Hypothetically speaking supposing there was an omniscient being - doesn’t have to be (a) god necessarily maybe a hyper intelligent AI or a genie or whatever but you could ask it one question - anything at all, what would it be? — Benj96
Incidentally, this argument refutes utilitarianism:
1. If utilitarianism is the correct normative ethical theory, then gang rape is right (if the gang is sufficiently big)
2. Gang rape is wrong (irrespective of the size of the gang)
3. Therefore utilitarianism is not the correct normative ethical theory. — Bartricks
1. If rape is wrong, then you ought not to rape
2. Rape is wrong
3. Therefore, you ought not to rape — Bartricks
↪SolarWind
How do you know that X is wrong? — SolarWind
By my reason.
Anyway, you've missed the point. I derived an ought from an is. Here, again:
1. If Xing is wrong, then we ought not to do X
2. Xing is wrong
3. Therefore, we ought not to do X — Bartricks
If xing is wrong, you ought not x, yes? — Bartricks
↪SolarWind
Total nonsense. You can't seriously think this -
What we should or should not do cannot be derived from being. — SolarWind
has any meaning? — Bartricks
Well, if we lack free will, then we lack all obligations. Or at least, that seems self-evident. Obligations, whether moral, instrumental or epistemic, presuppose free will. Thus, if we lack free will, then we lack any obligation to do or think anything. As such, if hard determinism is true, nothing you think is anything you ought to think, or ought not to think, and likewise for anything you do. So it is a kind of dead-end. — Bartricks
I concede you are right. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Well no if you believe in rebirth you have already a reason to "act good". But most people who believe in rebirth don't they follow some kind of religion already? Don't know, just asking.
And well then, we would have to convince more people start believing on rebirth. But without any God for that, wouldn't that be difficult to happen? — dimosthenis9
.If you gonna make people stop believing in religions then WHAT could replace God? How can you convince people to be "good" ??? — dimosthenis9
↪SolarWind
< This infinity is never reached because it is only a potential infinity. We cannot be in the moment of "infinity" and therefore never have experienced infinite happiness.> — SolarWind
All that matters is the good goes on forever. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Quantum superpositions amongst entangled wavicles are fundamental, which give rise at a very basic level to percepts, which eventually reach enough emergent organization to constitute consciousness. It seems as obvious to me as evolution was in Darwin's seminal account, but the research that proves exactly how it all works is yet to be performed. — Enrique
Grow to more than infinity?
-10 + infinite good = infinite good
-157 + infinite good = infinite good
-258958 + infinite good = infinite good
-999999999999999 + infinite good = ..... — Down The Rabbit Hole
Why is "b+" better than "b"? — Down The Rabbit Hole
... (a) no finite bad to be cancelled out by the good (b) finite bad that is cancelled out by the good, and as there is no reason to prefer "a" or "b", god acts completely reasonably in picking at random or letting what will be, be. — Down The Rabbit Hole
If you ask the wrong question you will inevitably get the wrong answer. — prothero
That paves the way for a souless universe devoid of any inherent value or purpose.
The way I see it, if God exists and is omnipotent, then I think he can do as he pleases. He is under no obligation to submit his actions or the motives of his actions to human scrutiny and judgment. — Apollodorus
There's a reason I say I'm not the same person as you. — InPitzotl
To get this scenario to make sense, it's necessary to presume that identity is, rather than constructed and generated by a physical construct, somehow fundamental and separate from physical constructs. And that presumption is basically just a presumption of dualism. — InPitzotl
And thus I think God can create a stone too heavy for him to lift, and lift it. — Bartricks
Most of them are just silly questions that admit of easy answers. I believe in God, so I'll answer them.
Heavy Rock:
1. Can God create a rock so heavy, he himself cannot lift it? — elucid
Yes. God is all powerful and so can do anything, including making a rock so heavy he cannot lift it. He can lift it too. — Bartricks
On reflection, of course, if there is no life after death we have nothing to fear. — Apollodorus
Anyways we've been going around in circles for a while now. — khaled
But even if Qualia only depended on the physical configuration, you have absolutely no way of finding the significant variables. Maybe people born after 3 pm on Wednesdays actually enjoy torture (though they’ll act like the rest of us and scream). — khaled
But as you said, qualia must be completely separate from any physics, or else the physicists will consume it as some force or other. So you have no reason to believe that a clone of you, with the exact same matter configuration, would have the same, or similar, or any qualia. — khaled
And you have 0 reason to believe they are experiencing the same qualia as you, if any qualia at all. — khaled
I doubt qualia can be treated as a good basis for ethics. Especially given that you can't even tell anyone else has it other than yourself. How do you know the keyboard you're typing on right now isn't in extreme pain? Those are the questions you have to ask when you propose an ineffable, private qualia. — khaled
↪SolarWind
"Epiphenomenalism is true and we can prove it:
If there would be a mind effect, this effect could be captured by the physicists, they will eat everything what has an effect and define a force to it.
What remains can only be an epi. Q.e.d. !" — SolarWind
This assumes that something will remain. I don't think so. — khaled
Do you think that some physical effects are not caused sufficiently by physical causes? Because it's that or epiphenomenalism. — khaled
The mistake most make when it comes to time is to conceive of it as a kind of extended stuff, and that immediately generates actual infinities. For now any region of time, like any region of space, can be infinitely divided. And thus we have to posit actual infinities. Which can't exist. — Bartricks