There is biological and neurological evidence that human emotions exist along with an enormous amount of observational evidence. What more proof do you need? — universeness
I am most interested in information that has empirical support not the musings of entertaining authors of human fiction. I place fairy in a different category of information, don't you? — universeness
"All X is P" in standard logic is never understood as "All X is P and all P is X" as you seem to claim now (indeed "all humans are all animals" sounds pretty weird as a sentence). Formal logic is about propositional forms not about the semantics of the terms occurring insides propositions. — neomac
You obviously disapprove of the way I engage in discourse with others, I would call that distaste.
It's ok, you don't have to tenderfoot around me. I am very resilient. — universeness
How can an omnipotent system be entropic? Chaos-order-chaos, or singularity-expansion-singularity-expansion, with no ability to apply intent is not omnipotent. — universeness
By imposition of that which is existent, ME or YOU. What is the beginning or end of a circle? The same place on the circle, I can choose where it is, so can you. This allows me to separate real from imagined.
I think therefore I am, and solipsism is BS nonsense. — universeness
So do fairies and orcs and a race of omnipotent beings called the Q in Star Trek. But none of them have any existent either and to suggest they have is BS. — universeness
Supernatural has no existent. — universeness
So you agree with me then. If you insist that an omnipotent creature can exist, then you are in BS territory. yes? — universeness
The universe may be one of many so you have no compelling evidence that any singular universe can be perceived as omnipotent — universeness
The universe may also be cyclical, so again cannot be perceived as omni anything — universeness
You are not offering much reasoning for your distaste towards me and I don't really care — universeness
If you think there are no occasions where you would employ the term BS then that's up to you. — universeness
. And how many of those jobs are available to the 6.5B of today's world? I'm not sure how many of the factory workers in Bangladesh can relocate to the head office in New York and take over management of communications. — Vera Mont
Go ahead, explain! — universeness
don't give the same credence to posits about the supernatural than the credence I give to posits which are based on logic or reason or human ethical imperatives etc. I hope that clears up your confusion about what I am actually typing. — universeness
. I am sure you can do it to. — universeness
An omnipotent being can exist and yet not be responsible for evil or what humans label evil. — universeness
They are welcome to it but if you preach it to me as something supernatural and real then have the evidence to support it or expect me to treat it as nothing more than your own personal coping mechanism. I am interested in that which is evidence based — universeness
I am not pretending anything, I just don't assign the same credence to concepts like god, logic, reason, human ethics or human fundamental principle. But you can, if you want to. Good luck with that. — universeness
And those who have a good command of argument will likely convince others of the errors in their beliefs through reasoning." as I assume you are attempting to disguise a compliment to yourself. — universeness
Yes, I am completely open to the ideas of others but not when they type BS. — universeness
Any of these seems like BS to you Mr Benj? — universeness
We need to leave the god BS in the dirt, like any empty vessel no longer of any use to a progressive intelligent species. — universeness
Accepting contradiction as paradox changes how the mind thinks — Gregory
If Buddhism is metaphysical, maybe it can be classified as absurdism — Gregory
There's a lot of corruption. — frank
Hume once said that if it were up to reason as reason, reason would just as soon wipe out all humanity, for there is here nothing of value-meaning-content in reason. Reason is an empty vessel of logical structure, and possess none of this dimension of ethical shoulds and shouldn'ts and rights and wrongs. But value, now there is something palpable: the feels and feelings of the world! But they are unwieldy to agreement.
I do agree that there is in all of our affairs there someting as you say, science, spirituality, and all the rest of what we are, but the "behind" is a very mysterious idea. Keeping in mind that, as Wittgenstein understood, the logos cannot apprehend itself; it cannot say what the logos is, for the saying presupposes the logos. This "behind" is elusive; and yet: what is elusive really is possessed in[/, the existence we witness all the time. This is the key to penetrating into this mysterious "behind" of metaphysics. It is not to look behind or beyond and the like; rather, it is to realize that what is manifest IS the behind of things. — Constance
the logos cannot apprehend itself; it cannot say what the logos is, for the saying presupposes the logos — Constance
philosophical argument will replace religious dogma; and this is something of an inevitability ...in a few hundred years or so, if we're lucky) but a bringing people together will require either a very liberal attitude that accepts what is really not agreeable or appreciated in the comportment of others who are different; or an agreement in values, such that everybody lives comfortably with others because they are essentially the same. The former is a tall order. Really, nobody wants to live with others who are so morally and aesthetically remote. — Constance
But everybody can do something better than they have been.
Nothing is carved in stone. Supermarkets are not mandated in the Ten Commandments and all those half-empty shopping malls could easily convert to hydroponic gardens. There are quite a few urban community projects already underway. — Vera Mont
I don't know. I'm more interested in health than veganism, which doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the health of humans or of the world. — frank
Buddhist say they want to extinguish desire, but perhaps this is yet another paradox. Mustn't we desire to extinguish? — Gregory
You could go with theirs...National Center for Biotechnology Information
The use of indexing systems, estimating the overall diet quality based on different aspects of healthful dietary models (be it the US Dietary Guidelines for Americans or the compliance to the Mediterranean Diet) indicated consistently the vegan diet as the most healthy one. — Vera Mont
However, one of my complaints about the Gettier business is precisely that it pushes us to give a binary answer where it is not appropriate. — Ludwig V
Nothing like that can happen in the Republican-ridden US, where agri-business has serious political clout and zero scruples. — Vera Mont
They're not exactly that, but they are bred for specialty traits: lean ham, more milk, big brisket, tender white breast... They're commodities, not animals. They are commercial items, subject to product-design, product-modification, according to the demands of the market. — Vera Mont
. The reason we read about them is that we don't readt about the half-billion (or so) other Americas who don't do that. "Mr. John Tavernicky did not kill anyone today" would make a poor headline. — god must be atheist
The trend continues. We, today's people, can eat it, if we don't have to kill it first.
But once in a while a vegan rears its ugly head (figure of speech - they are not ugly) and instills in us a sense of guilt.
This is a strange and difficult world we live in. — god must be atheist
Yes, I'm aware of the problem. It's just hard to get enough digestible protein from plants. — frank
Here, again with some jargon, the moral precept is its own presupposition! Meaning, to witness the pain IS the precept! This, as you say, is the "Godly (I add the capital letter) approach to ethics." I think this right! But how is it Godly? — Constance
I think the main issue is protein. I get most of my protein from goat whey and peanut powder. I don't have any interest in the taste of meat. — frank
I do accept Gettier's definition because your strict definition would rule out many ordinary uses of "know" and transform "know" into a jargon concept useful only to philosophers — Ludwig V
Maybe. Or maybe their numbers will simply decline from the expendable billions to a cherished few. To a manageable population level, where they provide milk and eggs and wool for their caregivers and stem cells for the meat factories. On a family farm with one or two cows, they would be better treated and more valued than on a factory-sized dairy farm with 2000 cows, which are slaughtered for dogfood at age 5 or 6 when their milk production falls below the financially mandated quota. Beef cattle have a life expectancy of 1-3 years. I'm pretty sure you don't want to think about the 'life' of poultry. None of them have the freedom to mate according to their natural inclination; their genetic makeup is rigidly controlled for uniformity. — Vera Mont
There's no such thing as that, is there? — frank
I am not obliged to make that kind of sacrifice for a stranger. — Bartricks
Why is it hard for humans to reconcile ethics and eating meat? Because we have the capacity to know the ethics behind it. Our desire for taste of meat overwhelms our desire to recognize the life you snuff out of that living being — L'éléphant
The way to settle it is to farm people for food also. Then let's talk ethics. People complain about overpopulation, then why not gather a group of people and hunt them for sports? Yes, this sounds crazy -- but is it really? — L'éléphant
I don't understand this. If we stop breeding food animals, there won't be any more of them to need the grass and grain. We can eat the grain and leafy plants directly, saving a huge amount of energy on the intermediaries. — Vera Mont
You need to define evil first,
"Evil is lack of good"
If you agree with this definition, then evil isn't creatable — SpaceDweller
No there isn't, no way that isn't very costly anyway. They don't produce the majority of their energy with renewables, but the majority of their electricity, and that is typically only 20% of total energy consumption. First you need to electrify everything and then you need to up your electricity production without fossil fuels times 5 to get to the same levels of energy consumption.... never mind the pre-supposed continual growth (which implies even more energy) that is deemed necessarily to keep our economies running.
And no, Iceland (with warm water springing out of the ground), Denmark (surrounded by windy seas) and Costa Rica (no industry because their economy is tourism) are not representative at all for the rest of the world. — ChatteringMonkey
It just so happens that up till recent we were not that numerous and nature was resilient enough to carry those costs for the most part. — ChatteringMonkey
They should but they don't, never have in the geopolitical arena... stamping your feet about the immorality of it won't get us closer to solving the problem — ChatteringMonkey