What do We Mean By “The Meaning of Life”? — George Fisher
I do think that there are the old fashion conservatives, but they are simply muted out by the Trump crowd. — ssu
The demonizing of Republicans/Conservatives as ethical monsters in the last 20 years has much, much more to answer for imo. — AmadeusD
No, it's not about morality, it's about the facts of the matter. — schopenhauer1
. Sorry.a certain sense of angst, existential dread, isolation, loneliness, ennui, and meaninglessness. — schopenhauer1
Why are we even deliberating this kind of evaluation? — schopenhauer1
Rather, the "excess" of consciousness brings with it a set of issues that humans uniquely must face. — schopenhauer1
How much do you expect and or fear that a strong fascist moment could be organized within the next 5 years? — BC
No one is saying that the "universe needs to sanction our existence". Rather the point is that we are not like the rest of existence and this leads to a unique circumstance and shifts our mode of being- one of deliberative means, and self-reflection. — schopenhauer1
My opinion is that no words are inherently bad or harmful,only bad actors. — GTTRPNK
Everybody is enslaved to either the self or to the Truth itself. — Piers
There is no such thing as freedom because everybody is enslaved to either ego or conscience. — Piers
If you have time, could you tell us if a contract, marriage or mortgage ceases to exist if the documents on which it is written are destroyed?
Since in many cases a contract does not even need to be written down in order to be valid, it would be odd. Wills are an obvious exception.
Sorry to bother you with such trivialities. — Banno
Well, of-bloody-course!! Their gods are bullies who approve of subjugation and submission. That's what makes empires great. — Vera Mont
I know. Geez! — Vera Mont
es, indeed! And I endorse them wholeheartedly - except for that unfortunate bit about soldiery. — Vera Mont
Humans (predominantly, I think, human males) seem in every age preoccupied with their own significance and dashed when they are compelled to admit how very small it is in the scheme of things. — Vera Mont
What is life? Why is life? Where did it come from. Are we special?
Is there a God? What is God? Why is God? — George Fisher
Do you also want to make this hard and fast distinction between technological and scientific know-how? We build computers but we don’t build concepts like neuron and quark? Or do you want to argue that neuron and quark are constructions, but perceptual achievements like object permanence, depth perception and recognition of chords are not? Let me ask you, how is it that we are able to recognize any aspect of the visual environment as familiar when no aspect of the seen world duplicates its features from moment to moment? Is there not, as Piaget would say, an accommodation of our memory- driven expectation to the novel aspects of what we encounter? Do we not do in perceiving what we do in understanding language, adapt and adjust our rule -based criteria to accommodate the new context of interaction? — Joshs
We build the models, apparatus of measure and observation, and the world responds just so to how we prod and alter it. It only gives up its secrets in the language of the questions we ask of it, and for the purposes we use it for. — Joshs
It really is such a pointless, boring and interminable debate that lacks any significance for human life. — Janus
Actually, children do such things, according to Piaget's theory of cognitive development. :)
It covers also issues of perspective, object size, object permanence. — baker
Western philosophy has affectation built in as a feature, in the assumption that an argument can somehow "stand on its own", regardless of who is making it; "a fallacious ad hominem" is considered a pleonasm, as if every argument against the person is automatically fallacious. — baker
You're thinking like a lawyer, not a philosopher. Except that we're at a philosophy forum. — baker
But must these judgments amount to a certainty that justifies burning people at the stakes? — baker
People who are not lawyers and otherwise not in the business of professionally judging others, can get by just fine without pronouncing definitive judgments upon others, and can instead live with tentative. — baker
That was actually the prevailing belief back then: that children are just like adults, only smaller. The belief was that children were only quantitatively different from adults, but not qualitatively. — baker
The quotes are because the term ‘create’ has connotations beyond what is intended in this context. There is no simple way to convey the gist. The basic tenet I’m criticising is the instinctive notion of the mind independence of phenomenal objects. — Wayfarer
Minds 'create' the objects of perception, not in the sense that they're otherwise or previously non-existent, but insofar as they're object of cognition (and reason, for us.) — Wayfarer
A better answer is the obvious point that there are different ways of using an expression such as "I see the flower". — Banno
There is no flower with four petals , or any other visually identifiable object, until we first establish these relational interactions between ourselves and the world.
— Joshs
I don't agree. The flower has four petals regardless of what you suppose. That we see, feel, count or believe that it has four petals is incidental, post hoc. — Banno
A history of art book offers a chronology of changes of socially shaped ways of perceiving. In many respects, this has involved leaning to ‘unsee’ previous socially formed notions of how things present themselves to us. Greek sculptors unsaw the rigid, depersonalized statues of the Egyptians, Assyrians and Mesopotamians when they discovered the inner dynamism of human beings. Renaissance artists had to unsee the inherited idea of a perspective-free landscape, no unifying light source and children depicted as tiny adults. Impressionist painters learned to unsee objects reflecting only a narrow band of colors onto the eye in favor of trees, skies and seas composed of every color in the rainbow. Expressionists taught themselves to unsee scenes in which subjective mood played no part in how things appear., giving us Van Gogh’s Starry Night and Munch’s Scream. — Joshs
I have a phenomenological state that seems to me to be elicited by an external stimuli, but I know that it can be elicited without it because people dream and some people have hallucinations elicited by brain injury, direct brain stimulation, drug use, or perhaps some sort of mental illness. — Hanover
Legal professional full time; back in school (conjoint LLB (law) and BA in Philosophy undergrad). — AmadeusD