Somebody that didn't believe in objective truth would not believe that, and hence would be liberated from a potential contradiction.A statement is either true or false. — curiousnewbie
No, It doesn't, and it isn't.The point remains, that in physics a wave is defined as a vibration in a medium. — Metaphysician Undercover
To complicate matters, the 'wave function' is, I believe, a misnomer. It's not a 'wave' in the way waves are understood either in physics or in everyday discussion. It is an element of a Hilbert space, and there's really no more user-friendly way to describe it than that. It has nothing to do with electromagnetic waves, gravity waves, sound waves or any other sort of wave, and it's not a solution to the wave equation.The big mystery with the wave function is precisely its ontological status, whereas the same can’t be said for water or sound waves, as they propagate through a medium; they are indeed ‘phenomena’. — Wayfarer
I think the 'yourself' that Wallows recommend recuse themselves was the person at the switch, not you BC.In an unusually forceful statement, Wallows is telling me to butt out. — Bitter Crank
I don't see that it makes any sense to talk about the entire human race, since there is no remotely likely scenario in which any of us would have to make that decision. It's not ethics, but fantasy.We’re talking about the entire human race not simply one life over another. — I like sushi
Because both are loaded questions containing a presupposition. But the presupposition in the first - that we would kill an innocent person - is false for most people, whereas the presupposition in the second - that we would try to save somebody - is not.If you prefer to approach the problem from a “who should we save?” rather than a “Who should we kill?” proposition then why is this?
Yes. I think most people would conclude that it is morally preferable to not kill one billion innocent people. Most people see killing a person as far worse than not saving one. How else can one explain the low rates of donation to life-saving charities like Oxfam?What? Are you saying people would prefer EVERYONE to die? And exactly how is picking who you want to survive better than picking who you’d want to die? That is EXACTLY the point! Don’t you see?? — I like sushi
Not in physics. In physics a wave is a phenomenon that behaves in accordance with the wave equation.That's what a wave is — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so that's what the point is not. I thought you were going to tell us what the point is.The point is not to answer this in your head. It is not to... — I like sushi
I agree. The difference between those health policy decisions and the sci-fi thought experiments is context. Everything depends on context, so a thought experiment that just asks if one would kill a billion people to save the rest of the human race from extinction is just silly.we do make these kinds of choices all the time. For example when we invest money in cancer research over drug rehabilitation. I personally think it's important to think about whom we save and why and if our reasons for doing so are faulty. — NKBJ
What it makes me feel is regret at the Hollywoodisation of ethics. Rather than deliberate over real problems that actually occur in our world, people make up sci-fi scenarios that have nothing to do with real ethics. The blithe amusement with which people have reacted is entirely appropriate.I’m more interested in what the process makes you think about and feel like. Not really interested in an actual reply — I like sushi
That supposition was rejected more than a century ago given the results of the Michelson-Morley experiment. There is no medium in the model for electromagnetic waves.a wave without a medium doesn't make sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't know about Sweden, but France was far from the peace-loving victim that many WW2 narratives suggest. The way they behaved after the war in aggressively reclaiming and subduing their colonies in Indochina and North Africa, torturing and killing as many indigenous people as was necessary to secure their hold over the countries, was not that far off fascism. That continued until the early sixties.Yeah those brazen militaristic fascist European countries from WW2, such as Sweden and France — Maw
I dare say you are right.The trouble is that the word 'objective' is inextricably connected to the concept of an 'object'. — Wayfarer
Putting this together with your earlier comment that you are not attached to locality, it sounds like you have an affinity to the 'non-local hidden variables' school, of which David Bohm's 'pilot wave' interpretation of QM is perhaps the best-known. In most other popular interpretations, the imprecision about location is not just epistemological.I'm saying that wave function collapse is a matter of knowledge. — Benkei
As per my previous post, we cannot measure the 'length' of a photon, because that would require two or more measurements - one at each 'end'.I think that we must be going wrong somewhere with our theories, because it's incoherent to have an existent with 0 length. — Terrapin Station
A photon is essentially an observation, and can only happen once. It is not possible to observe "the same photon"* twice, so it is not possible to observe whether any aspect of the photon "is changing". Hence the idea of a clock appearing to be stopped is invalid because, to appear stopped, at least two observations are needed.From our perspective as observers, if there were a “clock” on board a photon, it would appear to be entirely stopped to us. — Devans99
I think the answer is that rationality is not inconsistent with emotion. As Hume observed, reason is the servant of the passions, not the other way around.How does a person motivate themselves to protest against animal cruelty when the initial instinctive emotional reaction subsides and they're acting upon rationality, but rationally they know ethics to be absurd/relative/meaningless without emotional conviction. — Edward
My two cents' worth:So, where does one draw the line between patriotism and nationalism? — Wallows
To make sense of the question you'd need to get a lot more precise about what you mean by property.In other words, even if we can’t imagine what it would be like, is an object that has nothing except logically-necessary or negative properties in common with, say, the Eiffel Tower, logically possible? — Troodon Roar
I've never come across that particular prejudice, thank goodness. But I recall a scene in a US sitcom years ago (I can't remember which one) in which a character, who was not Jewish, was taken into hospital and then freaked out upon learning that he was to be operated on by Dr Armstrong. He reasoned that all the best American surgeons are Jewish, so Dr Armstrong, presumed to not be Jewish because of his name, could not be any good.What if a patient was admitted into your hospital and said that they didn't want any black doctors operating on them? Would it be right to refuse the patient service and kick them out of your hospital? Would you give them what they want? — Harry Hindu
It sounds like your concern about psychiatry relates to its practice in the criminal justice system, where the subject is not the doctor's client. That will always be problematic, just as it is with forensic pathologists and police surgeons.the practice of psychiatry isn't politically neutral, either on the side of the patient who requests a diagnosis due to failing to conform to the social values of modern society — sime
That might be the problem then., because I think that category of people is almost empty. As I understand it, the OP is about people that use SJW as a term of derision, not about people who voluntarily apply it to themselves.Im talking about people who refer to themselves as SJW’s in general. — DingoJones