Sam Harris podcas — WaterLungs
For example, during hallucinations we feel colors more vividly, the same colors of our day-to-day experience, but in a more intense way.
those same colors of everyday life are experienced with more intensity, giving a "metaphysical tone" the experience like something magical? Or making us realize there's no difference between the common and the metaphysical? But a spectrum of experiences with a continuity? — WaterLungs
- To make a coffee you have to act as someone who believes that coffee is real, not real in the ultimate metaphysical/epistemological sense, but real ENOUGH in the sense that: — WaterLungs
but a common sense acceptance that we need to suspend disbelief temporarily, to continue living life without questioning everything. Otherwise we couldn't leave our beds, because we would be trying to rationally justify/find a reason or a purpose to every single action we take. Here nature is important, were alive because breathing is automatic and doesn't depend on rational deliberations: a radical skeptic would die if breathing depended on his epistemological certainties.
- I think Hume describes this much better than me: — WaterLungs
We lose the ability to take the world for granted and stop believing in those common sense truisms we all agree on NOT QUESTIONING, for discussion sake - to avoid falling into a maddening relativism. — WaterLungs
to avoid falling into a maddening relativism. — WaterLungs
I have another Anscombe article! Inevitability both a joy and a frustration. This one is Causality and Determination. — Banno
why do many philosophers think that desires give people reasons to act and not other phenomena like pleasure or suffering for example? Finally, why think that our current desires give us reason to act but not our future desires? — TheHedoMinimalist
Many philosophers such as myself don’t see how our own desires give us any more reason to act than say the desires of others — TheHedoMinimalist
The kid on the island can figure out that (for instance) he can get the fruit of a tree by shaking the tree, instead of climbing up on it. — god must be atheist
Consider Nagel’s assumption that “we all believe that bats have experience”. Am I wrong to object and argue bats have nothing of the sort? that his famous essay is a round-about way of saying humans do not have bat bodies? Or should I forgive him this, and say “Well, it’s the limitations of language”? — NOS4A2
Is the sacrifice of pleasure worth becoming able to try to answer such questions? — Nikolas
When the word or verb must appears we need somehow sacrifice something. Probably our own pleasure to confront others. I guess this could be one of the steps to promote a community.What must I do?
would be subterfuges as well, such as Nihilism. Would you agree with this statement? — Georgios Bakalis
Do atheists actively not want God to exist? — Georgios Bakalis
is there ever an element of not wanting God to exists? — Georgios Bakalis
but should philosophers try to avoid nominalizing verbs and adjectives lest they risk leading others astray? — NOS4A2
It appears that the reason we fight, the reason for the arms race, is rights to resource. The world's population is growing exponentially and the per capita slice of the pie is shrinking rapidly and no prizes for guessing what lies at the end of that road. — TheMadFool
What's a better candidate for an eternal thing and/or an uncaused cause, a physical universe or a god? My bet is on a god. — RogueAI
real problem which is mutual animosity among the tribes of men. — TheMadFool
Can you use math to describe philosophy? — Huh
What are the reasons of them being good and bad?
How do we distinguish one from other? — RBS
If it is related to each individual then not all goods are good and not all bads are bad. — RBS
Interesting. Is it safe to assume we are talking about Subjective and Objective truth's? Perhaps one can think of their own sentience as their own unique language onto themselves, nevertheless, their own subjective truth... ? — 3017amen
I'm thinking we would simply not be able to react to a stimulus that say's...' I don't like what he/she just said, so therefore I'm going to respond (using language of course) in like manner... '. We would be denying our own Will, or at least our intuition, etc. I think... . — 3017amen
Our brains are structured to recognize patterns so I would say our ability to reason is innate. — Athena
If not, could our search for what we think of as the "soul" be somehow related to a connection between dimensions. — Steve Leard
. It is possible that you are dreaming the very same experiences that you are now having. — Aoife Jones
Even if by considering Keats, we can receive or even associate feelings of joy (in this case) with Truth, how does our feelings of truth manifest? Language only? Is our truth ours and ours only? What is Truth? — 3017amen
Freedom is the answer - not oppression. — counterpunch
Then I'm not sure you've thought through the implications of your suggestion that: — counterpunch
If it's a utopia, why is it full of irresponsible people having kids? — counterpunch
With regard to reproduction, I would simply give women control over their own bodies, with education, contraception and medical care - and if people were still incapable of raising their children properly, then the state should step in and remove the children from danger. But preventing "irresponsible" people from breeding is a non-starter. It's eugenics. It's morally abhorrent, totalitarian and wide open to abuse. — counterpunch
If evidence arises linking him to the crimes he committed should he be prosecuted. — Steve Leard
it refers to all of these thoughts that wouldn't make me feel like I amright reason
. I mean, the purest dorm of reason.mistaken

I already gave my answer as to the difference between beginning a life, and continuing a life that is already here and how ANs would not use the very things they are against (not forcing a situation onto someone, not getting consent, not harming) to prevent current suffering. The nonexistence of an actual person prior to birth makes all the difference here.
How would you deal with unsanctioned pregnancy? Would women become criminally liable for the natural functioning of their bodies? Would you be happy ordering terminations of unapproved pregnancies by court order?
we need at least two people for morality to make sense.
To my knowledge, no moral theory has a good enough explanation why suicide is immoral despite insisting to no end that it is.
