Your inability to function - much less think - without a mythic crutch does not warrant an arrogation of this impotence to cosmic proportions. Much less make the basis of rendering judgements upon other modes of ethics that do not find their raison d'etre in a dearth of imagination. — StreetlightX
For me atheism is experiencing the radical absence of any transcendent guarantee. It comes with no pangs of dread or emptiness and absurdity makes only an occasional appearance. — Tom Storm
Of course.Your not, that's my point. It oughtn't be profound that what's at stake in terms of meaning is only considerable if you already are biased about what that meaning is. From within a particular ideology that makes claims about meaning, those meanings are important. But outside, other meanings are important, or none are important. — Kenosha Kid
But this thread is about the proverbial foxholes, those challenging situations that put to the test what one believes and holds dear.What's at stake is relative to what you believe.
Sure, and if a person can firmly hold their peace-time beliefs also once they are in a foxhole, then there's no problem for them.You cannot compare the meaning of life as understood by a creationist to that of a Buddhist, or an atheist, or a simulationist, since the values of each kind of meaning differ from reference frame to reference frame.
Of course, but, again, we're talking about the proverbial foxholes.The Buddhist meaning of human life is comparable to the Christian one: both are transcendental, involving ascensions for the ethical and devout, which is unsurprising as both religions concern how the existence of different kinds of afterlife should dictate how we behave in this life. Remove that afterlife and the meaning disappears: the meaning only had value in those religious belief structures. Wayfarer believes this is a loss, and I'm just trying to get him to see that it could only be a loss if you believe in that meaning, in which case nothing is lost. — Kenosha Kid
Does he simply want others to believe it?Since your idea of philosophy is ad hominem, i.e. largely to quote somebody important saying the thing you want others to believe — Kenosha Kid
Actually, I'm not so sure he does believe them, because I think that if he did, he wouldn't be discussing them here, in such a manner. Personally, I think that if I would believe those things, I wouldn't be discussing them at a forum like this.The point of my conversation with Wayfarer is that he believes these sorts of meanings, where there is some higher purpose intended and some ultimate goal to aspire to, have values generally, such that to be without such a meaning is a loss. — Kenosha Kid
Have there ever been any media outlets that started with absolute freedom of speech?So, the way I view things is that absolute freedom is the default position, and from there any laws, restrictions, etc. need to be justified. I see it the same way in this case. Whichever media outlet starts with absolute freedom of speech, and then needs to justify their reasons for excluding certain types of speech. — Pinprick
It seems your issue is specifically with appeal to authority (implicitly on your part!), because this same theme keeps coming up in your posts.Mr. Clark: I'd like to see your med school diploma please. — T Clark
I don't know how to say this nicely, but you sound a bit ... naive. A bit like a kid in a candy store who can't decide what to choose.As I've said, because the forum is informal and lots of stuff gets discussed here, many of the questions hinge on questions of fact. When that happens, a persons qualifications, experience, or education may be relevant. Example - people keep claiming that Einstein was wrong about the speed of light because the big bang happened 14 billion years ago but the universe is 45 light years across. I've read explanations of why this is, and I sort of understand them, but it still bothers me. If, in response to one of these claims, I say "I don't really understand all of this, but I don't think you do either, so, I'll stick with Einstein." That is an ad hominem argument which I think is appropriate. — T Clark
It's rather that you don't raise enough questions about yourself and about why you're reading ro discussing something.That's the main question I'm trying to get at - when is it reasonable to raise questions about something personal about someone as an argument. — T Clark
Do you mean invalid or unsound, or in fact vacuous?What's the difference between saying that someone is not worth listening to, and saying that their arguments are vacuous, and thus refuted? — Janus
But the ad hominem fallacy is usually committed in contexts where there is no definable of certifiable expertise, or at least not the kind of expertise which guarantees or at least produces tendencies towards consensus of opinion. — Janus
But there are also at least such triplets:Hot-cold, Good-bad, Tall-short, Big-small, male-female, up-down, left-right, but more importantly, something you for certain will understand: is (p) and is not (~p). — TheMadFool
It may be valid, but the truth of it a different matter.
— tim wood
I can live with that. — TheMadFool
Is it ever based on competence? — Tom Storm
I see no need to make it personal like that. If one is so inclined to have a conversation on the topic of Einstein being wrong about the speed of light, one can simply summon the claimant to elaborate, explain, and then take it from there.If someone were to say "Einstein was wrong about the speed of light," I think it would be reasonable for me to ask how the person is qualified to make that statement. — T Clark
But MP taught us to.As you well know, nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition. — T Clark
So why cast an insult as a response to an argument being made if it's not an attempt to invalidate the argument that they made? — Harry Hindu
Then you will be trod upon.Why limit yourself with reason. Transcend reason. Be a force of nature
— Wittgenstein
I don't want to. — Wheatley
Well, this is just a philosophy discussion forum, not the Holy Inquisition. So, no pressure.We can go back and forth in deciding when a personal attack is an appropriate argument. It would just be easier if people were clearer and didn't use jargon like "ad hominem." Instead of saying "That's an ad hominem argument," say "My educational status is not relevant to the argument I am making." The idea of a logical fallacy makes it easy for people on both sides not to face the real problems with inappropriate arguments. — T Clark

Not for me, though. I'm extrapolating from my own example. For instance, in terms of clothing: I buy about 5 quality clothing items per year and I intend to be able to wear them for at least three years. And once the clothes are so worn that they can't be mended and worn for dirty work around the house and in the garden anymore, I make blankets for cats out of them or use them as cleaning rags. I do this not out of frugality, nor out of concern for ecology, but out of an old-fashioned sense for making good use of things. I extrapolate that if more people would do that, the textile industry as we know it (which is a major polluter, and employer) would collapse, because people would buy only a fraction of the clothing items they do now.But I really don't see why we should buy into the notion that going green will harm our economy or weaken our country.
This is straight out of conservative media. — Xtrix
Will the irony never end!the worst of all is the overbearing belief that some people have in their own superiority. — Sir2u
(See the linked resources above.)Which brings us back to my original concern - What should be considered an ad hominem argument and when, if ever, is it appropriate. — T Clark
One can always talk about one's own perceptions and formulate one's verbal expressions accordingly. It's a whole other world of interacting with people.I am really sorry to say that this makes no sense. If people don't have characteristic that would exist regardless of the observer then there is nothing to talk about here. — Sir2u
That's not the difference I'm talking about.Also, "aggravating" is not the same kind of personal characteristic like "Caucasian".
— baker
Both are descriptive of people, one is physical the other is personality. Did you just figure that out or do you think I am not able to recognize the difference.
In the way you formulate your statements.You're externalizing, you talk of other people as if you're the one who decides who they really are or what is true about them.
— baker
Exactly where did I say something like that?
Except that you don't formulate it as your thought, as your opinion, but as if it were an objective fact about the other person.I am the one that decides what I think about them, or is that not obvious to you?
Have you read the link?You use you-messages, not I-messages. Most people are like that. But it still makes for very low quality interactions.
— baker
Again I do not understand what you are trying to say. Maybe you could give an example of what I have said that makes you think something like this.
Of course, but this thread is about the proverbial foxholes. Ie. those times and places when health and wealth are gone, when friends, family, home are gone.Given people do precisely this, it must be true. I think for all the lofty talk about meaning requiring some transcendent foundation, I believe people obtain meaning from being in the world, interacting and doing things. Possessions, nature, music, food, friends, family, home, whatever you are into is where your meaning comes from. I believe this is true for theists and atheists alike. — Tom Storm
So what? If they don't think they are arseholes, they are wrong, in denial?But then decides that they are both arseholes — Sir2u
Here’s what Wikipedia says. — T Clark
Some old textbooks (not in English) on the topic of "introduction to critical thinking and informal logic" had a nice introduction where the context of informal fallacies was explained -- when is it appropriate to call something a fallacy and when not. Unfortunately, while there are many resources for informal fallacies on the internet, I don't know of any that would have such an introduction like those old textbooks. I'll keep looking though, because it would often come handy.I have trouble with so-called “logical fallacies.” A lot of them don’t make sense to me. I think they disallow what seem to me to be perfectly reasonable arguments. They are also often, usually? misused by people who don’t understand them. They whip them out like yellow cards as if they are the referee. As if it makes them seem like they know what they are talking about. — T Clark
This sounds awfully abstract.Accept the way things are. Know what difference one can make. Be content with what one does and/or has done. — creativesoul
To protect the environment, people would need to radically decrease consumption in general and establish ways to produce less harmful and longer lasting products.I also don't understand this idea of being "frugal." — Xtrix
How? By inventing new ways of producing electrical energy, inventing wrapping materials that aren't as harmful as plastics, and such?It has to do with legislation and trillions of dollars of investments. — Xtrix
But the religious can actually say the same thing!The game is played using one's free play of imagination and understanding, one's reason and logic in harmony with one's irrationality and intuition. In this foxhole of sometimes crisis and chaos, rather than timorously looking outwards for imagined support and consolation, to look courageously inwards in order to find the strength in the reality of one's own existence.
IE, meaning comes from playing the game using the human spirit of imagination and understanding. — RussellA
Of course it has something to do with them both. One has a low tolerance for a specific characteristic of the other. For example, I have a low tolerance for people that ask pointless questions, therefore those that have a tendency to do that irritate me. — Sir2u
Sure, but whence this desire to build an empire, whence the motivation for it, whence the justification for the killing, raping, and pillaging?Looking at the list in Wikipedia, it seems to me that most wars are caused by empire building — T Clark
Exactly.But it's not happening quickly enough — Xtrix
People generally seem to believe there is an important difference between intentionally doing something that can result in outcome X, as opposed to going on as usual and letting outcome X happen on its own.Lastly, talking about risking the economy "collapsing" is ridiculous. We have an asteroid heading to Earth, and we're worried about whether the cost of blowing it up will sink the economy? It's completely insane.
Your precious economy doesn't mean shit if we're all dead.
Those who are superior to you in a particular context. E.g. your teacher in school, or your boss at work.Who decides what is justified and what is not? — Wheatley
The standard of the person who has more power in the institutional hierarchy than you.What standard do we have to judge whether a believe is justified?
