That's because you're those three monkeys, all in one. — baker
My post was a cutesy and a bit too obscure statement that truth, knowledge, facts, and beliefs are not something we normally use directly in our day to day lives. — T Clark
I'm not sure what is intended by your remark, but you can flesh it out if you feel like it. I am personally familiar with these religions being friendly with other religions and even encouraging education about other religions to their members. T — Ennui Elucidator
I'm on the golf course. I look at my lie. I look at the flag. I turn to my caddy and say "What do you think?" He reaches in the bag, pulls out a club, and hands it to me. I turn to make the shot. Now... What do I care about? I don't care if he believes it's the right club. I don't care if he knows it's the right club. I don't care if it's a fact it's the right club. I don't care if it's the truth it's the right club. Just give me the fucking club. — T Clark
Put simply - I can look like a raging tyrant, an ineffective debater, or a non-participant. I happen to think not-participating is generally the best choice. — Ennui Elucidator
For all of these words, the broader point remains - differences in facts are typically emblematic of differences in values/paradigms that are irreconcilable. I cannot, by mere words alone, force someone to change their deeply held beliefs that permit them to maintain claims about the world that appear counter-factual. — Ennui Elucidator
Let the world impose itself and the “facts” will out. — Ennui Elucidator
But his 'stove's Gem' invective is not against Kant per se, but against cultural relativism and post-modernism - 'perspectivism' in the vulgar sense. Jim Franklin, who was also around the Uni at that time and who is now a UNSW academic, has ventured this analysis. I don't think much of it, myself. (Franklin also has written some very interesting things on Aristotelian philosophy of maths. — Wayfarer
I personally don't know about the observer effect in QM. I know Wayfarer argues that it is important, highlighting some of the people who think observation is important. — Manuel
it generally gives me stuff that I prefer (even if I find the circumstance distasteful). — Ennui Elucidator
The world imposes itself on me and I try to mold it to my desires using whatever contrivance available. All “facts” are understood contingently and abandoned/modified as necessary. — Ennui Elucidator
I have no way to prove this, but wanted to get a few reactions.
Any thoughts? — Manuel
We might laugh about their religion being archaic, but they aren't the ones hanging from the helicopters. ;) — stoicHoneyBadger
Dawkins focuses on the fact of Islam, or Christianity or any other religion being factually incorrect. But what if the goal of a religion is not to be factually correct, but to give people moral guidance, thumos and social cohesion? — stoicHoneyBadger
Looks like I haven't done a good job with you. — T Clark
Lao Tzu - The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao.
Some guy - Hey, Lao Tzu, you're talking about something that can't be talked about. What's with that?
Lao Tzu - Tao as a thing is entirely illusive and evasive. Evasive and illusive. In it there is image. Illusive and evasive. In it there is thinghood. Dark and dim.
Some guy - This is such bullshit.
Lao Tzu - Go fuck yourself. — T Clark
How about taking your own advice and actually get to know a person? — baker
If wisdom arises from experience over time then are we just concerned with knowledge or at a more fundamental level something akin to satisfaction or even survival? What do you think? — Shawn
It's a fact for me, because I can feel my pain, but it's not a fact for you, because for all you know, I could be pretending. — Olivier5
Okay so we agree that a fact is an accurate observation, then? — Olivier5
Not sure what a "religious fact" would be? Do you have an example? — Olivier5
Could be that some philosophy is a self-immersating habit, while some of the rest is a cure for the first. Like bad music and good music, bad food and good food. — Zugzwang
A fact is an accurate observation. — Olivier5
My point is that as long as one is looking for happiness outside, one is going to be faced with an endless amount of problems. Even if you were to opt for the final solution (as some in the past did) and executed it in full (as those in the past haven't succeeded), so that you'd be left only with like-minded people, you'd still be living on a planet where there are volcano eruptions, tsunamis, earthquakes, dangerous animals, unwelcome genetic mutations, limited natural resources, and at that a planet that is on collision course with some asteroids, in a solar system whose sun will eventually explode. IOW, living on such a planet and looking for happiness outside, you'd still be miserable. — baker
In some ways, I think that knowledge is socially constructed and is not absolute. — Jack Cummins
Not everyone who gets branded as a narcissist is one. — baker
Sorry but I'm tired of guessing. — Olivier5
I am sorry that I have started poorly, and it may be that my thread will not work at all. My point is probably that many think we have such great knowledge in our grasp. I am not denying that, but I think that it is possible to become inflated and not recognize the limitations — Jack Cummins
