What does that say about a cynic's mental health? — TheMadFool
Do you know what? Based on that response, I don't think that this is going to be a constructive exchange. I think maybe I'll just leave you and your ingrained preconceptions be. — S
Some drugs are more addictive than others — S
Really cutting loose from the demands and commands of society may be a pretty dangerous thing. — Bitter Crank
If society withdraws its approval and tolerance from non-conformers, life can become wretched, or one might be terminated. — Bitter Crank
How many people are deliberate nonconformists, and how many are people who have decided to call their unhappy fate the result of their personal rebellion? — Bitter Crank
I've always thought of myself as something of a non-conformist. In fact, in many cases I just didn't fit in (and didn't know how to fit) so declaring nonconformity provided me cover. — Bitter Crank
I'm in favour of self-restraint and intervention when the situation calls for it. — S
What's wrong with my original wording? — S
What don't you understand about it? I don't think I was saying anything particularly hard to grasp. — S
Yes, finding out the hard way, but that doesn't have to be the end of the world. You can learn a lesson and adjust appropriately going forward. It doesn't have to be rehab, addiction, or an alarming change in behaviour. That's just resorting to more extreme circumstances in an attempt to bolster your argument. — S
I think that's true in most cases, but pragmatism isn't necessarily a virtue. We do all sorts of things that have no utility. An ethic of pragmatism sounds pretty dull. — Hanover
There are many who live their lives taking various recreational drugs throughout their lives (not me, by the way) and live happy lives. — Hanover
I know when I've done too much. — S
It's an individuals choice how many times - 0,1,100. — Drek
I don't agree that they can't be be taken more than once. — S
I disagree. — S
I thank Wallows for toughing it out in a tough world. — Nils Loc
The problem is that you don't articulate a specific principle here that determines morality from immorality. — Hanover
Yes, and for that same reason, let's ban skiing, sailing, abseiling, skydiving, rock climbing, scuba diving, racing, rugby, bowling, reading, sewing, playing video games, going to the cinema, discussing philosophy... — S
That it's a popular opinion doesn't mean that it's anything more than that. I'm entirely on board with those who would urge extreme caution with those kind of drugs because of that risk. But that's all it is: a risk. Not a prophecy, guarantee, or foregone conclusion. — S
You're confusing your own opinion for something more than that. You are not sufficiently equipped to determine that no one can get anything good out of it. You would have to know details about the lives and circumstances of so many people in so many situations that it's just not possible. — S
It's an example of loaded language. — S
In your opinion. — S
The harder stuff is more risky. That doesn't necessarily mean that it's worse. Is skiing more iffy than bowling? The former is more adventurous, the experience more exhilarating. These things are about what risks you're willing to take for recreational purposes. — S
Resort? — S
There it is again. Resort? — S
Maybe a lot of drug takers lack a meaningful life, but it only reveals your prejudice to ponder that question specifically of drug takers. — S
Are you talking about the domain of individuals? — Snakes Alive
The issue you're talking about is that the Barcan formula's validity makes it impossible that worlds accessible from a world have 'larger' domains than the world from which they're accessed: in other words, domains don't 'grow' across accessibility relations. This is fine, however, not because of commitments to modal actualism, but because to think that distinct worlds are associated with distinct domains in the first place is a mistake. — Snakes Alive
One can make a logic this way, but it is probably a bad idea. There is just one domain of individuals, and it is not anchored to worlds to begin with. — Snakes Alive
The validity of the Barcan formulae follows independently from ordinary, independently plausible semantics for the universal quantifier and the box. If one objects to it, one had better have a pretty good reason, and I'm not aware of one. — Snakes Alive
Accessibility relations hold among a set of worlds – it doesn't matter which one is actual, and the standard modal logic does not even mark an actual world. — Snakes Alive
he whole point of the modal logic is that any arbitrary formula can be evaluated fro truth or falsity relative to any world. And once you have a semantics for counterfactuals, you can plug this into your modal logic. — Snakes Alive
I don't see how it was not boiled down from the beginning. The analogy wasn't meant to be hard to make between the two ideas of the Buddhist/adversity potential person/adversity. — schopenhauer1
Not really, the story was to illustrate the point. The point has always been, there is no need to create adversity for someone else when that person did not need to experience adversity in the first place. — schopenhauer1
If by entity you mean the person who is forcing the Buddhist into adversity, and by life you mean the people who are procreating the potential person into existence, then yes. — schopenhauer1
No you're still not getting it. The Buddhist is like the non-existent/potential child. There was no need for it to be forced into experiencing adversity when they didn't need to. — schopenhauer1
That person who forced the Buddhist into adversity was not doing the right thing. — schopenhauer1
I am not claiming anything about how existence should be, other than that. — schopenhauer1
