Probably because, being alive, I have something dead people do not have: a responsibility and duty, which I can either fulfill or shirk. The dead can neither fulfill nor shirk their non-existent duty.and tell me yourself why it is invalid. — Alkis Piskas
That means that dead people indirectly support sides in a confrontation. At least if they would have chosen sides had they been alive.Not supporting directly one side in a confrontation, you are indiretly supporting the other. — Alkis Piskas
It's pseudo-democracy. Even North Korea is called The Democratic People's Republic of Korea. And it's citizen's are required to vote every four-to-five years for who will be elected as Supreme Leader.How can someone who is not against democracy honestly argue against participation in democracy? — praxis
Science is advancing. This is very obvious. But is philosophy? — Alkis Piskas
Isn't it impossible to prove a negative? Not only that, isn't it impossible to define a negative? (Other than to say what it is not?)Are there any strong arguments for free will? — TiredThinker
Lol you have misinterpreted my intentions again. I don't want to dismiss your thread. I like the topic.Ok, but no, I don't think that covers all my questions at all, but if you think what you have typed via Dan Dennet closes the thread for you then, fair enough. — universeness
Actually I doubt it's done on purpose, so I think that covers all your questions.Ok, but you use the words 'might be,' so you must have an opinion about their reasoning?
Are the individuals you are typing about just malcontents?
Do you think it's more sinister than that and they have their own personal agenda or a group agenda?
Do you think they deliberately quote words or concepts out of context as part of an overall plan?
Why would some individuals HERE on THIS FORUM want to 'generate pseudo-profound questions or answers?' Are some of them trying to recruit towards a cause? — universeness
No, I don't think it's anything to do with Deepak Chopra.
According to: https://www.edinburghskeptics.co.uk/skepdayJan/Deepity
The term was "First coined by Miriam Weizenbaum, the daughter of a friend of American philosopher Daniel Dennett." — universeness
I think it's a play on "Deepak" and "deep"I think Dennet was quoting a 'child,' when he used the term 'deepidy.' — universeness
I meant that a lot of what goes on in philosophy here might be using words or concepts out of context to generate pseudo-profound questions or answers. Which may be related to looking for "profundity". Maybe I'm making a strenuous connection.When I read/participate in a thread, the word 'profundity,' or its equivalent conceptualisations, seems to be the main/ultimate/perceived goal of the exchange. — universeness
I don't think so.is this helpful???? — Nickolasgaspar
I'm done unless you want to offer a deductive answer to my questionWhy does the evidence have to be accessible to everyone? And how could we possibly know if something is accessible to everyone? Who is everyone?
Before there were people, there were no objective truths?
— Yohan
-Because this is why we avoid to be scammed by con artists. This is why we don't answer back to emails from Nigerian Princes. This is why we hold receipts and reject claims that have economic implications for our well being. This is an essential quality of good evidence.! — Nickolasgaspar
Why does the evidence have to be accessible to everyone? And how could we possibly know if something is accessible to everyone? Who is everyone?Objectively true is a claim that is in agreement with evidence currently accessible to everyone. — Nickolasgaspar
Well, I suppose no claim can be absolutely true. Logically I have to believe there is something absolute though. Even If it can never be put as a claim.Absolute truth is a claim that is based on absolute facts meaning that no new facts exist that can change the value of truthiness of our claim. That of course is not possible. — Nickolasgaspar
By the criteria you've noted then, geocentrism used to be objectively true?i.e the available facts for centuries were supportive of the objective truthiness of the geocentric claim. — Nickolasgaspar
I think methodological naturalism helps us form reasonable positions about the "natural world". I don't see any reason to call these reasonable positions "objectively true"So objective truth doesn't mean absolute truth but its the only reasonable position to hold based on current available facts — Nickolasgaspar
What does objective truth mean? Is this a scientific term? What is the difference between objective and absolute? Can objective truth be wrong?Scientific evaluation can offer objective truth..not absolute truth. — Nickolasgaspar
You are shifting goal posts.-This is only because your expectations were not reasonable. Again the process is messy and slow but it is really successful in keeping nonsense away from science — Nickolasgaspar
I believe infinity leads to absurdityThat's what I've been saying, the conclusion is based in faulty mathematics which employs infinity as a number. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think there is a justified reason to think this.Give the monkey infinite time, and it is impossible that it will not complete the task — Metaphysician Undercover