter, tough.

    Likewise practicing your own religion personally and imposing you religion on others through the state. If you religion were to say it is a sin to not have a theocracy... then too bad for (that part of) your religion.
  • Question about separation of church and state.
    It's like imposing a ban on the meat industry but still allowing people to consume meat.TheMadFool

    That would make perfect sense to me. There’s nothing wrong with eating an animal that’s already dead. There’s only anything wrong with killing living animals. So if something were to be done about carnivory, it would make more sense to ban the killing than the eating. If as a consequence nobody’s able to eat meat anymore, so be it, but stopping meat-eating was never the point.
  • Metaphilosophy: What makes a good philosophy?
    And a 'force multiplier to thought' is meaningful???A Seagull

    Do you know the term “force multiplier” in general?
  • Question about separation of church and state.
    Oh, I didn’t think you were. I expected you would be on the opposite side of that if someone did make a stink of it.
  • Question about separation of church and state.
    It sure seems like a borderline case to me, for its endorsement of theism at least (in exclusion of atheism), but since it is voluntary and non-exclusive within religion at least, it seems pretty harmless to me and as an atheist myself I would look down on anyone making a stink about it just on principle.
  • Have scholars surrendered to nihilism?
    The false dichotomy of fideism and nihilism, coupled with the exposed weakness of fideistic (e.g. authoritarian) worldviews, is what's lead to a rise in nihilism, if such a thing has actually occurred.

    This confusion of liberalism with fideism, or equivalently of criticism with cynicism, and likewise of phenomenalism with nihilism, or equivalently of objectivism with transcendentalism, leads many people, I suspect, to see the only available options as a transcendent fideistic view, or else a cynical nihilistic view. The differentiation of those superficial similarities and so the opening up of possibilities besides those two extremes is the key insight at the core of my entire general philosophy, embracing objectivism without transcendentalism, criticism without cynicism, liberalism without fideism, and phenomenalism without nihilism.The Codex Quaerentis: Commensurablism

    Objectivism without transcendentalism: There are genuine truths independent of anybody's opinions, but not independent of all experience

    Criticism without cynicism: Everything is open to question, but "prove it or shut up" isn't a question.

    Liberalism without fideism: Feel free to hold whatever opinions without absolute evidence to support them, but be prepared abandon them if there is evidence against them.

    Phenomenalism without nihilism: There is nothing more to reality or morality than the experience of things seeming true or good, but that doesn't mean that there is nothing to reality or morality at all; the seeming of it is enough.
  • On Language and the Meaning of Words
    No need to apologize. My shitty day was not because of you, it just left me without the mental capacity to respond to you appropriately.
  • Belief in nothing?
    that’s not a larger category its a smaller one and what words we use doesn’t make any difference to the underlying thing in question so i don’t care if you want to misuse the word “belief” it doesn’t matter go ahead
  • On Language and the Meaning of Words
    I'm having a ridiculously shitty day so I'm just gonna be curt here. I feel like there's something you're really missing somehow. If "wrong" was just a descriptive word, then questions to the effect of "why shouldn't I do things that are wrong?" would make sense. (That's different from "why is this wrong?" You might want an explanation of what is wrong about something, but once you've accepted that it is wrong, you've accepted that it's a thing to avoid). There might be some descriptive content associated by people with normative words like "wrong", examples of things they think are wrong, but the core take-away message of any equivalent of "that's wrong" is "don't do that". If you were translating a word from some alien language and the word seemed to indicate some descriptive properties of things, even things we would normally think of as wrong, but the word didn't carry that imperative, prescriptive, "don't do that" force, then "wrong" would be an inappropriate English translation of that word.
  • Belief in nothing?
    Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Pfhorrest

    No it isn't.
    Frank Apisa

    You evidently have no knowledge of philosophy whatsoever. "Justified true belief" has been the standard definition of "knowledge" (only recently challenged) for the past 2400 years or so.

    [Why do people] ...almost NEVER use "guess" rather than "believe/belief?"Frank Apisa

    Because we're not guessing. We're inferring. Maybe fallibly. We might be wrong. But we generally think we have reasons to believe the things we do.