Well, ok, but there was definitely a whiff of the rationalist condescension people use toward spiritual or religious ideas in your response. — T Clark
Some scientists feel that religious Faith and rational Facts are mutually incompatible, and propose to resolve the conflict by assigning each approach to Non-Overlapping Magisteria (NOMA). — Gnomon
Yeah, but I'm talking to you, not them. Also, we claim to be the ones using reason. We're the ones who have to keep inappropriate emotion out of our arguments if we don't want to be hypocrites.So who is condescending to whom? — Gnomon
Feeling is much more personal and persuasive (and real) than abstract knowledge. But by translating passionate Feelings into impartial neutral Facts, humans can try to find some ground between opposing beliefs. And that is the function of Philosophy : to reconcile objective empirical Facts with subjective biased feelings. — Gnomon
The difference between knowing something to be true, and feeling like something is true is that feeling like something is true allows you to actually experience what your mind knows. When you feel like something is true, then that principle can genuinely operate in your life. When you feel like something is true, it becomes a reality for you. — Gnomon
I really disagree with this. There is no reason to translate feelings into facts. Facts are never neutral. As I've said, you can't reach the truth without human values. As I alluded to in the OP, there is only one world. — T Clark
I'm not clear - is this what you believe or what you think I believe? Either way, I have no argument with the thought. — T Clark
In my opinion, the function of Philosophy, as opposed to Religion, is to find some objective worldview that all reasonable people can agree on. — Gnomon
Rational philosophy will never reach absolute Truth (God's values), but by canceling-out conflicting human values, we may get closer to a general truth that we can all live with. — Gnomon
Has anyone ever, in the long history of the world, come anywhere close to finding "some objective worldview that all reasonable people can agree on? Answer - No." — T Clark
That's true, but has any subjective worldview come close to absolute Truth? We can either strive to get closer to objective truth, or give-up that dream of mutual understanding, and just retreat into our little isolated cells of solipsism. It's the realization that an insular worldview leads to misunderstanding and mutual distrust that drives us to seek the holy grail of unbiased objectivity. — Gnomon
I don't believe the idea of objective or absolute truth is a very useful one. — T Clark
Chasing the dream of absolute Truth is not practical for materialistic purposes. — Gnomon
I was trying to make a stronger statement. I do not believe that absolute or objective truth exists. That's not quite right, because the existence of absolute truth is a metaphysical question. Metaphysical questions don't have true or false answers. It is a matter of usefulness. I don't think the idea of absolute truth is useful and I think it is misleading. — T Clark
I don't want to go off topic, which I think we're starting to do. There are lots of threads on the forum that discuss this issue. I've started some. It's an issue that is near and dear to me. I don't think there are any active right now. Actually, there is one "Metaphysics - What is It," that @Pattern-chaser started and which closed out last week. Maybe PC wouldn't mind us reopening it to discuss this issue. — T Clark
Actually, there is one "Metaphysics - What is It," that Pattern-chaser started and which closed out last week. Maybe PC wouldn't mind us reopening it to discuss this issue. — T Clark
If you don't think metaphysics is a "useful" concept, — Gnomon
My original comment was simply an attempt to point-out that the visceral feeling of knowing is equivalent to Faith --- what's true for you, may not be true for me. Faith is based on a fractional understanding of reality. Only by sharing and comparing our personal beliefs can we get a feeling for truth and knowledge in a more general sense. — Gnomon
I think that the distinction between reason and faith is not a very helpful one in this context. My understanding of your belief is that they are the heart of the matter. Please set me straight if I'm wrong. — T Clark
PS___If my comments are off-topic and irrelevant, I will apologize for hijacking your thread. — Gnomon
I am constantly testing my personal beliefs and feelings against those of other people -- as in this thread -- to see if they know something I don't. — Gnomon
If there is no objective truth, is there subjective truth? — Shamshir
A simulation is an objective reality - its subjectivity relies on its relativity to our own.
Is it misleading or are we mismatching - tempo or rhythm? — Shamshir
Whether we view the weather physically or virtually - both are simulations, who relate to the same derivation of possible weather.
The tempo of physically observed and virtual weather is the same. Which is to say they are principally and/or functionally the same.
But the rhythm of the two, which is to say the composition, does not align. This makes them practically different. — Shamshir
I'm curious why you would consider an objective truth a hindrance - as the title sets an objective tempo?
All answers would thus follow to be principally objective, yet practically subjective and I think it would be hard to be mislead by one due to their layered functions.
If there is no objective truth to the query, then any posited quality would be worthless - methinks. — Shamshir
Pardon me, if my explanation is shoddy.I really don't understand this. The modeler has created the weather model to allow her to predict the real weather. They are no more the same than the word "weather" is the same as the rain and clouds. — T Clark
And that's the - problem, maybe?I wrote elsewhere, I can't remember if it was in this thread, I don't believe that objective reality exists. That's not quite right. What I really believe is that it is not a very useful way of thinking about things in many situations. As I've said many times, the existence of objective reality is a metaphysical question and, as such, it doesn't have a yes or no answer. — T Clark
I'm simply asking - why do you add 'real'?
What is the difference besides practical semblance?
They are based on the same principles, so their derivations of weather - excluding how each is made - are functionally the same. — Shamshir
Objective reality is inescapable and the metaphysical question you propose, is situated within its stable ground. — Shamshir
It's simple.I don't see it that way. I don't see any reason to just repeat my arguments. — T Clark
Without an objective reality - there's nothing to base your question on, and it is void.
The very rejection of an objective reality denotes an objective reality as a prerequisite.
How could you come to reject what isn't? You would be rejecting nothing. — Shamshir
And it does.
Are you suggesting the imperceptibility of Superman denies this? — Shamshir
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