Nah. I'm in agreement thus far. It doesn't add anything helpful though, does it? — creativesoul
That's a recurring problem. — creativesoul
I take it that you cannot distinguish between concepts and that which is being conceived of... — creativesoul
The oddity arises not from the mistake, but rather from the insistence of telling me that I'm wrong about my own terminological use. — creativesoul
I take it that you cannot distinguish between concepts and that which is being conceived of... — creativesoul
It's not some sort of pure intellectual thing, though. You don't just consider, you feel a certain way about it, and that's very relevant, perhaps more than you realise. — S
You haven't demonstrated that it's necessarily a value to begin with, so saying that it's a value which they forgo does nothing. — S
Your point that it works as an explanation is refuted by my point about Ockham's razor. — S
Yeah, that's a bit of a problem. You're not even talking about value, not like the rest of us. You should call that something else to avoid confusion. — S
I take it that you cannot distinguish between concepts and that which is being conceived of — creativesoul
Concepts are abstractions. They don't exist externally. There are external particulars that serve as influences or bases for concepts, but concepts are "of abstractions," they're not "of particulars." — Terrapin Station
I didn't say anything like that. I don't even believe that word usage can be wrong. — Terrapin Station
I didn't say anything like that. — Terrapin Station
Of course it is relevant. Without feeling a certain way, some humans might no longer care for their children. But it is the caring for their children that morality refers to, not the feeling. — Andrew M
Of course it is relevant. Without feeling a certain way, some humans might no longer care for their children. But it is the caring for their children that morality refers to, not the feeling.
— Andrew M
Yes, but if humans didn't care about how they and others behaved then there wouldn't be morality in the first place. Morality is thus dependent on care, or in other words, on feeling. — Janus
Yet a person can still act morally (e.g., provide for and protect their children) without the attendant feeling. — Andrew M
I didn't say anything like that. — Terrapin Station
If I am pointing at a tree and say "look at the dog", that is wrong word usage, no? — creativesoul
Which is the concept, and which is that which is being conceived of?
If concepts are abstractions, and they are of abstractions, then they are of themselves? — creativesoul
If I don't believe that word usage can be wrong, then obviously I'd not say that that is wrong. Word usage can be unusual, unconventional, etc., but it can't be wrong. It's not wrong in general to be unusual or unconventional. — Terrapin Station
Well, it doesn't follow a particular standard, but why is it wrong to not follow that standard. — Terrapin Station
A lot of people are going to read "wrong" with connotations that I'd want to avoid. If they would read "wrong" so that it just amounts to "is different from x" that would be fine, but people read "wrong" so that it implies something negative, suggests something normative, etc. — Terrapin Station
because it's implicit within a particular standard that one is expected to act accordingly. So if you don't act accordingly, then you're wrong — S
I think that's ridiculous though. Just because some people want to do things whatever way, have whatever preferences, why the hell am I expected to act that way or I'm "wrong"? That's basically demanding that I conform to what they want to do or what they like. On what grounds? — Terrapin Station
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