I already said to keep your fuckin arguments to yourself, it seems you didn't get the point. Let me be more clear: If you stand to deny a vast body of scientific data, then you are a god damn quack and you need to go somewhere that is accepting of quacks and holy-fools. — Garrett Travers
That which does not exist leaves no evidence behind to analyze except the absence of evidence itself. — Garrett Travers
No, best not discuss Epicurus with someone who knows about him and is able to show him to be a poor reasoner, albeit an ingenious one.
But arguments, it seems, do not interest you. — Bartricks
If violations of the Human Consciousness are occuring within our purview, then perhaps such action is on the table, but the acknowledgement of such an obligation would need to uniformly consensual, and rationally planned to the absolute best of our ability. — Garrett Travers
If everyone would live an Epicurean (or Stoic, I would say) life most if not all our problems would be resolved. — Ciceronianus
That we should be free to live such a life is clear; that others (not just the government, but other people) should be free to prevent us from living such a life by living however they see fit isn't at all clear, to me. — Ciceronianus
Legal rights which protect our freedom, and ability, to live a tranquil, wise, virtuous life are desirable. — Ciceronianus
Legal rights which allow others to restrict that freedom, or limit or extinguish our ability to live that life, are not. — Ciceronianus
It's a conundrum I struggle with more and more in these dark times. — Ciceronianus
So you reason like this: materialism is true because science. — Bartricks
Now, put down your microscope and turn on your reason and try - try - and do some philosophy. — Bartricks
If you think its conclusion is true, then you think killing someone does not harm them. So punching you would be a more harmful thing to do to you than killing you. If you are about to stub your toe and I can prevent that by killing you, then that would bein your best interests. That is stupider than a stupid thing on stupid day, is it not? — Bartricks
If the conclusion of a deductively valid argument is false — Bartricks
If it helps, read that via a microscope, as then it would be scientific as you observed it using an instrument of science. — Bartricks
Again, look down the microscope at this: if 1 or 2 is false, and 1 is true, then 2 is false. — Bartricks
But how can 2 be false if some scientists who don't understand the boundaries of their own discipline or expertise think it is true? How can that be? How could Garret be wrong. — Bartricks
Now, this is a good argument:
1. To be harmed at time t1 you need to exist at time t1.
2. Our deaths harm us
3. Therefore our deaths do not end our existence — Bartricks
That you cannot reconcile the conclusion with your worldview is 'your' problem, not evidence the conclusion is false. — Bartricks
So, your argument that materialism is true, is that it is true. Good stuff!! A+ — Bartricks
1. If p, then q
2. P
3. Therefore q — Bartricks
You accept that death is a harm. Well then you are rationally obliged to accept the conclusion if you accept the existence condition. — Bartricks
Then you said some patently false things about deductively valid arguments. — Bartricks
if the conclusion of a deductively valid argument is false, then at least one premise is false. — Bartricks
Incidentally, how do you know an argument is valid? Do you look at it down a microscope? Can you weigh validity or touch it? Is it made of molecules? — Bartricks
Yes, all true and valid propositions are tautological by definition, both logically and inductively. A=A. — Garrett Travers
No, it didn't, or Q would have been repeated instead of modified. Plain and simple. Your conclusion was R, not Q. — Garrett Travers
A harm as in an injury to my body. — Garrett Travers
Now, this is a good argument:
1. To be harmed at time t1 you need to exist at time t1.
2. Our deaths harm us
3. Therefore our deaths do not end our existence
— Bartricks
P>Q
P
_____
R
This is your argument in terms of logic. The ending of existence is not a conclusion that follows logically from this proposition. Properly written in modus ponens, the proposition would look thus:
P(harm at t1)>Q(t1 existence)
P(harmed at t1)
_____
Q(existed at t1)
not R (existed at t2) — Garrett Travers
Which means my death cannot be the cessation of my existence. — Bartricks
Because death is a harm. If death improves our condition, then it is not a harm. If death is nothing, then it is not a harm. If death makes our condition worse, then it is a harm and we have reason to avoid it - and that is clearly the case, for the reason of virtually everyone confirms that death is a great harm. So great we use it as the most severe punishment. So great it is only if you are in agony with no prospect of it ending that you have reason to opt for death. We can reasonably conclude then that life after death is worse than life before it by some margin. — Bartricks
People are afraid of death (apart from the being afraid of the suffering that dying might entail) because it is the unknown. — Janus
And none of my arguments assume their conclusions. — Bartricks
1. If I am harmed by an event at time t1, then I exist at time t1
And the meaning of 2 can be expressed thusly:
2. I am harmed by the event of my death when it occurs.
From which it follows that:
3. Therefore, I exist at the time of my death. — Bartricks
Question begging. Read what I wrote. Don't substitute my words for yours. — Bartricks
You don't really know what you're talking about. Validity is a property of arguments, not propositions. And yes, this argument - your argument - — Bartricks
is valid. It's just shit, that's all. And it's all you've got. — Bartricks
Yes it did, it's just you don't understand the meaning of the sentences I used in the original. Anyway, like so many others here, what you've done is read about argument form without actually being able to recognize a valid argument intuitively. You are the equivalent of a parrot who says 'hello' without at all understanding what 'hello' means. — Bartricks
Shall i refute materialism for you? What's that? Squawk? I'll take that to be a yes. — Bartricks
1. A material object can be infinitely divided
2. That which can be infinitely divided has infinite parts
3. Nothing has infinite parts
4. Therefore nothing is a material object. — Bartricks
1. A material object can be infinitely divided
2. That which can be infinitely divided has infinite parts
3. Nothing has infinite parts
4. Therefore nothing is a material object. — Bartricks
1. The sensible world is the place that some of our sensations resemble
2. Sensations can only resemble sensations
3. Therefore, the sensible world is made of sensations (not mind external extended objects) — Bartricks
1. Materialism is the view that everything is material
2. My mind is not material
3. Therefore materialism is false. — Bartricks
I don't know whether death is a harm or not because I don't know whether I will exist when I am dead. And neither do you. — Janus
Well of course his logic seems valid to you! — Bartricks
In the above argument you assume both that you exist at the time of your death and that you are harmed by the event of your death. — Janus
Make an argument or fuck off. — Janus
So, just to be clear, do you think you exist at the time of your death, or not? That is, do you think death marks the cessation of your existence - in which case you do not exist at the time of your death - or not? Be clear. — Bartricks
It's literally the basic principle of validity: A deductive argument is said to be valid if and only if it takes a form that makes it impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion nevertheless to be false. Otherwise, a deductive argument is said to be invalid. — Garrett Travers
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