So you admit to strawmanning my position. — Thorongil
A necessary being by definition avoids it, a point you seem incapable of acknowledging for whatever reason. — Thorongil
In other words, speaking of 'the data of experience' is not a 'neutral' starting point that can then be treated, as though in a second, unrelated step, in either a 'materialist' or 'idealist' manner. — StreetlightX
In any case, I suppose I would be of the opinion that the fault line with respect to experience is not as deep as both sides like to make it out to be. The primary reason for this, again, is that neither side objects to the existence of the content of experience. — Thorongil
A caricature and a strawman are two entirely different things. — Pseudonym
If you conclude that a being is 'necessary' — Pseudonym
In other words why is the necessary being necessary? — Pseudonym
Right, that's why I said, in the last sentence you neglected to quote, "They disagree about how it is supplied and how it ought to be described." — Thorongil
Do you think existentialist classics, like Nausea, are persuasive? I can't find anything persuasive about them. I kind of admire Sartre for his honesty and for being utterly true to himself, but I can't help but feel he was, so to speak, pretty tone deaf when it comes to questions of meaning. 'Hell is other people'? — Wayfarer
"Find" doesn't make sense in the world you posit. Meaning must rather be created. But the meaning we can create isn't proportional to, and doesn't fit, what the desires of the heart demand. — Thorongil
All that shows is that you are mistaken about what you possess being subtlety. Subtlety cannot be heavy; its character is the very opposite of heaviness. — Janus
Heidegger thought metaphysics begins with the question of why anything exists at all - or the question of Being. That there is a distinction between that which is, and Being as such, is what I feel is what makes it so powerful to me when Leibniz wrote: — darthbarracuda
I reject the notion that the divine, if it exists, would be something that we can come to "know" in such a way that we can express it using the vocabulary of the everyday. — darthbarracuda
Yet a religious belief based on rationalist proofs is hardly religious at all, because it lacks the risk of faith. Before the modern era, demonstrations of God's existence were meant to get people on the path of faith, not establish without a doubt that God exists, because that would jeopardize faith — darthbarracuda
The problem with this is that there are no "rational demonstrations" which are capable of demonstrating the axiomatic assumptions upon which they are founded. — Janus
Your only option is to remain silent. — Thorongil
I don't see the problem. One cannot demonstrate the principles of logic, but then neither can one reject them, for in order to reject them, one must employ them. — Thorongil
The truth of premises is not demonstrated by logical arguments; and must be assumed or evidenced by something other than mere logic. — Janus
An "if-then" proposition is true if the "if" is true and the "then" is valid. — Janus
That remains true even if there aren't any Slitheytoves or Jaberwockeys. — Michael Ossipoff
No, it remains valid, not true. You need to brush up on your terminology. I suggest you take a course in elementary logic. — Janus
I do think this is a bit 'apples and oranges' - if Sartre's fictions don't persuade you of something, I'm not clear that that diminishes Moliere's claims about the philosophical approach of existentialism and 'finding' (or whatever the right word is) meaning in the face of the absurd. — mcdoodle
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