This was supposed to be a political philosophy thread. — Noah Te Stroete
but it has nothing to do with the OP. It’s a distraction. — Noah Te Stroete
That’s exactly the reason for the Senate and the electoral college. — Noah Te Stroete
Weather or not the US is or is not a union of states says nothing to whether the current set-up of state representation is democratically representative. — StreetlightX
So it's sheer existence justifies itself? Are you even trying? — StreetlightX
That was the purported argument. The reality is that it protected slave plantation owners from the more populated cities of the North. — Noah Te Stroete
Saying that 'well it's representative because it represents the states' is just tautological bullshit that justifies nothing. — StreetlightX
I’m talking about the CURRENT Republican Party. They have benefited greatly from oppressive policies, whether current or from the history of right wing judges. — Noah Te Stroete
Lol, you think the job of a representative democracy is to represent governments. — StreetlightX
History of oppression is what favors the Republicans. — Noah Te Stroete
Are we playing the jack off to the founding fathers game? — Maw
e whole point is that the senate is unrepresentative, and fails even by those standards. — StreetlightX
n the US, each state gets two Senators no matter how many people reside in that state. California with tens of millions more people than Alaska gets two Senators and Alaska gets two Senators. How exactly is that democratic?! How is the Senate ever going to reflect the will of the people?! — Noah Te Stroete
The Senate is an extremely undemocratic system and we should get rid of it — Maw
If one is positing that one has a body and is perceiving things via one's senses, etc., then one is already assuming realism, by the way. — Terrapin Station
Isn't that more than sufficient for our needs? If not, what does it lack? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
What's to stop anyone from effectively arbitrarily saying that something is or isn't an explanation in that case? — Terrapin Station
"Perspective" as in from some reference point or other. I'm not alluding to perception in that. As I said, "Our perception is just another perspective." — Terrapin Station
There's an error of thinking that an object is some way from a "perspectiveless perspective." There is no such thing. — Terrapin Station
Then how did humans come to know chemical composition of an apple? — Harry Hindu
You are now talking about the light not the apple. I asked what we were missing about the appl — Harry Hindu
How do you know that's not how perception works, unless you had access to what perception really is? — Harry Hindu
You keep contradicting yourself in claiming that we can never experience things as they are, yet you make all these claims about things as they are. — Harry Hindu
"The Earth is flat" cannot be falsified. Just like "The Earth is round" cannot be falsified. If you think scientific theories can be falsified, check the thread "What is a scientific attitude?". Thinking that falsification is what defines science is again an ignorant view. — leo
So, are you saying that you have access to your mind, it's just that you don't have a good explanation of what your mind is for? — Harry Hindu
You would have to know that there are things about some object that we aren't getting at with our senses to say that our experience is "limited". What is it that we are missing of the apple as it is when we look at the apple? — Harry Hindu
What is the difference between getting at an object as it is and getting the perception of an object as it is? — Harry Hindu
How do you know that you are missing information, instead of you just misinterpreting the information? — Harry Hindu
And who says what the facts are? You? — leo
but that it isn't fine to coerce others to agree with us, — leo
nd I don't like to see people having their views dismissed or ridiculed simply because they don't agree with the consensus. — leo
So I don't see that view as inconsistent nor how living by that view makes life impossible, on the contrary. — leo
because you are right and they are wrong, right? — leo
You have noticed that not everyone agrees on some things. You can go a step further and notice that there is seemingly nothing everyone agrees on, including that statement. — leo
I think it would just be a discussion about different ways to use "belief." — frank
There are some people who agree with me. — leo
So your feeling of coldness or warmness isn't JUST about the outside temperature, or JUST your temperature. It is about the relationship between the two. — Harry Hindu
So we can only be skeptical if we actually had access to both how they appear and how they are? But you keep saying that we never have access to how they are - only how they appear - so then why are we skeptical? — Harry Hindu
have no idea what you mean here. Do you question the existence of your mind - or that something exists at all? — Harry Hindu
If we don't experience things directly or indirectly, then how do we experience things at all - even imperfectly? — Harry Hindu
Do you experience your mind directly? — Harry Hindu
What do you mean by "experience"? — Harry Hindu
Actually I would even doubt that. What if I'm blind — leo
or I can't understand how to read a thermometer? — leo
But then why can't I just say that if you don't feel cold when I feel cold it's because you're disabled or stupid? — leo
Why do we have to agree that feeling cold is relative and not that what the thermometer says to us is relative? — leo
I would argue that even what a thermometer says or what we call a horse is relative. And then we don't need to force a subjective-objective divide. — leo
It seems that difference and similarity are fundamental to human cognition and recognition, and are therefore not explicable in more basic terms. All explications rely on the cognition and recognition of difference and similarity, otherwise we could say nothing about anything, and then there would be no use or meaning. — Janus
What Kant was intent on showing is that we should abandon the naive realist view that empirical objects exist iindependently in just the same way, or the same form, so to speak, as they exist for us. — Janus
The whole solipsist dilemma is a strawman having sex with a red herring; it trades on the mere fact that we cannot prove deductively that the external world, other people or anything at all exists independently of our apprehensions (nor can we prove anything else that is not merely formally abstract, for that matter). — Janus
When will people let this, and other vapid vacuities like BIV, "evil demon", p-zombie and so on, go, as they should, into the dustbin of intellectual history. They've been on the slaughterbench for long enough now for us to be confident that they are in fact dead ideas with nothing whatsoever to offer. — Janus
However it seems on Kant's view that without the blind men (or anyone else), neither is there an elephant. — Andrew M
In one case we call those qualities which we use an instrument that reads the same for ourselves the object-dependent qualities, and in the other case we just state how we feel to designate the perceiver-dependent qualities. — Moliere
I'd just say that it's a way of talking with one another, rather than something which exists. — Moliere
Skepticism would still exist even if we experienced things as they are, for how would we know if we experience things as they are? What would it mean to experience you, or the apple, as you are? — Harry Hindu
Again, are you not experiencing your mind as it truly is? — Harry Hindu
f you can experience things as they are indirectly, — Harry Hindu
'm not sweet, the orange is. I don't feel sweet, I taste something sweet. I'm not red, the apple is. I don't feel red, I see something red. I guess I don't get the point you're trying to get across. — T Clark
s this really the source of any confusion? If I say "I'm cold." You generally know I mean "I feel cold." If I pick up a beer or if I'm outside and say "It's cold, I generally mean the temperature of the beer or the air is below about 40 degrees F. Just because there's a lot of play about whether to use 40 degrees F or 32 degrees F, doesn't mean there's really any confusion. — T Clark