It sounds to me as if you agree with Schopenhauer over Hegel. Is the world pure will, irrational and free. Or is the world pure reason wherein new truths build on old one in a structure. In medieval times, they had this same debate between Thomists and Scotians and I'm assuming Buddhism tends more towards will — Gregory
Fuck em right? They mine as well be dead because they can’t contribute no? — schopenhauer1
We're largely creatures of habit, and what we interact with is in most cases familiar and it requires little or no thought on our part to interact with the familiar satisfactorily. Perhaps we may be said to "understand" the familiar and our response to it, in that sense.
We only think when we encounter problems (Dewey again). When we encounter problems we're dissatisfied, and seek to resolve that dissatisfaction. We try to resolve the problems in various ways until resolution takes place. Thus do we learn and acquire knowledge.
Maybe that's what you mean. I'm not certain. — Ciceronianus
But we disagree on whether we can know everything. — Ciceronianus
Ever the quote if managers giving more work to their subordinates. — schopenhauer1
But alas, the universe isn't beholden to us to us in any sense — Ciceronianus
Have you studied psychology/neuroscience at all? Or is this conjecture? — ToothyMaw
I would phrase it in terms of being given the opportunity of fulfilling one's capabilities more than just hope. — Banno
How is this alone not reason to not willingly produce more beings into that situation? The inevitability of X suffering, doesn't mean that one thus has to willingly allow to continue X suffering because X suffering already exists in some form or another. Lions kill, therefore humans can kill for example is a really simplistic form of this argument. It is the naturalistic fallacy of course. — schopenhauer1
No, it doesn't. You're being far too generous.
A parent ought want the best for their child. It follows that one ought improve the way things are. It does not follow that one ought not have kids. — Banno
Another example: Susan wants to invite James over for dinner. Susan also wants to cook a particular dish - an incredibly hot curry - that James dislikes.
Well, she should choose which of those desires to satisfy. If she invites James over, she should cook him something he'll like, not something he'll dislike.
Now imagine that you also want to invite James over for dinner, but the only ingredients you have in your cupboard are those that make an incredibly hot curry and nothing else. Well, you shouldn't invite him over then. — Bartricks
You're not really listening, are you? You're just saying stuff. It's a puzzle to me why you're saying what you're saying — Bartricks
Tony wants to create new life and put it into that sensible world. — Bartricks
I don't understand that question — Bartricks
I don't really see your point. There's an omnipotent, omniscient person. There's a sensible world. They - the omnipotent, omniscient person - like the world, They enjoy watching how things unfold in it. There's nothing wrong in that. — Bartricks
That is, if the omnipotent, omniscient person decides to indulge their desire to let the world run in its own way, then the omnipotent, omniscient person ought to frustrate their desire to procreate. We are unable to affect how the world runs. Therefore we ought to frustrate our desire to procreate. — Bartricks
Morally it would be fine for them to just leave the world to its own devices and frustrate their desire to introduce life into the world. Nothing wrong in doing that. — Bartricks
Your hypothetical may work if you reduce the knowledge and abilities of the entity in the OP as such a being having SOME form of limitations. — I like sushi
Morally what ought they to do? Should they frustrate their desire to introduce sentient life into the sensible world? Or should they frustrate their desire to leave the sensible world alone and instead alter it so that it does not pose the risks to the welfare of the innocent life they plan on introducing into it? Or should they satisfy both desires? — Bartricks
irrelevancies — Banno
You have not shown yourself capable of replying to the critic — Banno
there is a point in attempts to engage in rational conversation at which the only reasonable thing to do is to laugh and walk away. Here we are. — Banno
Seems you are beyond redemption. The only hope is that you don't infect others. Were I a mod I would ban you for the good of humanity. — Banno
Seems you are beyond redemption. The only hope is that you don't infect others. Were I a mod I would ban you for the good of humanity. — Banno
But doing philosophy, being rational, involves sorting out the consequences of the things we make up. — Banno
Not just anything will do. — Banno
Now the consequences of the two contentions I selected from your comments are that we know everything, that there are proposals that are neither true nor false, that we didn't know yesterday that the OP is in English... I could go on. — Banno
well, let's just say the results are not worthy of due consideration. — Banno
It can take tremendous therapy to make a person with schizophrenia understand they are schizophrenic and can only be done with meds usually. If you want people to not have to deal with taking antipsychotics for their whole life, you should be in favor of them taking them until they are stable enough not to ruin their life/hurt themselves/hurt others/break laws, etc., which goes beyond just taking them until one is not of immediate danger to themselves or others. — ToothyMaw
If I said that aliens are coming to earth to steal our gold reserves to create conductors for their spaceships as they go on an unstoppable galactic conquest to snatch all sentient species' cannabis, would you say: "I don't know if I can say that your reality is any less valid than mine?" — ToothyMaw
. I'm not completely certain what Dougals Adams thought about this, but psychiatry definitely does have an aura of evilness about it which is hard to define. — introbert
A universal is supposed to be a general property that is somehow instantiated/exemplified in particular objects (instances/examples) that have this property, which coincides with a particular resemblance relation among these particular objects. For example, redness as a universal is instantiated in particular red objects, which coincides with a particular resemblance relation among all red objects: they all resemble each other in the sense that they are all red. — litewave
t there are harsh criticisms that the book has inspired fascism, communism, and overall totalitarianism — Dermot Griffin
Do you mean it would be nice if it was, or that would be only fair? — Ciceronianus
Yes, this is true. Buddha had chosen compassion. Quite similar. But I prefer Buddha's approach. Very "human", simple, direct, practical, no gods or even deities, etc. Christ, and the whole New Testament are very mystical and allow for a lot of interpretations, let aside the self-contraditions and other illogical elements it contains. — Alkis Piskas
These looks like attributes of a revolutionary and politically-oriented person. I have read in the (very) past a few texts with these views in mind. Even that he belonged to Zealots, who I think were also amed! — Alkis Piskas
Isn't this what Chirst did? If so, it means that he saw that there injustice in the world, which means he believed that His Father (as Son of God) was responsible for that injustice, did he? Because who created everything, including Man with a potential not only to be injust but also to kill his congeners?
Carrying the sins of humanity on one's shoulders is carrying all the injustice and imperfections created by God. — Alkis Piskas
#:22 And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever:
A little boo-boo in editing. And later transcribers and translators didn't dare to fix it, any more than they dared to remove the alternate creation story from the first chapter - because by the time it was fixed as scripture, the text had become too holy to alter. — Vera Mont
I used Macbeth as an example of a thought (or rather a collection of related thoughts).
My question is really: does it make sense to regard thoughts a pre-existing? - just as we regard things in the landscape (rocks, trees, etc.) as pre-existing. — Art48
1) there is no self — Gregory
2) the world is illusion — Gregory
Question: can the play Macbeth be destroyed? Theoretically, we could destroy every copy of Macbeth, be it on paper, film, or stored on a computer. And theoretically, we could wait a few centuries until humanity had lost all memory of the play. But would that mean Macbeth was destroyed? Can a thought (or the sequence of thoughts and images which constitute the play Macbeth) ever be destroyed? — Art48
democracy can be tyrannical — Hanover
I don't know if it's a moral similarity because there certainly appears to be something more sinister in harming others than in harming yourself. Not all moral violations are of the same magnitude.
I do think it's worthwhile however to make the point that if we hold humanity in high esteem, we can't overlook the lack of self-respect we offer ourselves as morally irrelevant. — Hanover
He told his freshly minted humuns "Go, cavort in the garden and amuse me, but don't touch my special fruit... because, if you do, I'll kill you." No further reason or explanation given. Indeed, it would have a been wasted effort to talk to them about fairness, since they had no knowledge of good and evil. — Vera Mont
The face of truth! A magnificent title as far as I'm concerned. — Agent Smith