considering the exchanges Ive seen between the more prolific posters.
In other words, I cannot tell if he was joking or not because it might actually be a case someone could make. — DingoJones
In a rational system, judgement is nothing more than the faculty of uniting the concepts of understanding to the intuitions of sense, from which an external object is cognized without contradiction, and is called experience.
In a moral system, which is rational but with different means and ends, employment of the faculty of judgement responsible for uniting a freely determined law with a willful volition, from which an act is cognized as good, and is called morality.
Need be no more complicated than that. — Mww
I would not boast about not understanding this bit of text; it would be nothing to boast about. Can it be, S., Isaac, Dingo, that you really do not understand it? — tim wood
You think, with a handful of exceptions, that this board is full of people with reading and learning deficiencies? — DingoJones
How do we compare/contrast as a means to determine which is best? — creativesoul
Do I really need to? Can't you see that for yourself? — creativesoul
This second parsing is similar to what I'd been thinking all along... At the time of utterance, a promise is not the sort of thing that can be true/false. The first is interesting and seems apt as well. There need be some sort of commonality between the two ways if we are to say that promises can be true in two ways. Correspondence to the actual intention, and correspondence to states of affairs(what's happened). Seems the former could be rendered as a kind of the latter, but not the other way around. — creativesoul
Perhaps it is because promises are not a single proposition, but two? I think so. The one to make the world match the words, and the other is the overt guarantee(the statement of intent). — creativesoul
How do we compare/contrast as a means to determine which is best?
— creativesoul
Which what? — Mww
Morality is codified rules about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour. Belief about those rules involves coming to terms with them. Coming to terms with them involves common language use. Belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour is existentially dependent upon neither; thinking about morality, nor the language necessary to do so. — creativesoul
Coming to terms with them involves common language use
— creativesoul
Show me how my common language use facilitates me coming to terms with my codified moral rules. — Mww
Do I really need to? Can't you see that for yourself?
— creativesoul
No. Yes. (Ok...only partly)
Humor me, for comparative purposes. Besides, you’ve asked me to expound, and I did. Now I’m calling fair play. — Mww
This second parsing is similar to what I'd been thinking all along... At the time of utterance, a promise is not the sort of thing that can be true/false. The first is interesting and seems apt as well. There need be some sort of commonality between the two ways if we are to say that promises can be true in two ways. Correspondence to the actual intention, and correspondence to states of affairs(what's happened). Seems the former could be rendered as a kind of the latter, but not the other way around.
— creativesoul
I missed this response of yours. I remember reading something by Bertrand Russell where he claimed that statements about what will happen in the future are true or false now depending on what happens in the future; it's just that we obviously can't tell which. — Janus
So, for example, according to this line of thought the statement "The Sun will go supernova in 2 billion years" is true or false now. That seems odd to me, and I'm not sure what to think about it. For example, would that statement being true or false now presuppose rigid determinism?
Perhaps it is because promises are not a single proposition, but two? I think so. The one to make the world match the words, and the other is the overt guarantee(the statement of intent).
— creativesoul
I agree with this answer. A promise could be both true and false in different senses. — Janus
I missed this response of yours. I remember reading something by Bertrand Russell where he claimed that statements about what will happen in the future are true or false now depending on what happens in the future; it's just that we obviously can't tell which.
So, for example, according to this line of thought the statement "The Sun will go supernova in 2 billion years" is true or false now. That seems odd to me, and I'm not sure what to think about it. For example, would that statement being true or false now presuppose rigid determinism? — Janus
I would not boast about not understanding this bit of text; it would be nothing to boast about. Can it be, S., Isaac, Dingo, that you really do not understand it? — tim wood
How do we compare/contrast as a means to determine which is best?
— creativesoul
Which what? — Mww
Which moral belief. I say we begin with the universally formed and/or re-formed ones... You know, the ones we all have? Point of view invariant. — creativesoul
How do we compare/contrast as a means to determine which is best?
— creativesoul
Which what? — Mww
Which moral belief. I say we begin with the universally formed and/or re-formed ones... You know, the ones we all have? Point of view invariant.
— creativesoul
Great idea. Let's have the list then, of all these universal, completely invariant objective morals with which no one but the mentally damaged disagree.
I'll start you off. — Isaac
Great idea. Let's have the list then, of all these universal, completely invariant objective morals with which no one but the mentally damaged disagree. — Isaac
No, no, no. You give him too much credit. He didn't even make that qualification. You know, it's the ones we all have. — S
even the Everydayman understands that coming to terms with anything and/or everything that one can come to terms with involves common language use. — creativesoul
Which moral belief. I say we begin with the universally formed and/or re-formed ones... You know, the ones we all have? Point of view invariant. — creativesoul
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