No, I don't have to. I haven't claimed or implied that I know that any particular event will or won't happen later today, and I don't need to. That's an unreasonable thing to demand in response to my objection. If I claim that being struck by lightning is an imminent threat, and that the pressing nature of it is such that it's akin to someone holding a gun to your head, and you object that my claim is misleading, then would you have the burden of having to explain how you know that I won't be struck by lightning later today? No, of course not. That's an argument from ignorance, an informal fallacy. It's possible that I'll be struck by lightning, and you haven't denied that possibility. Lots of things are possible. That both misses the point and tries to shift the burden of proof.
Moreover, people have of course been struck by lightning before, and it has happened way more times then we've been on the verge of a nuclear war, so, in that sense, it's way more of an immediate threat. But you'd still be right to object that my claims are misleading. Being struck by lightning is not an imminent threat. I have gone my whole life without being struck by lightning. So have most others. That's not lucky, that's average and to be expected. It would be unreasonable to resort to extreme measures against being struck by lightning, as though it were an imminent threat, as though it could happen any minute now if I don't do something drastic right now to prevent it from happening, and as though I'm being held hostage by an armed criminal. — S
I think the risk of nuclear war is relevant to a thread about the intelligence of philosophers--or anybody else--because the justification for nuclear weapons comes from a deep pool of very bright scientists, politicians, philosophers, strategists, etc. — Bitter Crank
I'm not fond of the view that everybody is stupid. — Bitter Crank
If I was holding a gun to your head you would have no problem at all seeing that as the highest priority issue. — Jake
Well, Vlad the annexer and Agent Trumpov seem to be best buddies. Why worry about the two?Please explain how you know that something like the following quote below won't happen again later today.
Like most people, you may be coming to your position based on the current geo-political situation. You may not be taking in to account that the current geo-political situation may be totally irrelevant. In fact, I know you're not taking that in to account, or you wouldn't be posting as you are.
Speaking of which, let's remind ourselves who has control over 90%+ of the world's nukes. Putin, the world's leading gangster, and Trump, a wacko in the White House whose own employees are scrambling around trying to figure out how to get rid of him before he does something insane. — Jake
And how are you doing yourself? Because your line is what I've been hearing from the 80's myself personally and this goes to an earlier discourse. Straight from a large group consensus that various authorities starting with Bertrand Russell among others presented to us: the utter doom that nuclear weapons present to us and the World.Like almost everybody, you aren't using reason and thinking for yourself, but are instead referencing authority in the form of the group consensus. You look around you and see that all the big shots of various flavors are complacent, and so you understandably feel it's ok for you to be complacent too. — Jake
You're not going to get very far attacking a supposed whole of philosophy. — Blue Lux
It is absolutely not a half triggered gun pointed at my head. — Blue Lux
I have other more pressing matters in my life. — Blue Lux
If you think this is the first time in history in which the future of man has been at risk, you are mistaken. — Blue Lux
Nuclear war is a problem, but I am not sure any of the most powerful countries are ready to blow themselves up and enter into a global thermonuclear war. — Blue Lux
People have not been this stupid yet, — Blue Lux
Instead of nuclear war you should be talking about the opioid epidemic, heart disease, emphysema, diabetes, certain cancers, etc., which are in huge ways preventable, although not 100% preventable for everyone. — Blue Lux
If you want to focus on some sort of 'hair-trigger' then focus on the problems that already exist. — Blue Lux
Well, it has been roughly two hours since I submitted my last comment in this discussion, and nuclear war hasn't broken out yet. Odd. :chin: — S
Because nuclear war is possible, doesn't mean the threat can be dismissed because it didn't happen within the space of a few hours. — Pattern-chaser
Do you have to be of above average intelligence to engage seriously with philosophy? — Andrew4Handel
Should philosophy and philosophical debate be made more accessible (without diluting it)? — Andrew4Handel
Does philosophy improve based on the philosophers hypothetical IQ? — Andrew4Handel
Or should it be a highly qualified domain? — Andrew4Handel
Do you have to be of above average intelligence to engage seriously with philosophy? — Andrew4Handel
But there is no preventable threat to civilization which compares to the threat presented by nukes in terms of scale and immediacy. Nothing else can convert the modern world in to chaos in less than an hour. — Jake
It is absolutely not a [hair] triggered gun pointed at my head.
I have other more pressing matters in my life. — Blue Lux
In fairness, I think chemical and biological weapons come very close to the imminent threat that nuclear weapons present. — Pattern-chaser
There are many problems in the world, and many threats to civilization. That is surely true. But there is no preventable threat to civilization which compares to the threat presented by nukes in terms of scale and immediacy. Nothing else can convert the modern world in to chaos in less than an hour. — Jake
But people, thousands and thousands every day do die already from the preventable causes I mentioned. They dont die today from nuclear weapons. My point stands. — Blue Lux
So, really, to be clear, what you're talking about is only the potential consequences, not the actual situation we're in. That is, if there's a nuclear attack, then these would be the consequences. — S
A nuclear attack is not imminent. — S
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