I think the Copenhagen interpretation is not compatible with the usual folk notion of 'objective reality'. It denies that there is any fact of the matter about where a particle is between observations.If you reject "objective reality", is there any interpretation other than Many Worlds which is acceptable? — Metaphysician Undercover
Is that what the paper does - create a situation where both observers have the same level of detail in their knowledge, and the details contradict each other? That would be a much stronger result than anything contemplated in Wigner's thought experiment, which seems to rely on a belief in 'objective collapse' to have any interest at all..I think to resort to Schodinger’s famous simile, it’s as if Bob observes a live cat, and Alice a dead one - and they’re both right. — Wayfarer
I don't believe in objective reality so this is a bit moot for me. But I'm very interested in QM so I feel the need to comment.Physicists have long suspected that quantum mechanics allows two observers to observe different, conflicting realities. — Wayfarer
It's not at all like that. Your example is of a weak justification to not do something. Not doing something is consistent with the notion of laziness.This is just lazy thinking like saying “philosophy is a waste lets just live, man!” — kudos
I'm on the side of those that deny that religious belief is necessarily irrational, in this discussion.Been looking at some Karl Rahner writing last few days. So in speaking to a person who claimed they had never experienced God.
"I don’t believe you; I just don’t accept that. You have had, perhaps, no experience of God under this precise code-word God but you have had or have now an experience of God – and I am convinced that this is true of every person." — Rank Amateur
Under that definition, a group of Amish collaborating to raise a barn is an instance of mob mentality. It's what most people call 'cooperation'.many people acting in conjunction with each other to a particular end, and that's what I'm referring to by "mob mentality." — Terrapin Station
1, 2 and 4 are consistent with the conclusion. It sounds like you are a libertarian. Fair enough - it's just a different ethical system.t's related to me (1) being a free speech absolutist, (2) being against controlling others as much as possible, (3) being against mob mentalities, (4) being pro laissez-fairism, and (5) not being in favor of sanctions in response to "hurt feelings." — Terrapin Station
I am curious to hear about how you come to that view. Is it derived from some set of moral principles, or is it more just a feeling? If principles, I'd like to hear about what they are and how the derivation proceeds.In my view, yes [there is something wrong with applying social pressure against somebody's expression]. — Terrapin Station
Nice work. That is a sentence that's easy to respond to.People aren't letting others' expressions stand as written, but are also applying various social pressures, are they not? — Bitter Crank
'Real joy' sounds a bit like a 'true scotsman'. I think both un's and your descriptions fit within the generally understood concept of joy.Real joy derives from feeling a sense of purpose beyond the sounds of the tea kettle and the fluttering of the birds outside. — Hanover
I don't want to try to control your expression, but I feel obliged to point out that asking questions with such fundamental grammatical errors that they are incomprehensible is not conducive to constructive discussion.People aren't just letting others' expression be and not applying various social pressures, etc., are they? — Terrapin Station
( (∃x(Fx ∧ ¬∃y(y≠x ∧ Fy) ) ) ∧ (∃x(Gx ∧ ¬∃y(y≠x ∧ Gy) ) ) ∧ ¬∃x(Fx ∧ Gx) ) ⊃ ∃x∃y( (Fx ∨ Gx) ∧ (Fy ∨ Gy) ∧ (x≠y) ∧ ¬∃z( (z≠x ∧ z≠y) ∧ (Fz ∨ Gz) ) )
The statement of "1+1=2" in Peano arithmetic is:“1”, “+”, “=“, and “2” have specific meanings by convention. So, “1+1=2” is a tautology. It has to be true given the meanings of the terms used. There is nothing to prove. — Noah Te Stroete
The only way I could imagine him being correct is if nobody can ever be happy, even for a moment. Since that would require that everybody that has ever said they are happy was lying, I find that too implausible to consider. It seems more likely that the Earth is made of cheese.von Hartmann had some interesting insights in this regard- the illusion is that happiness can be had in the present, the hereafter, or a future utopian state. So where does that leave us if indeed he is correct? — schopenhauer1
For what it feels like, you'd have to ask the people that are having children now. My youngest is aged nineteen, so I can't remember. For where it springs from, I'd say evolution. Species that don't have an inbuilt urge to procreate will be replaced by those that do.But what does this urge "feel" like? What does it spring from? — schopenhauer1
It can't do that because nobody has that understanding. We all know that the urge to procreate is far too strong for a movement against it to ever be successful in persuading everybody to have no offspring.This was meant to be about bringing people together in the understanding that we can solve the problem of suffering. — schopenhauer1
As the article and my post make quite clear, they used it to attack the then-government (Labour) in an attempt to make them lose the upcoming election - which they did, but not because of that issue.But it begs the quest "Why on earth would the Tories be trying to convince people that England was more violent than the USA?". Any ideas? — Sir2u
No I don't. I have no statistics and none have been produced in this thread that I have seen. So all I have to go on are impressions: I was in the UK a year ago and it seemed to me to be more peaceful and prosperous than it was when I was last there, in 2007.And we all know how greatly things have improved since then don't we? — Sir2u
The figures may or may not be accurate. We don't know. But we do know that the sources are anything but impartial.If these do not seem real, you can verify the data through the sources they provide at the bottom of the page. — Sir2u
yet the only one of the 'things below' that mentioned 'ratio' was the one that I had already said was the first time you did it, and none of them related to the disputed claim about attendance at crime scenes.I am so sure that I had posted all of those things below.... — Sir2u
Learn to read. — Sir2u
you do not understand English very well. — Sir2u
Could you just remind me exactly what accusations you were making about attempted bullying?I took it for granted that you knew how to read. — Sir2u
As you know, that's not how things work on a philosophy forum. The onus is on the person making a claim to justify it.My original statement stands until someone can prove it to be false. — Sir2u
In the instance to which you are referring, my use of 'that that ' was a mistake. I was careless when typing that sentence. I either didn't notice that I had typed the word twice, or I did but mixed it up with a sentence a few lines earlier where the doubling was used intentionally and correctly.Be careful using "that that" in sentences, S gets upset and pulls out his dictionary and some webpages about it. — Sir2u
No you didn't. That is the first time you have proposed that as an answer to my question, or that you have even mentioned the word 'ratio' in your replies. Further, the ratio you mention in this quote is one of object counts (numbers of police and number of guns), not events (crimes and attendances at crimes) which is what your original claim that I dispute was about.You asked about the ration and I explained several times that it is the number of cops to the number of guns that need to be collected or confiscated. — Sir2u
I am sorry that you feel bullied. I am not aware of having written anything that was bullying, but if I have you need only point it out and I will delete it and apologise.It is not about beating and bullying others into submission and trying to force them into admitting that they are wrong. — Sir2u
No. Read about the Australian gun buy-back here. There is plenty of room for a discussion about the differences between the pre-1996 Australian situation and the current US situation, and the effect those differences have on the viability of applying the same strategy to the US, but suggesting there were no guns to be confiscated forms no part of that. Approximately 650,000 guns were collected and destroyed.there was probably never any guns to get rid of — Sir2u