• What time is not
    I answered those questions.

    A substance is a bearer of properties.

    And to be 'extended' is to occupy some space.

    'Time' is neither. It exists, but it is not a kind of stuff and nor is it extended.
    Bartricks

    But it is still playing with words. You define words in terms of other words, which no doubt, in turn, can be defined by other words.

    If you wish to say something interesting about Time, you will need to get below the level of words; like physicists do.
  • What time is not
    What's a "substance"? And what does "Extended" mean? And again what is "Stuff." I think defining these is just as hard as defining time, which is why I don't think this discussion ever goes anywhere.khaled

    Agreed. It is just another example of playing with words.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    I may venture to say that you just hain't got there yet, to that point with Bartricks. Have you experience with debating him?god must be atheist

    I try to avoid debating with everyone, well most people anyway.

    I prefer to make brief comments to see what response I get, sometimes I get interesting ones.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    I'm afraid it's you who's missing the point, A Seagull. The point being that any debate involving @Bartricks leads to irritation, frustration, and anger for the opponent of @Bartricks.god must be atheist

    Not at all, I am neither irritated, frustrated nor angry. It is all part of the great debate.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    What 'wise' man said that? I mean, it seems clearly false.Bartricks

    How could you possibly consider it to be false?? Do you think life is easy?? Do you think being dead is hard???

    Anyway the quote is from : Nikos Kazantzakis in 'Zorba the Greek'
  • What time is not
    (One of these is not a joke).Pfhorrest

    Nope, they all are .. including this one.. lol
  • Philosophy and the Twin Paradox
    Why aren't we at the centre of the earth by now then?ovdtogt

    Mainly because of the reactive force/acceleration of the surface of the Earth upon one's feet and also partly because of the rotation of the Earth and the centrifugal/centripetal forces keeping us rotating with the Earth ( this is more prevalent at the equator than at the poles.)
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    Maybe life is the problem and not religion.ovdtogt

    As a wise man once said: 'Life is trouble, only death is not'.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    It is the public that disagree about things, but unlike philosophers they either conclude (stupidly) that 'it's all a matter of opinion' or 'subjective' or they punch each other.Bartricks

    Well that is just your subjective opinion.
  • Philosophy and the Twin Paradox
    You and I are 'perpetually-inertial observers' and do not age differently.ovdtogt

    You are not inertial, you are accelerating towards the centre of the Earth. (There is an equivalence between gravity and acceleration.)
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    For most people life is shit and religion helps.ovdtogt



    Maybe religion is the problem, not the cure.

    It is hard to interact effectively with the world if one believes lies about the world.
  • Why do most philosophers never agree with each other?
    Religion is a lie; life is wonderful.
  • Sextus Empiricus - The Weakness of the Strongest Argument
    The fallacy is that what is supposed to be 'true' cannot be shown logically to be 'true', there is always an element of 'hand-waving' within the argument.
  • Sextus Empiricus - The Weakness of the Strongest Argument
    One cannot refute nonsense, it can only be ignored.

    Many so called arguments amount to little more than nonsense or an arbitrary arrangement of words; they are best ignored.
  • Sushi - A mini-essay
    Today in ‘philosophy’ there is no life left. We only see a sullen regard for the words of the dead hanging upon quaint and cloying aphorisms of ‘on the shoulders of giants’ and such blind grandiose drivel. The obscurantists have crowned themselves as ‘wise’ and the scholars now claim the title of ‘philosopher’ - simply for reading the words of opinions of others whose opinions are of the opinions of those professing a ‘better’ opinion.I like sushi

    Well, yes I agree. The edifice of philosophy has become like the fictional Gormenghast castle, where people carry out the proscribed rituals but no one knows why. People play with words like a philatelist plays with stamps, they think they are achieving something but really it is no more than a pretty arrangement of words/stamps.

    So what is to be done? Burn down the whole edifice and start from scratch? Better to simply ignore it and start from scratch.
  • When is it rational to believe in the improbable?
    Suppose a friend messages you on Facebook that he just won the Powerball jackpot. The chance of winning the jackpot is 1 in 292,201,338. Do you believe him based on that message? Not sure if we can estimate the probability that your friend is lying, but let's just assume that your friend is not the type to joke like that.

    The probability that your friend won the the Powerball jackpot is 1 in 292,201,338. The probability that your friend is lying is likewise is very slim. Either way, you have to choose to believe in something improbable, am I right?
    Wheatley

    You don't have to believe either scenario. All you have to believe is that your friend said it.

    You only have to choose to believe one or the other should you need to make a decision or take an action based upon what your friend said.
  • Do humans deserve happiness?
    Yes, but not at the expense of others.Lif3r

    It is up to each person to find their own happiness.
  • Opposing perspectives of Truth
    "Your belief creates your truth"Gus Lamarch

    Quite so.
  • Opposing perspectives of Truth
    So what criterion or evaluation would apply to works such as Plato's "Republic", or Hume's "Essay Concerning Human Understanding" then? Are these works of artistic fiction only, containing no content or substance?Pantagruel

    What is important is what one takes from these works..or not, as the case may be.
  • Do humans deserve happiness?
    Everyone is deserving of happiness, except perhaps those who would actively try to restrict the happiness of others. (Those who try to restrict the happiness of others will typically fail to achieve happiness for themselves anyway.)
  • Opposing perspectives of Truth
    Every philosophical work is false. Just that some are more false than others.
  • Morality is the objective reality.
    In addition the senses have been shown to be notoriously unreliable in providing us a picture of the world that's stable enough to build anything sensible on it.TheMadFool

    Yes the senses are not entirely reliable for creating a picture of the world but they are way better than fiction or fantasy.
  • What’s your philosophy?


    Without a method for evaluating or generating a philosophy, all you have are opinions.
  • Do the Ends Justify the Means?

    You seem to be missing my point.

    In your example, you are able to consider the possibility of the house collapsing, so you can also ascribe a certain, albeit small, probability of this occurring. What is then required is a consideration of all the possible consequences that you can think of and ascribing probabilities to each and then totting them all up.
  • What’s your philosophy?


    The questions in the OP relate more to peoples opinions about philosophy rather than philosophy itself.
  • Morality is the objective reality.

    I do not know what you are trying to say here, nor what relevance it has to what I said.

    Words are for communication, nothing more.
  • Do the Ends Justify the Means?
    My 'reasoning' is simply that the consequences of an action are inevitably considerably greater than the 'intended end'. And the possibility (or probability) of all those consequences need to be taken into account when assessing the merits of any action. It is the difference between being an accomplished chess player and a 'pawn pusher'.
  • On Suffering
    Suffering is voluntary.

    We live in a wonderful world to which we have been adapted over millennia.
  • Do the Ends Justify the Means?
    Ends: the intended goal that is being fulfilled by your actionsLawrence of Arabia

    The 'ends' are not this.

    The 'ends' are all the consequences to all people over both the short term and the long term as a result of the action taken.
  • Morality is the objective reality.

    And just what is this process of yours for acquiring and confirming facts about the world?

    If it is just playing with words, I am really not interested.
  • Do humans deserve happiness?

    Well if you want it, what does 'deserving' have to do with it?
  • Morality is the objective reality.

    Well I don't know about your world view, but my world view is founded upon a logical analysis of sense data.
  • Do humans deserve happiness?

    Well, do you want happiness?
  • Morality is the objective reality.


    You say:"to build a world view that is true, the right place to start would be objective truth"

    But that is like trying to build a sturdy house by starting with the roof.
  • Morality is the objective reality.
    Because if objective reality is a dream, then we are nothing.
  • Morality is the objective reality.
    If morality is the objective reality, then we are all doomed.