In an empty way it probably appears that way to some. Kind of reminds me about how I show students they don’t really know how to read. They just ‘read words’ and think ‘now I know that,’ but usually they can barely explain/repeat anything they’ve just read. — I like sushi
The leap from oral tradition, to writing, to audio/video has surely left an imprint on pedagogical approaches that are almost impossible to reverse. ‘Remembering stuff’ as opposed to ‘understanding stuff’ seems to be how modern education has gone (‘modern’ meaning over the past few centuries). — I like sushi
As an example, if someone wishes to call a ‘hole’ parasitic I can get onboard with that. The issue remains the dividing line between ‘parasitic’ and ‘non-parasitic’. — I like sushi
I’ve had a long obsession with the various types of antonyms and how people disagree about what is or isn’t a ‘relational pair’ or what is or isn’t a ‘gradable antonym’. What seems to be underlying the discussion is exactly this problem right? — I like sushi
As in ‘interactions’ where humans imbue ‘objects’/‘items’ with characteristics - or rather as extensions of themselves in some way? — I like sushi
You’ll have to explain this too (bold), and how it relates to the topic.
This might continue, but it’s necessary for me. I’ll add what I can too in order to clarify what is under scrutiny. — I like sushi
Also, where’s the justification for this approach? I’m suggesting one is required but I’d like to know if you have a reason and whether or not you can parse it. — I like sushi
Do you agree that facts are what we say about a certain property or a certain relation? — magritte
Ah, I think I see. Facts not things? Because Tractatus? — bongo fury
Btw I'm confused by your employment of "referent", "denotes" and "denoting fact"... please clarify? — bongo fury
So, to avoid contradiction, you will refrain from denying that 'Pegasus' refers? — bongo fury
The issue is more to do with setting the grammar of existential statements out consistently. — Banno
Pegasus is a mythical creature, hence pegasus exists as a mythical creature. But of course pegasus is not real, so Pegasus does not exist, too. — Banno
If we truly feared death, then we would all be focused on figuring out how to stop it from happening. — darthbarracuda
Seems to me that pragmatism rests on extensional results rather than intensional results; is your point that pragmatism denies the intensional? — Banno
On a side note, I'm puzzled by your use of "intensional" in the title - intensional as opposed to extensional; not intentional as opposed to accidental. Seems to me that pragmatism rests on extensional results rather than intensional results; is your point that pragmatism denies the intensional? — Banno
Pragmatism says the meaning of a sentence is to be defined by reference to the actions to which asserting it would lead, or its possible causes and effects. Wittgenstein says that to understand language we ought forget about meaning and look at what is being done in our actual use of words. It's a subtle, but profound, difference — Banno
Pragmatists generally reject the notion of truth outright and talk in terms of improved utility over time asymptotically approaching something that they deny exists. — Banno
On a side note, I'm puzzled by your use of "intensional" in the title - intensional as opposed to extensional; not intentional as opposed to accidental. Seems to me that pragmatism rests on extensional results rather than intensional results; is your point that pragmatism denies the intensional? — Banno
Circumvented? As in prevented entirely or otherwise postponed for hundreds of years? Peace and civility. Purpose and prosperity. The more you look around the world and at raw human nature and conflict you get kind of a "gazing into the abyss" effect imo. All the corruption, greed, strife, envy, rage, indifference, and violence, compounded by the fact many people will simply scoff at any such scrutiny and say "that's life pal" or "that's just human nature", really makes you hope for something greater. — Outlander
Also, supposing that one needs a specific motivation is kind of putting the cart before the horse, and indicates a mentality where, in that metaphor I used in my last post, the pipe drains rather than fills, so you need to find something to keep filling yourself up with. If we can instead let everyone have a pipe that fills them to overflowing, it's not a question of needing something to motivate you, because your motivation comes from inside: it's just a question of where you're going to pour your overflowing positivity, and anything at hand will do. — Pfhorrest
You must have missed in the post you replied to where I explicitly dismiss cryogenics. — 180 Proof
I'm unsure if I understand you again, but I didn't mean to suggest that living longer will automatically make anyone happier (though relieving death anxiety is something that could make people suffering from it happier). Making people happy just to be alive is a separate thing from enabling them to continue to be alive. — Pfhorrest
Also, supposing that one needs a specific motivation is kind of putting the cart before the horse, and indicates a mentality where, in that metaphor I used in my last post, the pipe drains rather than fills, so you need to find something to keep filling yourself up with. If we can instead let everyone have a pipe that fills them to overflowing, it's not a question of needing something to motivate you, because your motivation comes from inside: it's just a question of where you're going to pour your overflowing positivity, and anything at hand will do.
Learn things just for the sake of learning them. Accomplish things just for the sake of accomplishing them. Teach others for the sake of teaching, and help them accomplish their goals too, just for the sake of helping. Reach out to harness all the resources and information of the universe, and then spread them far and wide to everyone else too. That project is probably infinite, but even if it's not, then you can just rest contented at having finally "won at the universe", and look back happily on all that you've learned and achieved, contented forever after. — Pfhorrest
I'm not sure I understand you correctly, but the point is very much to enhance life, yes. To make life feel worth living, and to enable people to continue living it. — Pfhorrest
Whaddaya mean? The Malthusian Trap — TheMadFool
Is the human ego so intent on continuing indefinitely? — Jack Cummins
I’m personally hesitant to be an early adopter of any new technology, and especially hesitant about invasive medical interventions, but if the time comes that it’s either risk a new technology or die, life is worth the risk. I just hope I live long enough to get to make that choice. — Pfhorrest
However, the connection between transhumanism and natalism isn't quite as straightforward as one might think. Immortality is quite obviously going to lead to a huge space/resource crunch - how many people can the earth sustain (carrying capacity of a habitat). Both antintalists and transhumanists may want to stop procreation but obviously for entirely different reasons. - for one, it's too painful, for the other it's overcrowding. — TheMadFool
Antibiotics & public health infrastructures since the late 1800s, for instance, have been doing the job (e.g. average life expentancy has at least doubled, IIRC, in less than a century). Sterilized obstetrics, family planning, eugenics, cryogenics, early cancer detection, etc since the middle of last century. The only "problem" is humanity's impatience with how gradual developments are and so far the lack of "radical breakthroughs" for solving "the death problem" once and for all. — 180 Proof