This isn't the place for philosophy — Michael
don't, and the reason why is because I view morality as a way of people being able to flourish and how we can get along with one another to do so. — LD Saunders
Setting up a society along the lines of Nazism is objectively worse than establishing a society along the lines of the current US Constitution. The Nazi society will crumble and kill many millions in the process of doing so. — LD Saunders
Any problems? — Purple Pond
Both. They aren't mutually exclusive. — Posty McPostface
The reasons for this are quite simple --- everyone could be wrong, or one person could be wrong, and the others right, or more than one person could be objectively right. — LD Saunders
Objects are simple, they are the simplest constituent part of a fact that occupy space, but nowhere does Wittgenstein give an example of an object. They are simply requirements of his logical analysis. They are not things like, apples, trees, cars, mountains, numbers, properties, etc. — Sam26
Because people disagree over moral issues, then morality must be subjective. — LD Saunders
What does not kill me makes me stronger. — Michael
As Thomas Paine pointed out, a past generation has no right to rule over the present generation. Why would they? — LD Saunders
And in a world where knowledge increases from one generation to the next, — LD Saunders
simply means we should try to discern what the intent was among a handful of people in an earlier generation who knew far less than we do now. — LD Saunders
What I can say is that the process we have in the US appears terribly flawed, where the Court is placed in the center of the political process, supposedly representing a wisdom beyond the grasp of the democracy. — Hanover
I think you should consider greed to be the reason for this? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
And if thinking of hands is existentially dependent upon and external world? — creativesoul
Are you here to ask about Marxist theory you've read or be taught Marxism? The former is reasonable, the latter is not. — MindForged
I think it's pretty clear he wasn't talking about a society that had then-presently existed. It's part of his theory, that in a communist society scarcity is eliminated from the economic system. — MindForged
Private property has been eliminated at this point — MindForged
What he's saying is that under socialism there will be an abundance since the economy isn't operating under scarcity. There's more than enough for everyone, basically. — MindForged
hat we are getting at with mathematical physics at least is the objective point of view - the one from the perspective which would be the Cosmos contemplating its own rational structure. — apokrisis
What reason is there to believe that one can dream of hands prior to thinking about them? — creativesoul
So the statement is not self-contradictory because it requires additional axioms to reach a contradiction. — andrewk
This bachelor is married' would not be self-contradictory, even though the statement 'No bachelor is married' is used as a canonical example of an analytic truth. — andrewk
Such doubt is belief based. All belief consists of meaningful correlations drawn between different things. — creativesoul
Or I suffer an inner ear infection that makes balance impossible, and so cannot demonstrate my skill; do I still know how to ride? — Banno
I think that Moore is separating the fools of the audience. Who - in that situation - would deny that Moore's hand is external to them? — creativesoul
I think it would be better to think something like, that having a hand and believing one has a hand are much the same thing - "inseparable", as you say. After all, to believe on has a hand, one has to understand ownership in some way, and what hands are in some other. — Banno
Thoughts? — Purple Pond
There's nothing like what there would be if all the mathematical forms instantiated in the same way. — fdrake
If the platonic realists are right, the name of that junkyard is the Platonic realm of forms. — fdrake
th. The main thrust is simply that most mathematical objects aren't worthy of study, — fdrake
but the recognition that the world is a certain way for us to reason about — Pierre-Normand
If you think science exhausts the claim to explanation, then this strikes me as a reductive reading, unwarranted imposed from without, of what the sciences do. — StreetlightX
he smallest units of matter are, in fact, not physical objects in the ordinary sense of the word; they are forms, structures or—in Plato's sense—Ideas, which can be unambiguously spoken of only in the language of mathematics. — Werner Heisenberg
It is the phenomenal which is the real and if we desire to understand it we cannot subsume it under some abstract system. — StreetlightX
The question is about subsumption under abstraction. — StreetlightX
I think the existence of atoms is questionable, in the sense of them being anything like the fundamental constituents of things. And I'm in pretty good company: — Wayfarer
How do they? You made the claim. — StreetlightX