Yes - note the semi-colon. It’s (quote=Sourcename; url including https). That will put (sourcename) under your quote hyperlinked to the source. — Wayfarer
Took me years to work that out! Here’s a hint: select an instance and click QUOTE and you will see how it’s done. — Wayfarer
Well the theory that all our theories are wrong, must be wrong, because if it were right then not all our theories would be wrong. Therefore fairy dust necessarily exists. — unenlightened
It's a question about how fairy dust works.
So that's a 'no'. — unenlightened
I've recently experienced counter-productive dialogues with posters who seem to have an anti-metaphysics agenda. — Gnomon
How did he know to stretch out his hand just at that moment? — unenlightened
it is exactly what would happen. — EugeneW
Second law of TD in time-reversed universe:
All closed physical systems evolve towards lower entropy (with local patches evolving to higher entropy, but these don't constitute time reversion). — EugeneW
The jealous God dies hard. — Wayfarer
We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs — Richard Lewontin
its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life — Richard Lewontin
I think 180 Proof is referring to the ongoing Enlightenment project of human knowledge which has incrementally dismantled the notion of god/s and the usefulness of religious models as a foundation for all human thought - also the unravelling of Greek models of absolute reality such as Platonism. — Tom Storm
Yes yes and yes again. The state of gas corpuscules being together in one corner of a container can be realized in way much less ways than them being all over it. That's no issue. The issue is why all motions of particles have the direction they have (which turns out to be compatible with the chances). Why don't they have the opposite velocities, so they meat in a corner? — EugeneW
Emptiness is the only spiritual concept that I think, or feel, gives me clearer understanding of the universe. True that it’s a religious concept, even though I’m anti-religious. It makes rational sense while at the same time relieves existential anxiety. I can’t imagine it not being true and yet I don’t know if it is true. Perhaps somehow things can have an essential and independent existence. — praxis
Again, probability has nothing to do with it. It explains why time goes forward given initial conditions. If a flipped coin lands 10 000 000 times on the floor with heads up, and 2 times on tails, is the reason it lands on heads so often that it has a higher chance? No. The reason is the die itself. Likewise for time. The basic question is why the begin state of the universe is not situated at its end with all motion reversed. — EugeneW
Why don't gas molecules behave like steel balls, settle at the bottom of their containers? — Agent Smith
Try this experiment: put a bunch of steel ball bearings (representing particles) in a box, shake the box and record a video of the balls moving randomly in all directions. Now, call two friends to your house. Play the video you recorded normally (forwards) to one friend and play the video in reverse (backwards) to the other friend. Ask both of them this question: Was the video played forwards/backwards? They won't be able to answer this question. — Agent Smith
I believe that one of the key reasons why a man will hate women is because of the power they seem to hold over him as sexual objects of desire. A woman can make a man want (to possess) her and yet also deny him access to her, thereby frustrating his desire. Women are perceived to be intentionally taunting men with their bodies, like a carrot on a stick, and men resent this. Hence why men often see sex as a form of conquest, in which a woman is finally dominated and put in her place. Sex is a form of revenge for these men. However, this very thing that men hate women for doing to them (manipulating their sexual desires) is itself often a form of revenge on men by women, who resent men for objectifying them. — _db
Probabilities have nothing to do with this. — EugeneW
But you could just as well argue the other way round. If entropy only decreased, it would be very unlikely for time to go forwards. — EugeneW
I understand the arrow of time, but I don't understand why the arrow doesn't point from future to past. — EugeneW
But why doesn't it and all around it move backwards. Why isn't the law that entropy decreases? — EugeneW
So using the second law of thermodynamics to explain why this won't happen is of no use. — EugeneW
Fortunately, in fact, Western "culture and philosophy" has been predominantly anti-foundationalist since the late 1500s CE (re: nominalism Copernicus/Galilleo, secularism, empiricism, Wallace/Darwin, pragmatism ...) — 180 Proof
Read my last post, the post before you lost your mind. — Agent Smith
Oh! Sorry, my bad. You didn't read my post thoroughly. I explain why paradoxes are a big deal. — Agent Smith
It's not that complicated. — Agent Smith
Escher's paradoxical ever up or down going stairs is about the angle of vision (that resolved the seeming contradiction). The twin paradox is about everyday experience and gravity, resolved by general relativity. "Contra-diction" is not always about diction. — EugeneW
Perhaps my mixed metaphor confused you. Judaism and Greece are the foundations of the west not Christianity. Christianity is built on those foundations. — Fooloso4
I did not ask or address that question. What I said was, religious people often do not see eye to eye and so it cannot be said they understand the universe more clearly. How can they both understand the universe more clearly and yet understand it so differently? — Fooloso4
there is no basis for this claim. The roots on which Christianity is founded are in the Greeks and Judaism. Plato's influence on Augustine and Aristotle's influence on Aquinas is evident. — Fooloso4
What about the mild mannered atheism of those who simply do not believe in gods? — Fooloso4
First of all, one need not be a theist to be "spiritual". — Fooloso4
it cannot be said they understand the universe more clearly — Fooloso4
throughout history their disagreement has often been deadly. — Fooloso4
Why are paradoxes/contradictions (so) important?
Their significance to all (real) thinkers is that renders trivial the logical systems in which they arise. — Agent Smith
Not sure this is relevant but I generally accept that humans are clever animals who use language to help manage their environment. As a consequence, meanings and worldviews are riddled with inconstancies and subversions, some of them more striking than others. When I encounter a paradox it tends to remind me of the poetic, imprecise nature of language and the manufactured character of human understanding. — Tom Storm
My main concern is the existence/nonexistence of (true) paradoxes. If they exist then, classical logic is trivial unless it excludes some rule of natural deduction that prevents ex falso quodlibet. The rule that most logicians choose to exclude from natural deduction in order to prevent explosion is disjunction introduction/addition. Should we do that? It seems the right course of action assuming there are (true/real) paradoxes. — Agent Smith
I would suggest that a large part of it originated from Christian social philosophy and their doctrine of universal salvation, even acknowledging the undeniable horrors that the Church has sometimes visited on the world. — Wayfarer
I understand that a lot of people are atheist or anti-religious and I generally don't try and persuade them otherwise, but in my view, the religious or spiritual dimension of life is real, and its denial amounts to a lack. It also subtly conditions what are and are not considered viable philosophical ideas. — Wayfarer
Is it that the focus given to physicalism is due because it is truly central to philosophical discourse, or is it just an accident that occurred by coincidence due to the interests of the forum's userbase? — Kuro
Is it that the focus given to physicalism is due because it is truly central to philosophical discourse, or is it just an accident that occurred by coincidence due to the interests of the forum's userbase? — Kuro
Physicalism of various stripes is the default in modern secular culture. Its assumptions are widely embedded even in many people who don’t know what the word means. So it’s a natural subject of debate. — Wayfarer
'Who can blame people for angry atheism when the church has done so many evil abusive things and God seems completely absent from much church activity?' — Tom Storm
Eyewitness testimony is notoriously unreliable – uncorroborated it's only an opinion. Anyway, the context here is epistemological and neither forensic nor psychological, so try not to shift the goal posts again. — 180 Proof
A responsible atheist would not make an argument that there is no god - why would they need to? — Tom Storm
You don't discern, or accept, there is a significant difference between evidence (i.e. fact) and anecdote (i.e. opinion)? The latter is subjective and the former is, at minimum, intersubjective. In what way, TC, is your wife's or my mother's "experience God's presence" intersubjective (i.e. publicly accessible)? — 180 Proof
So do I, members of my family included; and yet ...
A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything.
— Freddy Zarathustra — 180 Proof
You claim "there is evidence of God" and then call my request for you to present it "anti-religious bigotry". Typical apologetics. Evidence-free claims = woo-of-the-gaps = Humpty Dumpty's "it is what I say it is" blah blah blah. Sophistry (bs) replies with word salad when confronted with How do you know that? or Show me your evidence. That's pathetic gassing, not dialectic. — 180 Proof
I only "smash" dogmatic, irrational, fideistic apologists — 180 Proof
