Jokes aside, I'd say we reexamine the evidence carefully, thoroughly, and then ... — Agent Smith
The persistence of gods even in the age of information (explosion) implies that we've good reasons to continue believing in gods. What are these reasons, pray tell. — Agent Smith
↪Benj96 Name (of the space god)? — Agent Smith
I don't understand how noting the limitations of our knowledge in the context of all that is true amounts to saying we could not learn anything that is true or what behavior is better from what is worse — Paine
What else could be "true"--that which everyone would think is the case after everyone knows everything? That's hardly a meaningful or useful thing to spend our time discussing — Ciceronianus
but I haven't heard of a god of space. Is there one? — Agent Smith
Yep. But see how Benj entirely misses the point?
Benj's approach is making stuff up instead of working stuff out. There's not much point in further comment. — Banno
We create a God ourselves, and then we realize that He is not just and then compalin about that. — Alkis Piskas
he explicitly cautions against thinking our knowledge as being able to approach all that is true: — Paine
Sorry, I was referring to philosophical idealism (all that exists is consciousness and materialism is just mind when viewed from a particular perspective) as per Schopenhauer, Berkeley, Hegel, Schelling, and these days Kastrup and Hoffman — Tom Storm
That is the sort of thing I don't know. — Paine
To say something is observable is to privilege empiricism and to make assumptions about the observer and what is being observed. How does one rule out idealism, for instance? — Tom Storm
↪Benj96 You completely missed my point then. A is B is an abstract, the mistake is you assuming this maps one-to-one onto reality when you apply Electricity and Energy … I even gave such an example to show the distinction between objects that exist and abstractions.
Bring me number one and show it to me and you can then convince me there is no difference. Better still paint me a picture of ‘AND,’ ‘OR’ or ‘IF’ that everyone will recognise as such without painting the words. — I like sushi
Truly wonderful the mind of a child is. — Master Yoda
Dear Australian brother, I have a feeling it's about Fitch's paradox of knowability (there was a thread on that about 6 moons ago).
The issue can be exemplified with the statement "aliens exist" (status: unknown) — Agent Smith
Isn't the now of a few hours ago the same now as the present time? Or do you have the capacity to divide time into a multitude of distinct, particular, and separate nows, such that a past now would be distinct from the present now — Metaphysician Undercover
But I knew it was true when I wrote that post a few hours ago, so it's not only now that I know it to be true.
And yes, if I don't remember that it was true, I wouldn't know it was true, but it would nevertheless remain true.
Being true and being known are two different things.
Something can be true, yet unknown, unbelieved, unevidenced... — Banno
But I knew it was true when I wrote that post a few hours ago, so it's not only now that I know it to be true. — Banno
But that's just not so. I went to a Harry Manx concert last night. Past truth. — Banno
If, If something is ‘true’ then you must know it, then anything that is true is known: there are no unknown trues; we know everything.
Basic logic. — Banno
But what is in principle unknowable? Maybe "Germany wins the World Cup in 2030." Right now, that is unknowable. We have no way to know that. So right now, does it have a truth value? — Hanover
If A is B then B is A — I like sushi
This confidence does not, however, support the idea that all of what is true can be known. — Paine
In our ignorance, we can seek the truth but cannot claim that we know enough about it to say what is possible in relation to it. If it were possible to do that, we would already be a lot less ignorant. — Paine
My thought was a response to the claim that truth is knowable. Taken as the unchanging that is assumed to be the condition for all that exists, how can we, as "systems that change/are under the influence of change", know that truth is knowable? — Paine
I was thinking of it more as ignorance wanting what it lacks. If what is knowable can be established outside of that desire, then it does not have a job or a place to stay. — Paine
our system of logic — Benj96
So if contradictory things can really happen, then there is reason to suspect the world painted by logic. — PhilosophyRunner
But our system of logic cannot cope with contradictions — PhilosophyRunner
A question I have would be, can anyone else in the position of the God-who-is-for-now-human, also go through the same learning process and gain the same powers? — PhilosophyRunner
It would just mean that our logic system is faulty. What we use as a logical system, is a flawed system. — PhilosophyRunner
But in this scenario, God is not really powerless, is he? For he has the power to take back his all encompassing powers, otherwise he will be stuck forevermore as a mere human. — PhilosophyRunner
everyone must just get what they deserve. — ToothyMaw
could even just be a human with no powers if he so desired, and could just make himself God again whenever. — ToothyMaw
But largely that is the God people actually argue for, not some deistic/agnostic formulation, and, thus, that is what I am addressing — ToothyMaw
I can imagine a scenario wherein my thoughts are not mine. I've certainly met many people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia who claim that the thoughts in their head belong to others. But I imagine we could go broader with mere skepticism. — Tom Storm
Having objective independent existence — T Clark
Thank you for the reply!
I am reaching my limit for being in optimal mental capacity for now but I'll be sure to return to this later.
Have a balanced day :) — Universal Student
My first thought is that the inquiry itself is a helpful place to begin exploring.
My second thought is to determine a basic foundation of what we are dealing with. What is consciousness? What is self-awareness?
Third; what are the barriers?
Fourth; the tools to break down those barriers?
Would love and greatly appreciate to hear your thoughts and will gladly share my own in exchange.
Warm regards — Universal Student
Most people would agree that there are objects with a location in space and time and exist independently of conscious beings. This position is commonly called “materialism”. But for some reason, some people commonly called “idealists”, believe that there are no such objects. Instead, they claim that conscious beings and their experiences are the basis on which existence itself lies. — Hello Human
All I've got is this old bit of scripture:
Ye shall know them by their fruits.
— Matthew 7:16 — 180 Proof