There is so much information, its hard to make heads or tails of things. — Yohan
The right to be taken seriously is earnt, it's not a birthright. — Isaac
if your response is to attack the speaker - "this person is a moron" - you have changed the subject from global warming to the person saying it
— yebiga
Yes.
this is the death of discourse.
— yebiga
Why?
The person being told they are a moron has nowhere to go - even if they were to suddenly flip their view - they would only confirm the moronic title.
— yebiga
They could educate themselves, do their due diligence with regards to sources, do the work required to join the discussion in question.
This form of ad hominem is all too common and all too unproductive.
— yebiga
That's an empirical claim. Is it unproductive? Do you have some reason to think so? — Isaac
I conclude, then, that the harmfulness of death is mainly post mortem. — Bartricks
As many things are not certain or are not clear, room is left for choice. How you choose is up to you, which allows for an expression of preference.
If you choose to disbelieve that which lacks sufficient proof, as you deem "sufficient" to be, that is a choice. — Hanover
If you deny doxastic voluntarism (the belief you can decide your beliefs) outright, then what triggers your belief other than a deterministic force,
— Hanover
The facts as I understand them determine my belief. — Art48
Let us give the name of hypothesis to anything that may be proposed to our belief; and just as the electricians speak of live and dead wires, let us speak of any hypothesis as either live or dead. A live hypothesis is one which appeals as a real possibility to him to whom it is proposed. If I ask you to believe in the Mahdi, the notion makes no electric connection with your nature,—it refuses to scintillate with any credibility at all. As an hypothesis it is completely dead. To an Arab, however (even if he be not one of the Mahdi's followers), the hypothesis is among the mind's possibilities: it is alive. This shows that deadness and liveness in an hypothesis are not intrinsic properties, but relations to the {3}individual thinker. They are measured by his willingness to act. The maximum of liveness in an hypothesis means willingness to act irrevocably. Practically, that means belief; but there is some believing tendency wherever there is willingness to act at all.
Next, let us call the decision between two hypotheses an option. Options may be of several kinds. They may be—1, living or dead; 2, forced or avoidable; 3, momentous or trivial; and for our purposes we may call an option a genuine option when it is of the forced, living, and momentous kind.
1. A living option is one in which both hypotheses are live ones. If I say to you: "Be a theosophist or be a Mohammedan," it is probably a dead option, because for you neither hypothesis is likely to be alive. But if I say: "Be an agnostic or be a Christian," it is otherwise: trained as you are, each hypothesis makes some appeal, however small, to your belief.
2. Next, if I say to you: "Choose between going out with your umbrella or without it," I do not offer you a genuine option, for it is not forced. You can easily avoid it by not going out at all. Similarly, if I say, "Either love me or hate me," "Either call my theory true or call it false," your option is avoidable. You may remain indifferent to me, neither loving nor hating, and you may decline to offer any judgment as to my theory. But if I say, "Either accept this truth or go without it," I put on you a forced option, for there is no standing place outside of the alternative. Every dilemma based on a complete logical disjunction, with no possibility of not choosing, is an option of this forced kind.
{4}
3. Finally, if I were Dr. Nansen and proposed to you to join my North Pole expedition, your option would be momentous; for this would probably be your only similar opportunity, and your choice now would either exclude you from the North Pole sort of immortality altogether or put at least the chance of it into your hands. He who refuses to embrace a unique opportunity loses the prize as surely as if he tried and failed. Per contra, the option is trivial when the opportunity is not unique, when the stake is insignificant, or when the decision is reversible if it later prove unwise. Such trivial options abound in the scientific life. A chemist finds an hypothesis live enough to spend a year in its verification: he believes in it to that extent. But if his experiments prove inconclusive either way, he is quit for his loss of time, no vital harm being done.
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26659/26659-h/26659-h.htm#P1
it is to recognize that all of reality is hostile to life and that we are a mistake in the eyes of reality that will one day be corrected. — 64bithuman
if you buy a lottery ticket and win, it's your (good) karma and if you lose, it's your (bad) karma. — Agent Smith
n Asia there's plenty of ethnic prejudice as well, including some that is institutional (eg the treatment of non Siamese folks in Thailand) but to my knowledge it hasn't been made into an ideology yet. — Olivier5
Because the people who defend her maintain the idea that she is young and she is free to have fun because we are living in a “modern era” — javi2541997
I think that as far as Slavic people go, Ukrainians are better than Russians. The latter have always been slaves. — Olivier5
Why would any hatred of a large people or a country be morally right? — ssu
A god could surely just implant complete knowledge in all human minds, without the need for any long-form narrative. — Tom Storm
The big question for me is why is it that god/s are never known directly? — Tom Storm
Well the theists always use the same argument in that context: God is not guilty of human's free will. — javi2541997
Silence. — Banno
The problem is, it seems to me, worship – idol-making – not g/G per se. Theism is idolatry. The apophatics got it right, I think: anything said or imag(in)ed (e.g. "graven images", scriptures, theologies, sermons) about the infinite is necessarily finite and thereby false; even (especially) the belief that the infinite "exists" is idolatrous. — 180 Proof
Nothingness. If he would exist I would imagine him as the pure representation of silence and emptiness. — javi2541997
NONE OF IT WAS DOWN TO GOD(s)! It was all down to our behaviour! — universeness
Communism is on the rise in the U.S.? That's news to me. — Pierre-Normand
I still see Republicans defending him or arguing that prosecuting him could lead to violence, which in bait-speak is saying people should riot if Trump is prosecuted. — Benkei
Again, an overreaction. — Banno
I expect death to be just like it was for me two hundred, two thousand years ago. In other words, nothing. To me that sounds perfectly fine. Nothingness is not to be feared or lamented. Am I happy about it? Happiness is such a puerile term. — Tom Storm
But now we are here in the phase where she apologizes with nearly breaking up in tears ... — ssu
I support the idea that statesmen and leaders shouldn't behave like how she behaved in that party. She has a responsibility to her entire nation and a role model to the public. — L'éléphant
No. It is not about double standard. She is the PM and public representative of a nation. She has the aim to act in the most honorable and rectitude way possible. We are living in a difficult social context and we expect from a statesman to be, at least, professional. Right?
It is quite contradictory, isn't it? Probably she has the average discourse of how to be an exemplary citizen and look at her dancing and acting like an immature teenager. — javi2541997
I think the feeling is mutual with the Slavophiles in Russia. — ssu
The assumption by many seems to be 'politics is sober and serious, please don't have a life too.'
— Tom Storm
I wonder who else is covered under this assumption, doctors, lawyers, Sunday school teachers? — Fooloso4
Russia takes upon itself the role of the shortest man in the gang. — Banno
In fact, Russia is fighting the notorious collective West, defending its very existence as a country, a people, a civilization.
We must constantly remember that Russophobia in Europe has deep roots. And what is happening today is not a sudden, short-term episode, but a constant component of the social and political life of the West.
That's odd. Sure, there was Sovietphobia in most or many places. After that, things changed, there was optimism, friendships, seeking trust. 2-3 decades ago, something like that, I personally know people that went to Russia, business and otherwise. But now, ironically, Putin and compadres stomped that out good and well. To the extent it's real, Matviyenko's "Russophobia" was/is like a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Except, who has been wanting Russia to cease existing...? — jorndoe
Russia takes upon itself the role of the shortest man in the gang. — Banno
The Fine-Tuning Argument says “that the present Universe (including the laws that govern it and the initial conditions from which it has evolved) permits life only because these laws and conditions take a very special form, small changes in which would make life impossible.” — Art48
So, why would God bother to create an intricately fine-tuned universe for the sake of souls
Many Christians love to cite the following verse. Aren't WE special?
"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." John 3:16. — ThinkOfOne
What you're asking for cannot be done in the framework of secular culture and science. — baker
The trick is in having the power to define what is pure and what is evil — praxis
Yes. If you live by the sword, you'll die by the sword. — Tate
Karma presupposes supernatural record keeping and judgment.
— creativesoul
Why can it not simply be natural cause and effect? Very few (if any) actions absolutely terminate in their intended consequences. Anything you do continues on, past, and through what you intend. — Pantagruel