Don't you think that's going a bit too far?yeah I think it should have been done in increments of 5 years from 15-120 years old. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
An excellent point. Some of the gender gap may be explained by different career preferences between men and women.It's not whether they are proficient at it, its whether they are interested in it — Mr Phil O'Sophy
You're sure this is true? I can think of examples where you should do acts that aren't wrong if you don't. For example, you should brush your teeth twice a day, but there isn't anything wrong if you don't. Or, there's a really delicious donut at this bakery you should try it, but it's not because it's the right thing to do.I think asking why something is right or wrong can be essentially the same thing as asking why you should(n't) do this act. — darthbarracuda
For someone coming from an intuitionist angle, asking why we ought to be moral is an incoherent question. Morality is binding and universal; you ought to do what morality asks of you because that's what you ought to do. — darthbarracuda
Only if you conflate good and desirable with right and wrong, which I already gave reasons to doubt.Ultimately, "justifying" morality by appealing to its function in social stability only pushes the question back, since social stability must thus be seen as good, desirable, in a moral sense. — darthbarracuda
It's the only way we can survive and thrive in.What's the purpose of a healthy and functioning society? — Noble Dust
So you won't be held responsible when it collapses.What's the purpose of building a house the right way? — Noble Dust
So they can grow up to be educated people and hold decent jobs.What's the purpose of teaching math the right way to kids, and what's the purpose of wanting kids to learn? — Noble Dust
And you were right. So far, the past has definitely predicted the future. Whether or not the past will continue to predict the future, it remains to to be seen. Supposedly there is no way of knowing.I believe that the past definitely predicts the future. — Shane
You're not alone. The belief that the same regularities that happened to a great extant in the past don't imply that it would probably continue in the future is mind blowing. It means that preparing for the future is a totally irrational endeavor.But a few years ago, I came across the Wiki article on Hume's Problem of Induction, and it basically says Hume disbelieved in this probability idea. He believes that even if something happens literally over and over again, every day, it's not "more probable" that this thing will happen again tomorrow. My mind is absolutely and utterly blown. I can't comprehend it. It completely goes against everything I know and always took pride in. — Shane
Your absolutely right. Without the belief that the past will probably predict the future we'd be totally lost. Everything you learned about the past falls out the window, including science. They say those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it. Hume says that's rubbish.How would any of us live if we believed that the past doesn't predict the future? We'd commit the same mistakes over and over. How would you learn anything? How would science progress? — Shane
That's no proof. It's just a prejudice of yours. And it comes from your believe in the uniformity of nature. The other side of the question is equally valid: Why shouldn't something new happen?After all, the proof seems to be that if nothing has changed, why would something new happen? — Shane
I've been told that I haven't grasped the problem of induction many, so I'm the wrong person to ask.I just want someone to explain to me how I am wrong. Maybe I don't understand the problem or his stance well enough. — Shane
whether or not you saved three lives in the process — David Solman
But your still conscious of the answer when it pops into your head.Sometimes an answer to a question just pop into our conscious mind when you are thinking of something else — bahman
I'm not denying all the unconscious activity that goes on in order to produce a a thought. However, the result of all the unconscious activity is the conscious thought.Moreover, thought as I argued required the collective knowledge of all thing we gathered during our life. It is not possible to collectively be aware of everything. — bahman
There's no murder involved - it's simply minimizing the damage that will occur in the circumstances. It's kill three, or kill one. Not kill three, or murder one. — CasKev
That's a nice way to look at it but the punchline of the May be story is that it's impossible to know both the effects and their magnitude of our actions. Isn't this a fatal blow to consequentialist moral theory? — TheMadFool
We think in a language. When you are conscious of your thoughts you are aware of the voices inside your head. Let's forget about thinking since you believe it is an unconscious activity.. When we say we are are not doing things consciously what we really mean is that we aren't focused on what we do.I think that thinking is an unconscious activity. We just become aware of thoughts when they completely formed. — bahman
So you can vocalize and write precise the thoughts that you are focused on.I am not sure what is the use of consciousness when all the process for formation of a thought is done unconsciously. — bahman
I bet you can't do that in your sleep when you are not conscious.I can derive for miles thinking of other things. — bahman
People say they do things unconsciously when they really mean is they do it without thinking. Were always conscious of our surroundings though we might not be thinking about it.Let me ask you the question another way: Have you ever done anything unconsciously? Of course yes, deriving for example. We however sometimes do things consciously too. What is the difference between these two cases? — bahman
Then why do conservatives want tax breaks for the rich? We're always hearing how giving the rich more money to spend and invest will boost the economy. Here's a whole article arguing for just that. https://www.forbes.com/2010/10/27/taxes-wealthy-economy-opinions-contributors-alex-brill-chad-hill.html#45b823f862a0The 1% of wealth in this country does not move the economy when it's up OR down. The middle class does. — Austin Owens
Side note: some people begin life's journey as poor, and end up becoming some of the greatest success stories (Oprah Winfrey) — Austin Owens
Correct me if I'm wrong, but this assertion you make follows this line of logic; equality among society is good, therefore inequality among a society must be bad. I would COMPLETELY disagree with this. Everyone is different.. — Austin Owens
If Bill Gates earns more money today, how do I become poorer tomorrow? There is only less money in the world if I don't work hard, and choose not to take advantage of opportunities. There's no finite amount of dollar bills circulating around. I mean, it's not infinite, but it might as well be. — Austin Owens
We all have the same 24 hours in a day. Oprah, Bill gates and Tome Cruise are all successful (privileged) people. What got them their success? Is their time more magical than my own? Of course not. What separates these people is HOW they spend their time. — Austin Owens
Can you tell us why awareness is needed? — bahman