I think it's important to realize that there isn't universal agreement on the vast majority of claims about objective, factual matters.
"Objective" doesn't imply agreement, and "subjective" doesn't imply disagreement, even though that's a common misconception — Terrapin Station
Well, I think there is not literally unanimous agreement, but surely is virtually universal agreement about the vast majority of claims about factual natters-that's how something gets widely established as a "fact." — Brainglitch
I disagree. I think it has been demonstrated and learnt, that water boils under similar conditions. These conditions are described as the same temperature at the same pressure. That temperature is designated as 100 degrees Celsius at average sea level pressure. We could designate something else as the temperature which water boils at, like 212 degrees. So the reason why we can say what temperature water boils at is because we have designated specific numbers to represent the temperature which water boils and freezes at, and built a scale around it. We could take something like alcohol, and determine what temperature it boils at, and this would be an act of comparing it to the temperature which water boils and freezes at, placing it within that scale. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, it's yours, which is the bad argument. By the same principle that you can define "murder" in another way, which is according to some other convention, I can say that according to some other convention, water doesn't boil at a hundred degrees, it boils at two hundred and twelve. — Metaphysician Undercover
All you are doing is saying that I'm going to define "murder" according to another convention, in which murder is not necessarily wrong, then you provide your convention, your definition, just like I would say that according to the Fahrenheit convention, water does not boil; at one hundred degrees. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, to match your claim, that my defining murder as wrong, is trivial, I would likewise have to say that the fact you've chosen to say that water boils at 100 Celsius is just as trivial. — Metaphysician Undercover
One difference though, unlike you I don't believe these choices to be trivial. One might just as well define the boiling point of water in another way, like you would define murder in another way, but that doesn't mean that these choices are trivial. I think such choices have great consequences. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, this is exactly the case, we learn the meaning of these words, "murder" and "theft", what it means to murder and to steal, and in doing so we learn that these are wrong. That's how we learn ethics. — Metaphysician Undercover
We must learn which behaviours are wrong, so we have words for them, and meanings for those words, which indicate not only what the behaviour is, but also that it is wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
The meaning of the moral word does two things for us, describes the action and tells us whether it is a virtue or a vice. — Metaphysician Undercover
So we have other words like temperance, honesty, courage, etc., which refer to good character, and these are likely to lead to good actions. Many ethicists would argue that we should focus on the words which have meanings that are understood as good character, rather than the bad, as this will encourage good behaviour. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why does this lead me into contradiction, with respect to consequences? — Metaphysician Undercover
The consequence of learning these words is that we avoid doing the things which are defined as being bad and move toward doing things which are defined as being good. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can say what you like, but that won't change the fact that it is not impossible for water to boil at a different temperature. And because your position entails otherwise, it is therefore false. — Sapientia
Well done, Metaphysician Undercover. Your debate skills are clearly superior to mine. — Sapientia
(Your arguments, if they can be called that, frequently contain fallacies, Metaphysician Undercover: whether it be straw men, contradictions, missing the point, quoting out of context, false analogies, begging the question, wishful thinking, non sequiturs...) — Sapientia
We obviously learn, especially in relation to ethics, through empathy and experience, not just by learning the meaning of words, and this happens at a very young age. — Sapientia
We judge behaviours as right or wrong based on experience of those behaviours. — Sapientia
think that that doesn't give people enough credit. If we learnt, by some realisation that had been hitherto unrealised, that by virtue of the meaning of the word, murder was in fact good, then there would be a whole load of people that would reject it nevertheless, and certainly not go out and murder people. Would you? I want you to answer that question, because it is very important. And bear in mind that it is a thought experiment. — Sapientia
Logically, God cannot exist if they are Real. To exist is to be an illusion, only a finite state. It would take away what makes God God.
For us to suggest God exists is like arguing the transcendent is worldly. The point of God is they are the infinte beyond the finite world. For God to exist, to be of the finite flux, is to reduce God to man. God becomes not the Real beyond the world, but just another material actor.
Didn't I tell you that the boiling temperature of water is dependent on the pressure? — Metaphysician Undercover
Where do you get these strange ideas of what my position entails? — Metaphysician Undercover
Thank you, I'll take that as a compliment, though it really doesn't say much. — Metaphysician Undercover
We learn about ethics through empathy? — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that I have to experience murder before I can judge it as wrong? No one that I have ever been close to has been murdered, yet I still judge murder as wrong. Why do you think that is? — Metaphysician Undercover
Since murder is defined as wrong, how could one ever learn that murder is good by learning the meaning of the word? — Metaphysician Undercover
You have just proposed a contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if the meaning of "murder" was such that it is defined as a good action, of course I would murder, but this action would be something very different from what that word refers to now. Maybe it would mean the same thing as "generous" means right now, so I would attempt to be murderous as much as possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
You said that it is true by definition that water boils at 100°C. If so, then it logically follows that water cannot boil at any other temperature. — Sapientia
I think it has been demonstrated and learnt, that water boils under similar conditions. These conditions are described as the same temperature at the same pressure. That temperature is designated as 100 degrees Celsius at average sea level pressure. — Metaphysician Undercover
We obviously learn, especially in relation to ethics, through empathy and experience. That's what I said, isn't it? Do you have a sensible question? — Sapientia
You're just wasting time, which could be better spent on learning ways to improve your debate skills. — Sapientia
Aaaaaaand you're back to missing the point. No, in this thought experiment, the meaning of "murder" can't be anything you want it to be. It means, as it means today, in our world, something along the lines of one person killing another person in an attempt to kill or cause harm. And without the assumption that this act is necessarily immoral! Which would obviously defeat the purpose of the thought experiment. — Sapientia
I think it has been demonstrated and learnt, that water boils under similar conditions. These conditions are described as the same temperature at the same pressure. That temperature is designated as 100 degrees Celsius at average sea level pressure. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you really believe that we learn ethics through empathy? — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not interested in debating, it's not something I would enjoy, so I think that learning debating skills would be a waste of my time. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I said, this proposition is contradictory. You propose that the meaning of "murder" is the same, but different. That renders your thought experiment nonsensical. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm saying that under those same conditions, it is possible for water to boil at a different temperature on the same scale, say, 30°C, for example. So, for example, if the room temperature was 21°C, and heat was applied to the water, then it is possible that it boils when it reaches 30°C, rather than the usual 100°C. — Sapientia
Well, good luck then. Until you actually prove to me that you can make water boil at 30 degrees without lowering the pressure, I'll continue to express bewilderment. You can claim whatever you want is possible, that it's possible for you to jump over the moon, or that you're omnipotent, if you like. I'll just express bewilderment, without bothering to make any logical argument against this. Evidence speaks for itself.This would mean that under those same conditions, an extremely unusual result was produced. But your claim entails that that is impossible. I have taken your claim, and shown that this logically follows. You can't reasonably argue against a valid logical argument just by expressing bewilderment, as you have done thus far. Quit stalling and produce a reasonable and substantive response, assuming you are capable of doing so. — Sapientia
And lastly, I think it is telling that you've avoided addressing parts of my posts, and avoided properly engaging with the thought experiment, and avoided asking sensible questions, and avoided explaining yourself, and so on. — Sapientia
Really? I didn't think it was possible to get water to boil at a temperature other than 100, other than by changing the pressure. Actually I don't really believe you, have you ever tried, and had success at this before? — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, good luck then. Until you actually prove to me that you can make water boil at 30 degrees without lowering the pressure, I'll continue to express bewilderment. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can claim whatever you want is possible, that it's possible for you to jump over the moon, or that you're omnipotent, if you like. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'll just express bewilderment, without bothering to make any logical argument against this. Evidence speaks for itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, it should be obvious that the things you say leave me totally bewildered, including your thought experiment, which has contradictory premises, and that's why I don't bother to reply to much of your posts. The bewilderment leaves me unable to explain myself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you think that it's impossible? — Sapientia
It's possible unless there is a contradiction. — Sapientia
And the evidence doesn't show that it is impossible. It shows that it is extremely unlikely. — Sapientia
You haven't shown that my thought experiment has contradictory premises.. — Sapientia
It's quite obvious, and I'm amazed that you still haven't caught on. One hundred degrees Celsius is, by definition the temperature which water boils at, at seal level pressure. To say that water could boil at another temperature, at sea level pressure, contradicts this. Therefore it's impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
If what you have, boils at a different temperature, then either it's not water, or you're not assigning the temperature
number right, or it's not the right pressure, or something like that. It is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
Try this, blue is the colour of the clear sky, by definition. Therefore it is impossible that the clear sky could be a colour other than blue, that would be contradictory. If it's not blue, then it's not a clear sky, or you are assigning the name "blue" wrong or something like that. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is contradiction! — Metaphysician Undercover
What do you believe, words are not defined, so that you can use words however you please without contradicting yourself? — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you say that it's possible that black could be white, or that a circle could be square, because you happen to enjoy using words in a way that's free from the confines of conventions? — Metaphysician Undercover
And I suppose the evidence shows that it's extremely unlikely that a circle might be square? — Metaphysician Undercover
You asked me to consider the word "murder" with the same definition which it currently has, but with a different definition. If that's not contradictory, I don't know what is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Guys, what're you even debating about now? — Heister Eggcart
You mean can it boil at temperatures higher than 100? >:O — Heister Eggcart
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