The question I have for you at this point is, "does (4) deserve to be part of our notion of weakness, or should it be cast out as unnecessary?" What is good about (4) in relation to the other three we have here? Just another reminder that these four don't constitute and exhaustive list, only what we've managed to cobble together here. — kudos
It requires enough faith in people that you can allow them to discover their own way.
Every generation faces challenges to that faith. People who want to destroy that faith abound. You're an example of a person who's never had that faith.
It's not for everyone. That's for sure. — frank
to accept loss — frank
It doesn't appear to me that you understand what democracy is. You have to have the emotional maturity to accept loss. — frank
Again: Define "suffering". — baker
The general AN position is against 'suffering' which we all understand (no need to redefine the word). — I like sushi
Either way it's nice to see people thinking about stuff like this even if some of it makes almost no sense to me and what I say makes almost no sense to them
It's difficult to keep this discussion distinct from the antinatalism discussions elsewhere. I'm trying to avoid critiquing arguments in favor of antinatalism, and focus on why it's unpersuasive. Maybe this post makes it clearer how closely connected I think our experience of moral life is to what we find persuasive in moral discussion. — Srap Tasmaner
What AN ultimately does is question the project of life itself, and this is scary itself. But it's not much more than Buddhism, just taken to a practical level. — schopenhauer1
Many people think in black-and-white terms. They are not interested in understanding things, but in taking sides. So even when they read a (would-be) philosophical text, they do so with an intention of taking sides. If it turns out that they can't do so easily (because they agree with some things in the text, while disagree with others, and some they don't understand), they take this as a cue to oppose the text/the author.
— baker
How do you deal with such people? — Wheatley
I'll say this: Your way of describing philosophy can be very useful for communication on the Philosophy Forum, but there's no god-like figure that can decree that this way is the correct way of doing philosophy. — Wheatley
The request for clarification remains cogent. — Banno
My memory commands me not to desire or fear too much as things are happening as they do with or without my influence on their happenings. — Shawn
In regards to Stoicism, and this will come off as trite; but, modern day living is taxing on the Stoics mind. — Shawn
What do you think is the reason why most people, even very educated people, seem to have difficulty engaging with ideas that challenge their views? — thesmartman23
In such a system, what matters the most is whose will prevails
— baker
Yes. Believe it or not, democracy is about power. — frank
He'll ride in on a flying pig and open the world's first fission reactor. — Wayfarer
I'd prefer that by "democratic", the EU would follow the will of most of its participants when it comes to policy. — Manuel
Here’s an interesting challenge concerning Joe Biden. But the challenge is for you, not him.
See if you can watch this entire compilation video of Joe Biden’s love of hair sniffing. — 0 thru 9
Would you think it’s wrong if someone genetically engineered a severe disability into their child? Because in this case, similar to the birth example, at the time the act is done there is no one to suffer an injustice by it. Yet it’s clearly an injustice no? — khaled
You would like me to think that this state of affairs is somehow off the table as far as evaluation. I don't see how. It is good that X prevented a baby from being born in horrible conditions. — schopenhauer1
But the alternative strikes me as far worse; allowing nonsense to propagate. — Banno
I a lot folks dismiss ideas because they claim it lacks "clarity". The assumption seems to be that if an idea, or concept, is not easily comprehended it is therefore dishonest. There are some issues with this line of thinking. — Wheatley
Where do you draw the un-crossable line between human weaknesses and animal ones still remains a mystery. Surely it would be unbelievable to say humans and animals are the same thing, but it would be equally unbelievable to say we share nothing in common with the animals when there are some obvious similarities, depending on your religious beliefs. — kudos
There is a fundamental instinct that humans have regardless of their social personalities. "Weakness" is a relative social term, which may or may not play a role in an instinct that would kick in a given situation. — Caldwell
Please re-read the below quote again, and see how the switch from animal instinct to "weak relative to their potential" happens. Is there not a fallacious argument here?
In natural predator-prey relationships if a predator is so strong a hunter it proliferates and the prey population declines, their group gets equally wiped out. Would you say in this sense that weakness is necessary for survival, and thereby there is some good in weak people just in lieu of the fact that they are weak relative to their potential?
— kudos
How did you determine that someone who gains philosophical truth must educate the others? — Tom Storm
Then I think we were talking about different things, and what you said was not relevant to the point that I was making, which you replied to.
I was talking about knowing a cause (God for example), through its effects (the physical world He created). We have no capacity to directly observe the cause, but we can observe the effects, and infer the necessity of the cause. If you cannot relate to this way of knowing God, I could switch it for an example from quantum physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
We know God through His effects, the reality of physical existence, but we cannot see Him directly as the cause, His existence is inferred.
— Metaphysician Undercover
No. Every self-respecting Christian has a personal relationship with God. — baker
How can you possibly know it's pretense?
— baker
Because "knowledge" in the epistemological sense is justified, and "justified" implies demonstrated, which means shared with others. So if an individual claims to know something, but what is known cannot be demonstrated, or shared with others, it is not "knowledge" in epistemology, which is where the accepted definition of "knowledge": is derived from, and it is therefore just a person claiming to have knowledge, which is not real knowledge, but a pretense.
Remember, in Plato's cave allegory, the philosopher, having seen beyond the reflections, toward understand the true reality, is compelled to return to the cave to teach the others. Without doing this educating, the person would just be someone assuming I am right about reality, and they are all wrong about reality, and such a person would not be a philosopher at all, but a poser.
I’m saying ‘suffering’ is actually what gives life value. No suffering is a zombie life without emotion. — I like sushi
But we are responsible for procreating - and we could stop or at least wonder why we do it; we can actually consider reasons for and against. — ToothyMaw
So the 'responsibility' is no more valid a point than 'procreating'. We have a sense of responsibility tied to our procreative abilities. I cannot see how it can be argued that these are separate to the point that one is on a pedestal but not the other. — I like sushi
If there were someone who knows, how could she demonstrate her knowledge such that everyone would be able to see that in fact she does know? — Janus
Lack of consensus doesn't mean that nobody knows; but it can mean that only some know and others don't.
— baker
Maybe my language was sloppy. It doesn't mean nobody knows. But it also doesn't mean somebody does.
How would we know? — Tom Storm
No dichotomy! I didn't intend anything like you think I did. I said that we can know ourselves better with the added benefit of science. That doesn't obviate the need for self-examination. I wasn't referring to the question of others knowing me at all. — Janus
I won't go into what they are but the thesis of this thread is that stoicism presents itself as a constant struggle (in my experience) with analyzing what is important to control in one's life. — Shawn
every day affirmations of Marcus Aurelius or Epictetus. — Shawn
I'm interested to hear about other terms, or sets of terms, that have a habit of stagnating discussions — I like sushi
In short, the EU has a long way to go to become democratic. — Manuel
This is how democracy works: prior to the American civil war there were five different parties that claimed to be anti-slavery. Only one party was pro-slavery.
The result was that anti-slavery energy was scattered at best and divided against itself at worst.
Lincoln gathered all the anti-slavery parties together and thus won the presidency. — frank
Plurality of parties usually means there's either no pressing issues to deal with or there's apathy about dealing with the issues at hand.
You must've missed it: I referred to genomes (genes) with no mention of "those who feel immortal". — 180 Proof
to make room for descendents. After all, genomic self-replicators self-replicate or perish: without mortality, I think, natality would not be sufficiently urgent or adaptive in nature (for vertebrates). — 180 Proof