What right do we have to say that? — Mww
Can you prove that the laws of physics are the only way the world can be? — Wheatley
Those are the laws of physics, which do not necessarily mean laws of nature. — Wheatley
Patterns are why we can ask why, not the other way around. — fdrake
When I use the word "horse", I don't assume my audience has the same exact intuition about horse-ness that I do. Rather, I only hypothesize that my audience will use the word "horse" in similar sentences, or will utter sentences with "horse" in similar situations that I do. — Adam's Off Ox
But first, I wonder whether recognising the sense in the question entails making the assumption that it does make sense. — Welkin Rogue
. I can recognise that a creature is a horse without assuming that it is a horse, can't I? — Welkin Rogue
24. The idealist's question would be something like: "What right have I not to doubt the existence of my hands?" (And to that the answer can't be: I know that they exist.) But someone who asks such a question is overlooking the fact that a doubt about existence only works in a language-game. Hence, that we should first have to ask: what would such a doubt be like?, and don't understand this straight off.
What assumption am I making when I ask 'do trees exist?' — Welkin Rogue
Doubt can only take place against a background of certainty — Banno
If I decide that an invisible spirit exists and several other people agree with me, then we have all simply made the decision to believe it, even though this invisible spirit does not actually exist — BBQueue
That is not a reason why octoped descendants can't have freed-up arms. That's just saying that evolutionary pathway wasn't explored here on Earth. — Kenosha Kid
It could be argued that has dinosaurs not been made extinct they , in 65 million, years could have evolved well beyond our feeble minds — paganarcher
. But I don't see why the details (number of eyes, number of limbs) would be constrained. — Kenosha Kid
However a derivative of cockroaches will probably out live humans in my opinion — tilda-psychist
I do not think our physiology is the only one that could support mental ability — paganarcher
Evolution history is limited by what is possible, not vice versa. — Kenosha Kid
But I can't think of a reason why they must have evolved from quadrupeds and not, say, an octoped. — Kenosha Kid
What differentiating characteristics are you thinking of? — Kenosha Kid
I'm at home and my clock seems to me to run at a certain rate. My twin on the spaceship describes exactly the same phenomenon. But on his return I'm sixty years older, and he twenty. — tim wood
Imagine if you were a snail. At the speed of an elderly woman walking down Main Street with a cane, the same is true. In a way. Yes? — Outlander
Is there anything particular you have in mind that differentiates humans from other apes — Kenosha Kid
Because we get energy from two things: our mass and our momentum. Light is pure momentum: E=pc. A body at rest is pure mass: E=mc2E=mc2. This leads to the interpretation that any restful body is not actually at rest but is moving through time at the speed of light. So in that sense everything moves through spacetime at velocity c, but photons can only move through space, hence no time passes for a photon. — Kenosha Kid
There are myriad ways to order something. — Kenosha Kid
You already started a thread on this yesterday. Why did you abandon that discussion just to post another OP with the same ignorant tosh? — SophistiCat
Oh, go ahead. Science might be relevant to religion, but not vice versa. — Banno
Nor do I see religion as antithetical to science, so much as irrelevant. As it is to ethics. — Banno
the fact that we are much more likely to catch diseases from human and pig faeces than dog and cat faeces — Kenosha Kid
I think a "thought" should have to be propositional — GodlessGirl
So if the assumption that cause and effect holds universally is correct, we have the result that there must be a first cause and that the first cause itself must be uncaused — Devans99
The doctor should say: Congratulations, you are on the first rung of the ladder to sanity — A Seagull
Non sequitur — TheMadFool
The question then is this: [are there] some things that matter interacts with [but] are not matter? — TheMadFool
Are hermits insane? — TheMadFool
Yes, but the usual recommendation is to put facts before all else. — TheMadFool
Believe facts, avoid things that contradict facts. — TheMadFool
Being sane doesn't imply your beliefs have to be fixed. In fact sensible people always make it a point to update their beliefs in light of new evidence. — TheMadFool
.Yes, but the usual recommendation is to put facts before all else. — TheMadFool
You lost me there. I'm working with the standard definition of insanity which includes delusional thought and losing touch with reality. — TheMadFool
Well, if you think it's just an issue of "just in a dramatically different way" this question doesn't make sense does it? Why should functioning in society matter if insanity is just a "dramatically different way" of experiencing reality? — TheMadFool
amounts to losing touch with reality — TheMadFool
building a belief system around what we call facts (truths of our world) — TheMadFool
If it's being implied that a person claiming [his own] insanity is sane are we to infer that a person claiming [his own] sanity is actually insane? :chin: — TheMadFool
Energy,” based on E = mc2, is inconceivable without time; — aRealidealist
2. The magnitude of the effect is proportional to the magnitude of the cause.
This is also not true. The very notion of an explosion (an exothermic process) is a process which produces a net energy gain. The heat of a match is much less than the heat of the dynamite explosion it triggers. — Richard Bronson