So you believe in a “deity”? Do you believe in an “afterlife”? — I like sushi
you just haven’t found the need to propose such supernatural imaginings. — I like sushi
what makes you think those models have any purchase on what lies beyond language, such that you could say that if something is not proven to us as impossible it must be, not merely in our model, but in actuality, possible? — Janus
saying that such a thing cannot be known to be impossible, but it cannot be known to be possible either; it could only be known to be possible if it were known to be actual. — Janus
Rebirth, to use the example of this thread, might be impossible due to the nature of the Cosmos. — Janus
The definitions of unethical and immoral strongly overlap. But my understanding is that ethics is applied by an outside force, where as morals are internal to the individual? Hopefully I am close? — ZhouBoTong
There is a generally held belief (especially among atheists, antinatalists, nihilists, etc) that one essentially spontaneously came into existence at their birth. — Inyenzi
It rings true, but I'd be interested if you could dig up a reference for that. — Wayfarer
As for knowledge of your own mind - well, it's kind of contradictory to say that you know your mind - the mind is the subject of knowledge, "that which is knowing". But you can never really know it, in the same sense that the eye cannot see itself, and the hand can't grasp itself. But the mind is the unknown knower. — Wayfarer
Remind me again why we're discussing the correct terminology? And why does a lack of definition mean "totally arbitrary", is there nothing in between? — Isaac
Meat-sharing, for example, is strictly enforced in most hunter gatherer communities. It is not enforced by the 'chief', nor is the rule determined by him. The rule is both determined and enforced by the community as a whole. — Isaac
What kind of an answer is that? I presumed your evidence was somewhere in history, having ruled out the possibility of it being located in the future! I was hoping for something a bit more specific. — Isaac
I asked what evidence you were basing it on, — Isaac
'm curious, if something being immoral doesn't necessarily mean one should not do it (breaking a law for example), then what information does the term convey?
If I say to you X is immoral, what do you now know about X that you did not before? — Isaac
It is the specific claim that "it is always immoral to break the law" that we need to find. — ZhouBoTong
"According to DOD officials, advertising is one of several tools, which also includes recruiters, that the department uses to influence individuals to consider military service. DOD requested almost $575 million for fiscal year 2017 for its advertising programs." — Baden
Consider the postulate: The only tool we have available to provide support or not for the truth of anything is application of the scientific method. — Scribble
Notice how this post utterly ignores the impact that pregnancy has on the involved woman, treating her as a passive receptacle. — Banno
In short can we all agree, before we go any further that human life, all human life begins after the completion of conception. — Rank Amateur
The deeper roots of opposition to abortion are that the fetus belongs to either a god or the father. — Bitter Crank
well-off college will have more and better teachers, more teaching assistants, more and better facilities, including science labs. All this factors into the quality of education. — SophistiCat
The prevailing view is that there is something wrong with people who are depressed, and that they are mentally ill. — Tzeentch
So to break down the building blocks of harmful speech that should be restricted.
1. It's not about hurting one or more peoples feelings.
2. It's about creating a negative idea about a group of people.
3. It divides people into categories that through repetition may build hate/dislike between groups.
4. It is not based on factual sources that work as a foundation for reasonable criticism of a group. — Christoffer
No, it's not. You are taking one part of my text out of context and doesn't read into the nuances of the entirety of it. This is usually the way these discussions go; the nuances get thrown out the window to make a point instead of actually understanding the argument someone said before answering. — Christoffer
Just to point out, this is ending up discriminating against people for speaking at all about differences in ethnicity, gender, or culture. There is no clear line what constitutes criticism and what not. — ernestm
What do you think of philosophical novels and what do you think counts a philosophical novel? — Andrew4Handel
If anyone is unclear on what harmful speech is, it should be obvious that when anyone criticizes a group of people without any other reason than that they are different in ethnicity, gender or culture, it is hate speech. Any criticism against a group of people should be based on solid reasonable arguments that can't be disputed easily. — Christoffer
as it been possible to grasp the meaning of the present time? — Number2018
Does the spherical Earth cast doubt upon Popper’s claims about scientific theories never been confirmed? — Craig
as relative relativism is rather redundant and nonsensical — Carmaris19
CPR is a theory of knowledge, and as such, positing the existence of noumena is of course justified, because it conforms to the tenets of the theory. — Mww