If you see the world is generically grey, you can't coherently claim it to be black on the grounds it is not white. Just as the pollyannaish reverse is also an incoherent claim. — apokrisis
It is relevant that in one breath you tout the mood enhancing benefits of pot, the next you imagine it as the very worst advice I might give you and Schop (when it is as far away from sensible as any advice from positive psychology would get. — apokrisis
Thus the relevance is illustrating what awful arguments you make. — apokrisis
I defined it - going the furthest in reducing awareness of reality to a matter of signs - that is, the theory we create and then the numbers we read off our instruments. — apokrisis
The soccer goalie does just the same in the end. Success or failure is ultimately read off a score board ticking over - the measurement of the theory which is the rules of a game. — apokrisis
You are forgetting the role of measurement. Ideas must be cashed out in terms of impressions. — apokrisis
Science is the metaphysics that has proven itself to work. It is understanding boiled down to the pure language of maths. And so measurements become actually signs themselves, a number registering on an instrument. — apokrisis
Yeah it's just so obvious. Alcohol doesn't cause drunkeness, drunkeness causes alcohol. Lobotomies don't cause a destruction of integrative thought, a lack of integrative thought cause lobotomies. Etc, etc. — apokrisis
Smoked some weed for the first time last night at a concert. — darthbarracuda
and the superficiality of pot as a solution to life's problems — apokrisis
But why do you presume the job of the mind is to see reality "as it is"? That makes no evolutionary sense. — apokrisis
The goal is to reduce awareness of the surrounding to the least amount of detail necessary to make successful future predictions, and thus to be able to insert oneself into the world as its formal and final cause. We gain control in direct proportion to our demonstrable ability to ignore the material facts of existence. — apokrisis
This is why science is the highest form of consciousness. It reduces awareness of the world to theories and measurements. We have an idea that predicts. Then all we have to do is read a number off some dial. — apokrisis
You smoke your first joint yesterday and today you talk like a seasoned stoner. — apokrisis
And that existence is what you make it. — apokrisis
Of course Pollyannaism is as superficial as Pessimism. There are limits to what any individual can change. So Pragmatism accepts the necessity of working within limits. — apokrisis
Yet in accepting responsibility for playing a part in the making of a better world, at least we start acting like a grown-up. And that responsibility starts at home with ourselves - hence positive psychology. — apokrisis
Of course pessimism thrives on the claim that misery (for us, in this era of history, due to the way we live) is inescapable.
But that is what makes it superficial as philosophy. — apokrisis
So misery exists (in nature) as a signal to get changing. It says you are in the wrong place and need to head to a better place. — apokrisis
But where are they discovered from? Nature is no guide to moral behavior, plus the whole is-ought distinction. It's left to human culture, and human cultures vary quite a bit. Individuals and groups within a culture often disagree a lot on what's moral. — Marchesk
Okay, but I just want to understand your position. Is your position that it's not wrong to torture children, but that you pretend that it's wrong to torture them for convenience? — The Great Whatever
This is contradictory. What makes us moral if not that which grounds morality? — Thorongil
It's not incoherent, but it's also not binding. If you believe it's a fiction, then you're acting, it's easy enough just to turn around and say, OK I don't actually believe it. — Wayfarer
The only problem is why one ought to care at all in the first place, not whether moral statements can be justified or not. — Wosret
Is that the issue? I thought the issue was whether there are 'moral facts' or not? Nothing about the mind was mentioned.
Are mental states not 'real properties?' What relevance does any of this have? — The Great Whatever
But surely you think certain things are actually illegal? And that there are legal facts? — The Great Whatever
So, if there is no truth to moral claims, it must be that there's no truth to 'torturing children is wrong.' And so you must be committed to thinking it isn't true that torturing children is wrong. Or what am I missing? — The Great Whatever
Is torturing children wrong? By your own lights, it seems you can't ascertain the answer to this question until you have a philosophical theory of truth. But this would make you either an idiot or a psychopath. — The Great Whatever
What does it matter whether it's 'dependent on the mind' or not? — The Great Whatever
If you don't think torturing kids is wrong, but you pretend to think that so others don't suspect you of thinking torturing kids isn't wrong, aren't you a psychopath? — The Great Whatever
You mean, you think moral claims are true? — The Great Whatever
What makes anything true? Before asking that question, we need to agree on the simple fact that they are true. But a deflationary account seems promising. — The Great Whatever
So you don't think torturing children is wrong, but it's convenient to act like it's wrong? — The Great Whatever
But what can this mean other than to say that it's not actually or really wrong to torture children? — The Great Whatever
1) "It's wrong to torture children." This is a moral claim, and it's also true. So there are true moral claims. — The Great Whatever
It would be different if moral claims were in some obvious way different form non-moral ones, but they're not. — The Great Whatever
Your life has to be a vale of tears or else your personal philosophy would be contradicted. — apokrisis
You stop belly aching about the life that has mechanically been forced upon you and take charge of creating a life as you want it. — apokrisis
Of course then if you think you can have a life of untroubled bliss, you don't understand the point of life at all. So there is no point making romantic transcendence your goal. The nature of nature is pragmatic. Suck it up. It ain't so bad once you do achieve that kind of harmonious flow. — apokrisis
I am trying to interpret this correctly. Do you mean to say Nietzsche believed that life-denying beliefs affirm life, because you have to live to deny life, and this is indirectly affirming it? — schopenhauer1
It is forced not directly, but indirectly in that not participating in these institutions is a non-starter. — schopenhauer1
er, one can argue that institutions are actually self-perpetuating and may not have the individual in mind so much as perpetuating the social contract. — schopenhauer1
Just because it 'feels right' and it's not hurting anyone doesn't make the cut.
Someone could presume that it's sinful and that it 'feels wrong' and that it will hurt the person/society/God/children. — NukeyFox
Is there a way we can justify homosexuals? — NukeyFox
Perhaps the answer is more psychological than philosophical. — TheMadFool
Perhaps there's an absence of the implication of a personal defect in a general statement. — TheMadFool
Although this is a big blow to heart and mind it also opens up the possibility of finding a personal fulfilling, enjoyable subjective meaning to life. As an added bonus we also, despite the suffering that is real and unavoidable, find moments of happiness, no matter how fleeting how small, that make us feel our lives worth living. — TheMadFool
Given the hard facts above wouldn't it be utter hubris and foolish to boot to claim one can understand god's mind?
Does this argument refute the problem of evil?
God moves in mysterious ways...Cowper — TheMadFool
Per utilitarianism good is what makes us happy. Its apparent simplicity and appeal to our subconscious instincts (''happy'') makes the idea sound reasonable. However I think the issue is far more complex than that. If good is only about happiness then a serial murderer on a killing spree is good since he's doing what makes him happy. This clearly shows there's more to being good than just happiness. — TheMadFool
Another problem is the ''maximize'' and ''overall'' terms. It assumes we can quantify happiness in a meaningful practical way. I don't think that's possible. Also it commits the fallacy of appeal to majorit e.g. in ancient times the Carhthaginians performed child sacrifices and I'm willing to bet that the majority of Carthaginian folks thought the practice was at least acceptable. Yet child-sacrifice is unimaginable to modern sensibilities. — TheMadFool
After all a cursory glance at nature shows that it is ''amoral'' - unconcerned by human concerns such as morality. — TheMadFool
So evidence seems much stronger than argument. However, absence of evidence doesn't equate to absence. Something can be true but unobserved or unobservable. — Andrew4Handel
Reviewing the fact that utilitarianism seeks the ultimate option that maximizes the overall happiness in society, Is there any place for morality? — musimusis
A warning here - don't get all 'mystical' about it - stick with reality. You can imagine things, but know that it is most likely sheer make-believe. You can spend time, money, and energy testing them, if you think they are worth further investigation. but don't go playing the IS GAME - where you claim your speculations are correct without tests and verifications (unless your purpose is deception and fleecing people out of their money, like a celebrity guru). — Numi Who
METAPHYSICS AS PROVIDING EXCUSES — Numi Who
I call it the 'IS GAME' - when you claim that your speculations are correct, for whatever knavish reasons (and there are many). — Numi Who