• Is perfection subjective ?
    it can then likewise also lead to unicorn based technologies we all live by and universally agree upon.javra

    That I would like to see. Apparently their horns contain magic...

    But you are quite right to say that a perfect circle and a unicorn have little in common. A perfect circle is a mathematical abstraction, while a unicorn is a mythical creature. The unicorn relies upon open an open ended imaginative discourse, while the circle's properties are defined mathematically.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    By entailment: If a perfect circle is no more objective/true/real than is a unicorn, then the number pi is no more objective/true/real than is a unicorn.javra

    But I didn't say that a perfect circle is no more real than a unicorn. I said we can't rely upon the mechanism you identified since it can also imagine a unicorn. It's a critique of the epistemology not the putative conclusion per say.

    You made this point which I liked:

    A perfect circle is realized in this world by all minds which can comprehend it's, granted non-physical, being and, furthermore, all minds with sufficient comprehension will be able to thus realize an understanding of the exact same geometric form.javra

    But it may also lead to unicorns. :wink:
  • To What Extent is 'Anger' an Emotion or Idea and How May it Be Differentiated from 'Hatred'?
    All experience is meaningful, and all meaning is valuative. All valuation is affective.Joshs

    Nice. :up:

    I think I agree, but I would add that it is not the expression of anger which is the biggest problem today in our polarized world, but the failure to see the world from the perspective of others such that what appears as malevant intent can be seen instead as the other’s best effort to live ethically based on their vantage. Anger is blame, and blame impugns intent, delegitimizing the other’s motives. Whether we express our anger or not , as long as we cling to blame, we delegitimize the other, as seen in today’s political discourse.Joshs

    A way of thinking we really need to overcome. Any thoughts on that?
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    A perfect circle is realized in this world by all minds which can comprehend it's, granted non-physical, being and, furthermore, all minds with sufficient comprehension will be able to thus realize an understanding of the exact same geometric form. Such that this understanding is objective.javra

    Nice. I hear you but i don't think this is all that useful a formulation. We can find any number of minds to agree and visualise a unicorn but it still doesn't make it true. In this way we can also have objective accounts of ghosts and UFO too. Not sure what the word objective adds to this understanding.

    But its getting a bit late for me. And, again, I've got nothing to sell. So I'll leave it at that for the time being.javra

    No worries. I don't have the right currency, anyway. Have a good one.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    My actual point is what evidence do we have and can anyone provide an example in the real world of such a perfect thing? Not an abstraction, not an argument, not a theoretical description: but an actual perfect thing.Tom Storm

    Exactly. Can we demonstrate perfection in any thing?

    Abstractions are abstracted from concrete givens, and as far as I know there are no concrete examples of perfect circles.javra

    A perfect circle is still an abstraction even if there is no such thing as one in real life. Abstractions are not always directly derived from concrete examples. They can also emerge from conceptual reasoning, logical deduction, or mathematical principles. But my point doesn't rest on use of the word abstraction. Call it 'theoretical' if that sounds better to you.

    are you saying that the (perfect) circles do not occur in the real world, but only in fictitious worlds?javra

    Do we know if a perfect circle can be realised? I call it an abstraction because until it is concrete it is just an idea that represents general qualities or features distinct from specific instances or occurrences.

    But even if there were a perfect circle what does this mean for perfect morality? Is it the same use of the word perfect or is this another equivocation?

    And by now I've forgotten what Bob Ross was arguing about morality and perfection in the first place. :wink:
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    I just find you implicit assertion that objectively perfect givens do not occur,javra

    Fair enough. You are entitled to that reaction.

    But have I said that objectively perfect things do not occur? I actually don't think this, so if you can find me saying it, I withdraw it.

    My actual point is what evidence do we have and can anyone provide an example in the real world of such a perfect thing? Not an abstraction, not an argument, not a theoretical description: but an actual perfect thing.

    And I'm not even sure if we came to an agreed working definition of perfection.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    I'm not selling anything, youjavra

    Surely you know this expression essentially means, 'I do not accept the proposition you are putting to me'. Or are you not, in fact, trying to convince me of something via argument? Anyway, I've already said syllogisms don't do it for me. Let's see what others think.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    No. I'm not going for it. But nice try. Someone else may buy it.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    Nice work.

    But don't we have to ask first, "Is anything objective?" You kind of just asked that, so I think you would agree this question is in the mix here. I mean, if nothing is objective, or we can't know it if it is, than what measuring stick can we hold up to anything to adjudge "No, this one is subjective." And then to ask about a thing like 'perfection' whether it is subjective or not - difficult question.Fire Ologist

    Good point. I guess I would say that instead of ‘objective’ there are intersubjective agreements on matters. These are held by communities which share values and world views. Politics, religion, art and science are examples of such intersubjective communities and yet even here there are schisms.

    I thought you were only interested in perfection's application to morality;javra

    Indeed, but you know what it's like here; you enter a conversation and come out the other side covered in the conceptual detritus of ideas others raise in your passing.

    objectivity as that state of being which is fully impartial relative to all coexistent sentience (let me know if you have a better but incongruous definition of “objectivity”),javra

    I don't understand that sentence.

    p1) There either can occur or cannot occur such a thing as an objectively perfect circle (this in contrast to the subjective perfection of a circle which my five-year old niece has drawn on paper).

    p2) If there is no such thing as an objectively perfect circle, then neither can there be such thing as an objectively imperfect circle.

    p3) If there is no such thing as an objectively imperfect circle, one can then objectively have a circle which takes the shape of an octagon.

    p4) A circle in the shape of an octagon, however, is not a circle when objectively addressed - as is commonly confirmed by all sane humans.

    c1) Therefore, there is such a thing as an objectively perfect circle.

    c2) Ergo, objectively perfect givens can and do occur.
    javra

    I'm not a big syllogism guy. Firstly I can never understand them and secondly it seems to me (as my old philosophy tutor used to argue) that one can make a valid argument for anything using a syllogism. But reality will always have its own ideas. I stay away from them.

    Let's just take P3

    The fallacy here lies in the equivocation on the term "imperfect circle." In the first part of the statement, "imperfect circle" I assume refers to a circle that deviates from the ideal geometric definition of a circle, perhaps in terms of symmetry or roundness. However, in the second part of the statement, "imperfect circle" seems to be interpreted as any shape that is not a perfect circle, including polygons like an octagon.

    The fallacy occurs because the two interpretations of "imperfect circle" are not equivalent. A circle that takes the shape of an octagon is not objectively a circle; it's objectively an octagon. An octagon lacks the defining characteristics of a circle, such as being round and having a single continuous curve.

    But let's not do syllogisms.

    You did give me a chance to use the word 'objectively' so maybe there is progress. :wink:
  • Asexual Love
    Sounds good to me. What part of the world are you from?
  • Asexual Love
    what is Valentine’s Day? I’ve never had to engage with it. My memory from movies is that you send anonymous cards to people you have a crush on. And I imagine some young couples might go out to dinner and buy presents for each other. Is that it?
  • Asexual Love
    I am surprised to see Valentine's day come up here. Apparently it is February 14th. Not that this means anything, but I don't know anyone who has taken any notice of it. I thought it was an old Victorian tradition that mainstream Americans (mainly) seemed to go in for. We've just had Valentine's day and at my work (around 40 staff) the subject never came up and I would think most people would consider it a cheesy mainstream pseudo-event used to sell stuff (presumably trinkets, flowers and dinners?) like the inconsequential Mother's and Fathers Day.
  • Creation from nothing is not possible
    Do we know or can we demonstrate that there was ever a case of nothing?
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    It strikes me that 'perfection' is a word which we use in various ways - from a mere superlative to an almost transcendental category. Which usage is correct?Tom Storm

    "The word perfect is used in various ways.." This sounds like subjectivity is at play.

    "...it just means..." This sounds like objectivity is at play.
    Fire Ologist

    You're almost there. Keep going....

    What would really be interesting is what you mean by "transcendental implications" in general, and then apply it to "perfection".Fire Ologist

    Yes, what a great question! Wouldn't that be interesting? Imagine if there were a Platonic category of perfection - an instantiation of perfection that operates above and beyond any human criteria of value. The way the Platonic realm is said to work. Wouldn't that be something? Do you believe in this category?
  • Analysis of Goodness
    Ok. Perfection is identical to flawlessness. There are only two types of perfection: hypothetical and actual perfection. The former is pragmatic goodness; the latter moral goodness.Bob Ross

    What I meant was an actual instantiation of perfection, not more abstractions or discussions of usage. Let's look at something in the world which we can agree upon is an example of perfection.

    There is no chief function of a clock.. .Bob Ross

    Well if that's the case then we can't say what perfection in a clock looks like since there will be multiple competing possibilities as I have already described. I've already said that time keeping is but one dimension in those who collect clocks. :wink:
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    The word perfect is used in various ways, sometimes it just means ‘great’ or ‘cool’. The more interesting philosophical aspect of this is the transcendental implications of the idea of perfection.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    As I said earlier, 'perfect' generally means that which can not be improved upon. I entered this discussion by looking for an example of this understanding of perfection in relation to morality. It is this I am interested in, not its imprecise and multifarious uses in ordinary discourse, poetic or otherwise.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    When someone I'm enamored with tells me they'll see me at 10 o'clock, I'm gonna reserve the right to reply, "perfect".javra

    You would be using the word metaphorically/poetically.

    Yes, as you've mentioned, this would require adopting some variant of the Platonic ideal/form of “the Good” - but is in no way sinister in and of itself.javra

    I don't think Platonism is sinister. Just unwarranted.

    The word sinister came up specifically for the notion below.

    How does one describe a 'fit for purpose' morality? Sounds sinister. Fit for whose purpose?Tom Storm

    I so far take it you're not big on objective morality.javra

    I think morality is a code of conduct that shifts with time and varies between cultures. There are intersubjective agreements made around principles like - 'we should prevent suffering' which can operate as a 'foundation' for moral choices. But in the end morality is a conversation we have about oughts and ought nots.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    Let’s just lose the work perfect if all we mean is fit for purpose. Which then takes us back to more pragmatic relationships with ideas. How does one describe a 'fit for purpose' morality? Sounds sinister. Fit for whose purpose?

    Let’s call this chair the perfect chair - would you be happy to have the label perfect applied to it rather than just adequate?kindred

    No. See above.

    Perfect generally means that which can't be improved upon. Where do we find this perfect thing? Unless we accept Platonism?
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    I’d just call that fit for purpose.
  • Is perfection subjective ?
    I was contemplating this question and would like to hear the thoughts of fellow thinkers here on whether perfection is a trait that can be universally acknowledged or whether it’s a more subjective description that can also evoke aesthetics in the subject.kindred

    How about we start with an actual example of perfection in the world and then go from there?

    It strikes me that 'perfection' is a word which we use in various ways - from a mere superlative to an almost transcendental category. Which usage is correct?
  • Analysis of Goodness
    Can you demonstrate an instantiation of perfection about which we can all agree upon so that I can see what perfection 'looks' like?

    Which kind of perfection?
    Bob Ross

    Any.

    Only if you agree that telling time is the chief function of a clock

    I did not argue this in the OP: I said that pragmatic goodness is about utility towards a purpose (or purposes), and an example of this is a ‘good’ clock in ordinary language: we say a clock is ‘good’ when it can adequately tell the time—because it fulfills the commonly accepted purpose of telling the time that it was designed for.
    Bob Ross

    You've just repeated my point in different words. I said that identifying what counts as good is subject to a multiplicity of potential criteria. How do we deicide which is the right frame?

    I suspect we are not going to agree - I am more interested in quesions and peeling back presuppositions and in recognizing the role of personal values and you seem more interested in locating some form of objectivity from experince.

    But I would be interested in your example of perfection.
  • Analysis of Goodness
    I hope, Cecily, I shall not offend you if I state quite frankly and openly that you seem to me to be in every way the visible personification of absolute perfection.

    Oscar Wilde: The Importance of Being Earnest

    I struggle to follow your argument - possibly because I am not a philosopher and also because I regard words like goodness, evil and perfection as being contingent and subject to personal or intersubjective worldviews.

    a good clock is a clock that can tell the time,Bob Ross

    Only if you agree that telling time is the chief function of a clock. As someone who has spent a lot of time in horology circles, the idea of a 'good' clock is subject to many other considerations, telling time may be the least important - age, maker, decorative appeal, historic significance, may all rate higher than time telling. I guess what I'm saying is that when you come to establishing what is good you are trapped by the criteria of value you use to establish merit.

    Can you demonstrate an instantiation of perfection about which we can all agree upon so that I can see what perfection 'looks' like?
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    'm not surprised. The standard sales pitch makes big assumptions about what believing in God means. There are also people whose belief in God means guilt, self-loathing and sadismLudwig V



    I do accept that "is" does not imply "ought". But there is no doubt that "is" does lead people to conclude "ought".Ludwig V

    Certainly and it makes sense. We make choices about what we ought to do based on inferences and predictably.
  • Do Luxuries Necessarily make one happy? Or should we just avoid luxurious life for "True Happiness"
    I don't know , do momentarily pleasures take away long term pleasures of life?No One

    What are the 'long term pleasures of life' and what do you mean by 'momentarily pleasures'?

    The title of your OP is a bit clearer. But I think most people know already that money can't buy happiness (hence the saying) and that owning some trinkets and vulgar displays of wealth don't really work for anyone. Some of the most unhappy people I have known have also been the wealthiest.

    This isn't because happiness is fleeting or because material things come and go, it's because some people have psychological problems which can't be addressed merely by buying stuff.

    The average day of each person is sad, boring, depressing and nihilistic.javi2541997

    While this might be true for some, I can't say I agree with this. Sad, depressing and nihilistic feature occasionally, but not in my average day or even my average month.
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    Religions codify and organize life, so it is easy to see what the implications are of accepting his arguments. Atheism and Agnosticism do not have a codified way of life that goes with them and it is not clear what kind of attitude or way of life might go with them.Ludwig V

    Yeah. That's the key. People often confuse atheism with secular humanism. Which does have a worldview. Atheism itself is about a single issue and doesn't have a worldview. I know atheists who believe in astrology, ghosts and UFO abductions, so skepticism isn't necessary.

    For, after all, what deserves the first place in our studies is the consideration of God and our duty; which to promote, as it was the main drift and design of my labours, so shall I esteem them altogether useless and ineffectual if, by what I have said, I cannot inspire my readers with a pious sense of the Presence of God; and, having shown the falseness or vanity of those barren speculations which make the chief employment of learned men, the better dispose them to reverence and embrace the salutary truths of the Gospel, which to know and to practice is the highest perfection of human nature.

    For my money this is waffle. It only makes sense if you already presuppose an account of god as per Berkeley. A Scientologist might make similar arguments using their beliefs. It's just the rhetoric of someone who assumes truth. I'm not aware of the Gospels offering humans anything except some stories and claims which can be twisted in endless directions. Jesus death seems absurd and pointless. To believe in the New Testament you could be a rapist or a priest (or both), a homophobic fascist or a gay socialist. I would suggest there is no Christian worldview either. It supports disparate and contradictory worldviews.

    In a different vein, Existentialism (and Romanticism) seem to me to be a response to the idea that the universe is a soulless, meaningless machine.Ludwig V

    Does romanticism generally hold that the world is soulless or meaningless? Existentialism certainly seems to have been constructed as a way to deal with meaninglessness and in Camus' case, absurdity. The idea that we need to find meaning in a world without gods in it always makes me laugh. It's not as if theists don't find life meaningless. I have worked in the area of suicide intervention and on balance those who find life meaningless and become suicidal are just as likely (if not more so) to believe in a god.
  • The philosophy of humor
    I think your response is parochial in some sense.
    Those parameters will only meet your humour benchmark. For others, it will be different t
    AmadeusD

    Perhaps you didn't finish your response. I assume you see my comment as personal judgement. I don't disagree. Given he asked - 'what do you guys think' - what I provided is what I think. :wink:

    Is it possible to answer this question without personal judgement?
  • The philosophy of humor
    What do you guys think about dark humor and sarcasm?Born2Insights

    Depends what you mean. Most alleged dark humor and sarcasm is fairly tame and piss-poor. The really dark stuff is off limits to most as it deeply offends. Sarcasm is often predictable and dull - note also the old the saying that 'sarcasm is the lowest form of wit'. Irony and satire are somewhat richer, but may also suffer from conventional dullness if not undertaken by someone with some talent.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    Basically any Mark Twain quote.
    — Lionino
    How can you tell, since most of them are ironic or sarcastic anyway?
    baker

    Yes, he was a primarily a humorist, so most of his quotes were intended as provocations or quips.

    Hence -

    'Never put off till tomorrow what may be done day after tomorrow just as well.'

    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.”'

    'God created war so that Americans would learn geography.'
  • What’s your description of Metaphysics?
    Is it not the case that every worldview is located in some form of metaphysics (the nature of reality)? The extent of awareness of this varies. Some scientists, for instance, may posit that they don't do metaphysics, but the notion that reality can be understood is a metaphysical presupposition.
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    Are atheism and agnosticism ways of life? In a way, yes. Perhaps not entirely comfortable.Ludwig V

    How so?
  • The philosophy of humor
    Watch Jerry Seinfeld's Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. Comedians talking about what is funny, how they construct a funny bit. You see them trying out jokes on each other, just goofing around, showing how they are thinking. Mostly they are just comedians being funny, but you see the art, the science a bit.Fire Ologist

    Humour is cultural and subjective. I find Seinfeld about as funny as lung cancer. Contrived humour I generally avoid although in this context I find British comedy more appealing. My idea of hell is having to sit though a stand up comedy show. When I laugh it will ususally be at something spontaneous happening around me, rather than anything manufactured to create laughter.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    How about "Workers of the world Unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains!" Is that true?BC

    Wouldn’t have thought so. You may also lose your jobs or your life - depending upon the country. But the sentiment is laudable and we need more of it.

    Personal property which greatly exceeds need qualifies as theft, IMHO. A small family does not need a vast McMansion on 5 acres of farm land planted in high maintenance Kentucky blue grass (popular lawn grass) and other landscaping cliches. Don't forget the 4 car garage.BC

    That’s a tough one. I think one can argue that personal property is fine. Where do we draw the line in terms of what is enough for one family? My biggest gripe with McMansions is the aesthetic crime. The vulgarity and banality of the architecture. Appalling ‘entertainment’ rooms and the like. In Australia, all the new money favours French Provincial ‘architecture’ - which is neither French nor provincial. It’s the brutal tastelessness and cultural soup of a Disney Company style guide.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    I hear you and it has got me thinking that there's a separate aspect to these 'Hallmark' style affirmations.

    When someone says - 'You can be anything you want', I don't think it is meant to be taken as a literalist declaration of unlimited possibility. I think the sentiment of the saying is - 'Go after whatever you want, because you never know. Many fights are lost before they begin.'

    Quite possibly some of these sorts of sayings are not intended as literalist accounts of potentialities or states of affairs, but rather they are aspirational or 'sketches' of approximate wisdom.

    One of my favorites is attributed to Balzac - "Behind every great fortune, there is a great crime." It's by no means entirely true, but it is so rich in aesthetic truth that it might as well be a fact.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    I have seen a lot of the dark side of it, though.Paine

    For sure. And that is the issue here. Many of us are so disillusioned that we are almost incredulous at the thought there might be appropriate instantiations of such a sentiment.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    Nicely done. I think the first three are more factoids which can be contested rather than sayings per say. But I get it.

    How about "the United States is a democracy"?BC

    I'd probably say it is. It may be a dysfunctional democracy, with vested interests predominating, but there is still a vote and, presumably, if the eligible voting public were really motivated and involved, real change could still happen. The problem with many political systems is the quality of the voting.

    Any American can be PresidentBC

    False. :up: Any American within certain parameters - rich, native born, connected, etc.

    Peace-loving nation"?BC

    Is that a saying or just a descriptive term which is almost incoherent? I think, perhaps, you can love peace yet be in constant conflict.

    You can be whatever you want to be.BC

    For some this is true. Obviously the 'whatever' can be interpreted in crazy ways outside, I think, the expression's intention. I cannot be a nuclear power plant, for instance. However, if you are rich and smart the chances are you can be whatever you want to be. Sometimes it just takes one of those.
  • Sound great but they are wrong!!!
    Perhaps, where respect that is due...Outlander

    Exactly.