No, but the cat wouldn't let me sleep in, so there's that. And it's cold and windy and I really don't want to go out and muck out the chicken coup. So a good time to stay inside and trade insults with whomever is willing. — Banno
So your counterargument is that you don't want to? The point is that burden of proof is on the one claiming something. You claim the existence of God, then the burden of proof is on you. If you don't even know Russell's teapot I understand why you are confused, but it proves my point even better. In contemporary philosophy, theism is a joke. The scrutiny required for the level of philosophy done today requires much more than theists can manage to provide. — Christoffer
There's a teapot between Mercury and Venus and you can't prove me wrong! — Christoffer
This is basic stuff. — Christoffer
Nietzsche's inversion of values refers to how Christianity reverses the natural into the opposite. It stems from his contempt for Christianity. — Christoffer
God and religion is still irrelevant to humanity if we have good non-religious ethics system in place (which we have) and live our lives with self-reflection, skepticism, and a sense of logic and rational reasoning. — Christoffer
Many theists are blinded by the idea that religion and God is a foundation for which a fragile society is built upon. It's the Nietzchian fear of nihilism. — Christoffer
The only people who think that a society can't exist without a religious foundation, are the ones within such a religious framework. It's a usual theist argument that society needs religion and faith, but every time we have true atheism as the foundation in society, it's actually a lot more peaceful and rational. The common counterargument from theists then points out Leninist and Stalinist communism as an example of atheistic societies, but this is just false. Not only is it a simplification of Marxism, since Lenin and Stalin corrupted those ideas, but the key factor is that both Stalin and Lenin replaced God as a religious figure. — Christoffer
As I've said, atheism is about logical reasoning as a foundation, not proving God's lack of existence. If anything, in philosophy, the burden of proof is on the theist side and has been forever. — Christoffer
An atheist doesn't have a lack of belief in God, there's nothing lacking, there's just no logical assumption that there is a God, so it's not even on the list. The only reason atheists speak and think about the concept of "God" is because theists have proposed such ideas in society. — Christoffer
the idea that atheists lack a belief in God has become the norm explanation for atheism, which I don't think is accurate to what drives an atheist. — Christoffer
Western civilization according to Spengler aims at the infinite. — Wittgenstein
Well, that opening post is... embarrassing. — Banno
counterpunch You couldn't resist could you!!! — Mystic
After much philosophical reflection, La Rochefoucauld concluded that self esteem is the reason why we do most of what we do. We want to feel proud of ourselves, so even when we think we are being generous and selfless, we still unconsciously look at ourselves in the mirror saying "ain't I look good?" — Olivier5
I think stand up would be good.
But practice... — Mystic
You actually have some good jokes.
I like some of em. But a lot of dross in between.
Your timing is off.
And your getting your kunts mixed up... — Mystic
I doubt you have questions. — Mystic
More like your a crusader for the myth of sustainability, with a penchant for clichéd humour. — Mystic
Also,from the texts and life's of
Nietzeche,plato,Wittgenstein,aristotle,Kent,hegel. — Mystic
Excessive reflection is a sign of low self esteem. And the title philosopher often used to bolster prestige,an appeal to authority. — Mystic
I gave the matter some thought and a coupla points I want to discuss. — TheMadFool
William Lane Craig, not someone a philosopher might want to cite, said in a debate that self-awareness, knowing that you exist, amplifies suffering (hyperalgesia, allodynia) and I recall mentioning it somewhere that that's the key to morality - our suffering magnified by our sense of self, we begin to, or more accurately we're forced to, think about right and wrong (morality). — TheMadFool
Animals, most of them, lack self-awareness and even among those we've determined are self-aware are only so in very rudimentary ways. Thus, morality can't be a matter of simple biology common to all animals - — TheMadFool
2. The usual way morality is explained by the theory of evolution is by demonstrating how, for example, altruism benefits the altruistic individual. — TheMadFool
Yet, deep down, we can feel it in our hearts, we know something's off about it, our hearts (feelings) don't share our mind's (rationality) convictions that morality has now been explained by evolutionary theory. — TheMadFool
Hate to break it to you but no, you wouldn't! Sorry! — TheMadFool
I rest my case! — TheMadFool
You would know, right? — TheMadFool
That's an explanation but I'm sure you wouldn't go so far as to say that's the explanation, no? — TheMadFool
Morality, if you haven't already noticed, is human-exclusive i.e. only humans seem to possess it in degrees that would qualify morality as a distinct entity. — TheMadFool
Dostoevsky's warning - if God doesn't exist, everything is permitted — TheMadFool
I would have thought that development of an economic and social philosophy NOT based on consumerism and acquisition might be of vital importance. — Wayfarer
*Just to clarify the focus of my paper will be on Canadian/North American Indigenous peoples, not Australian Aborigines or other Indigenous groups (as this is a Canadian history course). — Grre
With many positions on modernity and the individual, can one say they are indifferent? Some philosophers say we are still living in modernity, for some we are in post-modernity, some say we were never modern. — Warren
This is a common, and flawed, defense. — Foghorn
Ok, but science is not a machine. It's run by human beings. And so declaring management "science based" does not automatically remove that management from the kinds of emotional agendas which rightly concern you. — Foghorn
As example, quite a few scientists willingly volunteered to develop the atomic bomb, even though at least some of them were clear minded enough to understand that doing so would present an existential threat to civilization. They weren't evil, they were just human. — Foghorn
Slapping "science based" on the regulation process doesn't remove the human element, because scientists too have religious, political and economic agendas which they pursue, just like everybody else. — Foghorn
This is the simplest thing really.
1) Everyone takes it to be an obvious given that the powers made available to children should be restricted due to their limited maturity, experience and judgement etc. — Foghorn
This seems a wildly inaccurate characterization of Wayfayer's writing. You're just sinking your own ship with this kind of talk. — Foghorn
No kidding. I have not said anything about religious conviction, you resort to that because your own dogmas are being challenged. — Wayfarer
Yes, I understand that too, and I addressed it. — Wayfarer
So, what does ‘a scientific understanding of reality’ mean, given that it must of necessity be ‘incomplete’? — Wayfarer
It means that it’s not ‘an understanding of reality’ as such. — Wayfarer
The ‘scientific worldview’ now is vastly different to the ‘scientific worldview’ of 1920 and it will probably be vastly different again in 2120. — Wayfarer
You're subtly conflating the two all the time in your posts. — Wayfarer
I agree that geothermal energy is likely important, but this thread is not about that issue. — Wayfarer
I disagree: science is the understanding of certain aspects of reality. Those understandings are not infallible and are always subject to the possibility of falsification. — Janus
I really, really do understand that. I make a living as a technical writer, I’ve worked for and with many engineers and software developers. I’m not a rustic peasant, nor an ideologue intent on dragging the world back into medievalism. I really do understand that science and technology are critical to almost every facet of modern life. I comprehend that, understand it, fully appreciate it. — Wayfarer
As regards scientific understanding of reality - science comprises hypotheses and models, which inform and guide technology and further scientific discovery. But as many here have already pointed out, science can be used for good or ill. The decision how to use science, what to research with it, is not itself a scientific question, it is guided by many factors, including curiosity, intuition, patronage, politics, and convention among many other things. Many working scientists are employed by industry for commercial, military and industrial ends. Hopefully they are generally working for positive ends, but there’s no scientific criteria for judging those. That rests on value judgement. — Wayfarer
But you can’t simply assume that it is has an intrinsically privileged point of view. So much remains a question of interpretation, of what the empirical facts mean, and that again is not a matter for science per se. — Wayfarer