I’m amazed that anyone of little acquaintance with pop/rock/rap music could be found nowadays. It plays everywhere you go, or if you stay home. — Todd Martin
Monotheism is not the insistence that God is a superior member of the set of beings hitherto designated 'the gods', although, considering the historical origins of monotheism, that is an all-to-understandable attitude. — Wayfarer
I have always found the novel to be a far better expression of truth and wisdom than academic philosophy and science.
For instance dickens is far superior to Wittgenstein and any neuroscientists publications.
Do you agree or disagree?
What are your reasons? — Mystic
What is faith though? Faith when given as a reason for believing in something is an empty placeholder for an actual reason. If the person actually had a reason they would just state that reason but they don’t so they say “faith” — DingoJones
I just want to say something really quick and end. When you give rebuttals (though you call it "alternatives") , it affects the person's credibility if they switch ans say "oh, i was just giving some alternatives, these aren't my rebuttals". Something to think about if you wish. — skyblack
Truth CAN be identified? So we don't have access to innate truths? Only philosophical questioning determines truth?
I like food. Do I need philosophy to determine if this is true! — Mystic
In this text Foucault defends "the ordinary of things" — besserlernen
Seems to me I need to make the point again. Morality is not about collectives, it's about the Other. The poverty of the myth of the individual is that it just fails to address the Other, and so fails to enter into moral discussion. Self-interest cannot form the basis for morality, because morality begins when one puts the interests of an Other ahead of one's own interests. In this sense individualism is the antithesis of morality.
The Other is not a collective; it is the person before you, now. The plurality is not a collective, but the Other. — Banno
Then arrogance is stupidity (un-intelligent), isn't it? Rather silly and worthless, considering it has no legs to stand on. It isn't backed by anything other than delusions of grandeur. — skyblack
How else to explain doubting the senses, solipsism, descartes demon etc,etc. — Mystic
How we interpret the Bible depends largely on our education. Liberal education prepared everyone to think abstractly and this makes mythology, stories, parables, not literally God's truth. A god did not make a man of mud and a woman from his rib. Christians who interpret the Bible literally have trouble with science, and education for technology dropped education for abstract thinking and we are in a mess now! Interpreting the Bible literally pits people against science and that works against our survival, turning those who rely on science firmly against religious folks. Who is the liar? Science and Satan or the religious community that denies science? — Athena
t is not so simple. It is not a matter of ethical principles but of whether particular acts are just or unjust. In a healthy society it is not enough that a sufficient number, (what number?),do something in order for it to be permissible. If we agree that murder is wrong, are we then wrong or is it both right and wrong if some group shouts "death to the infidels" and starts killing people? They consider themselves to be pious followers doing the will of their god, for which they will be rewarded. — Fooloso4
Now i have no idea what level of depression people had back then if they even had any at all?
My personal assumption is that depression wasn't even a thing back then and that's just my assumption basses on the few tribes still around today and the little bit that we know about them . — MAYAEL
does Craig's response mean that God's goodness is coincidental/accidental? (Seems a bit like kicking the can down the road.)
On another note, what does Craig's identity (God himself = the paradigm of goodness) mean for people doing the right thing (irrespective of their beliefs)? Coincidental/accidental? Say, do they somehow become part of God or something (un/wittingly)? Surely Aboriginal Australians did some good things before being polluted with ideas of Craig's God, err before the European invasions. — jorndoe
I don't care about "philosophers".
I've never once in this thread asked about "philosophers". — Need Logic Help
I don't take religious apologists seriously. I'm asking about serious philsci-experts, serious logicians, etc. — Need Logic Help
Does any serious/leading scholar of epistemology challenge the notion that nonbelief (in supernatural/religious claims) is rational? I would love to read their argument, if so. I don't imagine that that's controversial.
The word "atheism" is extremely loaded, so I avoid it. I only care about whether nonbelief is rational. "Atheism" is a nightmare of a term, since it might imply an assertion about God not existing or some such thing. I try to avoid that term at all costs, to avoid massive confusions. — Need Logic Help
Thanks for responding. I want to clarify something absolutely crucial.
I would imagine:
--nonbelief (in supernatural/religious claims) is not remotely controversial among leading scholars of epistemology
--serious scholars will not challenge "atheist" commentators on the issue of whether nonbelief is rational
--nonbelief is fully rational based on the most rigorous thinking in epistemology
--"atheist" commentators probably make all sorts of philosophical mistakes, despite being correct in their conclusion that nonbelief is rational — Need Logic Help
I'm just interested in the questions that I asked in the post about whether there's any bad philosophy being spread. — Need Logic Help
When you mention the "commonly cited" textbook, is that something that Dillahunty cites? — Need Logic Help
Maybe it wanted to have the experience of getting up late one morning and ambling down to the store to buy a lemon gelato. — Wayfarer
Thanks. I'm just pushing this idea as a potential fact: "the religious people are way off-base and Dillahunty also commits major errors when he wades into the pools of phil and philsci and logic and epistemology".
I just want to make that clear, since it's a false choice to say that either Matt is solid or his religious interlocutors are solid; they could both be wrong about various things in philosophy. — Need Logic Help
There seems to be a potential major error here. If not, I apologize. — Need Logic Help
Dillahunty has no problem talking about philosophy without having any philosophers check whether his philosophy commentaries are solid — Need Logic Help
And are those bullet-points (the ones that relates to philsci) all solid points to make? I realize that in order to know if those bullet-points contrast with anything that Dillahunty has ever said, one needs to be familiar with Dillahunty's commentary on science. — Need Logic Help
So the question is, is stuff good because it is loved by god, or is it loved by god because it is good? — Banno
since I can do evil, I can do something that god cannot do. So I am in at least one way more able than god. — Banno
David Graeber was an anthropologist, and he also mentioned the same thing, in less detail though. — Manuel
What if we are not the source of intelligence but rather receivers, much as a television reads and interprets a signal from beyond itself? — Foghorn
As I currently understand this theory, the signal is not from beyond itself. — Foghorn
What if we are not the source of intelligence but rather receivers, much as a television reads and interprets a signal from beyond itself? — Foghorn
When Scotty from Marketing set out his approach with the slogan "If you have a go, you get a go", he was espousing the social contract Midgley critiques; he disenfranchises those who cannot, or will not, as he puts it, 'have a go' - children, the disabled, indigenous communities, the poor. — Banno
If we were to edit that claim to read our relationship with science, then the claim has some merit.
Blaming science would be like blaming a hammer for someone's bashed in head. Science is a tool for developing new knowledge. It works. It's us that doesn't work so well. — Foghorn
Midgely also says that philosophers should 'stop imitating Hegel.' — Jack Cummins
