The modern philosophers gave themselves a task not entertained by the ancients, to master nature. Philosophy was no longer about the problem of how to live but to solve problems by changing the conditions of life. — Fooloso4
if the becoming has no end then there can be no ultimate convergence — Leontiskos
Some envision progress as the movement toward universal agreement. — Fooloso4
We're talking about the thesis that philosophy has a determinate pull (link). Saying, "There will always be points of divergence and points of convergence [among philosophers]" doesn't seem to help us in addressing that thesis. — Leontiskos
the input of a professional ethicist I found to be valuable — LuckyR
We haven't outgrown yet religion, politics or science, all of which require critical analyses and reflective interpretations. — 180 Proof
I think there's maybe a default tech-worshipping pragmatism where a philosophy 'should' be but never actually was. — plaque flag
If there is, at least in principle, a way to tie values back to something outside the individual, — Count Timothy von Icarus
then that provides a framework — Count Timothy von Icarus
understanding how value claims gets communicated without an infinite loop of translating mental state to mental state — Count Timothy von Icarus
Our sense of values did have to emerge out of something after all. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think social norms work for this because they are too malleable, we need a more general principle that stands behind social norms, hence looking to how animals view fairness. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I would put forward that the problem is not a misunderstanding of the word, rather that the word is being used as a short form for more than just itself. Simple elaboration clarifies the misunderstanding. — PhilosophyRunner
Is this assuming nominalism? That there is no "justice," or "good," that people can point to that extends outside the frame of "my desires and preferences?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
No matter how much a community of agents might appear to agree (or disagree) that "such and such is true of "the" real world", as far as linguistic designation is concerned they are merely talking past one another and gesticulating towards different and unsharable private worlds corresponding to their individuated mental processes. — sime
as far as linguistic designation is concerned — sime
You're suggesting that the US's net influence is to make other countries better than it can even manage of itself? Is the theory that it nobly sacrifices it's own people's freedoms to help improve those under it's sheltering wing? — Isaac
It is a terrible mistake to think that every trait possessed by all individuals in a population must be there because it is or was beneficial. — GrahamJ
There is in principle no difficulty answering Srap Tasmaner's argument in relation to 'procreative genes'. If cultural transmission made them only mildly advantageous, they could go the same way as the vitamin C enzyme.
I do not think this has happened. I do not think cultural transmission is reliable or powerful enough to explain what we see — GrahamJ
So I'm not seeing how honesty is serving the purpose you've assigned it (making communication functional). If I ask you where the train station is, I'm far less interested in your honesty than I am in where the actual train station actually is. I want you to be right, not honest. — Isaac
I'd responded to the "creek" vs "crick" for small stream as a functional difference analogy you made — fdrake
But I do point out that that option that we do have, that you outline, is a moral imperative arising from the social nature of language, that it is shared. — unenlightened
Cultural change couldn't stop Tinky Winky from being purple, but they could turn Tinky Qinky into a queer symbol. — fdrake
What type of intuitions are you talking about Srap Tasmaner? — fdrake
That's a great example, thanks — fdrake
The act of treating something as manly, womanly etc informs what it means to be a man or a woman. — fdrake
I thought you were addressing an arbitrary functionalist, rather than specifically Isaac. — fdrake
My reference point here is the manifest and scientific image concept in Sellars. — fdrake
If we end up saying the social categories don't mean anything, what question are we asking again? — fdrake
Your sense of your gender, or your identity more broadly, comes to you as an intuition. Seems obvious to me.
— Srap Tasmaner
I think as a "manifest imagey" conception this makes a lot of sense. — fdrake
we could all agree that the sole criterion for being a man, in this sense, is an honest report that one is — fdrake
What's the difference between psychological, physical and social explanatory styles? — fdrake
If we go the other way and climb from "bottom up", all of the social categories we were trying to "climb toward" would dissolve since they're not derivable from, or identical with, their neural-dynamical conditions of actuation. — fdrake
Your functionalism is just unwelcome.
— Srap Tasmaner
Yeah! — fdrake
gender is a performance — fdrake
"I'm not here because I'm awaiting a sentence, I'm here because (something to the effect that I'm minimising some neurological loss function defined over my body states)" - and it would be true. — fdrake
absolutely nothing of social life, no "mental furniture", ideology or even motivational state, survives the parsing — fdrake
And basically that's true for all of us, so far as I can tell. — Srap Tasmaner
"Just not clear to me what the word "true" is doing in this story. " — unenlightened
I think when you say, "Just not clear to me what the word "true" is doing in this story. ", you are deceiving yourself, and saying something that is not true. I believe it is true that my key will open the front door, and if it should turn out not to be true because the lock is broken, or my wife has changed the lock or someone has blown the bloody door off, or the god of locks is angry with me, then I will have to admit I was wrong. — unenlightened
it might be better to finish with some other kind of identity -- like identity in general — Moliere
A heterosexual child doesn't have to wait long for his or her culture to supply the "guide book" for what "heterosexual" means. On the other hand, a rural homosexual child may recognize that he likes other boys, and understands that this is an outlier desire, best not discussed. He may not have a "homosexual identity" until he comes into regular contact with urban homosexuals who can supply the gay "guide book". — BC
Having these broad stories for ourselves helps us make sense of our own actions and thoughts, put them into context, give them a purpose and a coherence (that they might otherwise lack). — Isaac
And at no time has what is true changed, but only what we believe to be true. Although it could also happen that the number of chromosomes might change.
By all means let us be open to revision and reversal of what we believe according to what we later learn to be true, but not according to what we later find to be convenient — unenlightened
Ask 'em to get you a pair of your socks; if they succeed, then that'll do, won't it? — Banno
There are a few ways to not know where your socks are kept. One is pragmatism, in which the location of your sock draw can never be known, but only approximated asymptotically. Such brilliance derives not only from Charles Sander Peirce. — Banno
if the truth becomes a matter of choice, or convenience, then language itself loses its value — unenlightened
The number of human chromosomes was published in 1923 by Theophilus Painter. By inspection through the microscope, he counted 24 pairs, which would mean 48 chromosomes. His error was copied by others and it was not until 1956 that the true number, 46, was determined by Indonesia-born cytogeneticist Joe Hin Tjio. — Wiki
