What advantage does that give you that a lack of an objective reality lacks? What does it allow you to say that the no objective reality model doesn't? — khaled
My answer is "What's the difference?" Or, in more detail: Why propose an objective reality that you can be wrong about? What advantage does that give you that a lack of an objective reality lacks? What does it allow you to say that the no objective reality model doesn't? Same question with objective moralities. — khaled
But it does make a huge difference in the case of God. — khaled
You can analyse people's biases, it makes sense to do so. And hence you can start to resolve differences of perception. — Olivier5
Then it is in principle possible to judge whether or not God exists between these on the basis of that difference, and you’re not appealing to things beyond all phenomenal experience after all. — Pfhorrest
Two people who agree that there is an objective answer and disagree about what it is have reason to try to sort out which if either of them is right — Pfhorrest
If they think there is no such thing as objective answers at all then there’s no point trying to figure out what it is — Pfhorrest
You do need to agree that the world is one in spite of our different views of it, in order to WANT to resolve differences of opinion. Otherwise e.g. the flat-earthers' world would be actually flat and there would be no need for them to discuss this with non-flat-earthers, who literally would live on another planet.All you can do is reach an agreement. Which you don’t need that postulate for. — khaled
Otherwise e.g. the flat-earthers' world would be actually flat — Olivier5
You do need to agree that the world is one in spite of our different views of it, in order to WANT to resolve differences of opinion — Olivier5
What does "flat earthers' world" even mean? — khaled
Wanting agreement is not dependent on whether or not a correct version exists. I would say wanting agreement precedes the meta consideration of whether or not a correct version exists. — khaled
Why should we want everybody to live in the same world if they don't actually live in the same world? — Olivier5
Having people who agree with you is great. You can cooperate, agree on certain things, r — khaled
if your world is different from mine, — Olivier5
And what does "They don't actually live in the same world" even mean? Here you are proposing the existence of multiple, objective, and independent worlds. Idk why you are still doing that.
The closest thing it could mean that makes sense is "Why would we want everybody to have the same views when they don't actually have the same views", which I answered. But also, not postulating an objective reality doesn't prevent people from having the same view as you so idk where you get that either. — khaled
channel 1 and I was watching some crappy western movie on channel 2 — Olivier5
Here you are proposing the existence of multiple, objective, and independent worlds. Idk why you are still doing that. — khaled
Precisely because it's trivial. You could find some literature supporting pretty much any common sense position. In fact even the most non-sensical positions would have some literature backing them up. — Olivier5
It's still fresher than Buridan, who dates back to the middle ages and is what you seem to go by. You are just another behaviorist if you ignore the multilayered complexity of our cognition, and the role of language in it, and behaviorists are basically treating people as beasts, like Buridan was doing. That's bad middle age thinking... — Olivier5
Of what? — Olivier5
These idealists must have assumed they lived in the same world as other people, then. — Olivier5
The purpose of a citation is so that we can see where the opinion derives from and follow the line of argument. Without it, there's nothing to argue. We might as well just write "yes it is", "no it isn't" all day - pointless." — Isaac
my argument was that if what feels good hedonistically was always equal to what is a moral course of action, then there would be no need for punishments and rewards. This is pretty clear, and dare I say obvious. You could have addressed the point a long time ago if you wanted to. — Olivier5
In my view, there is an objective reality, but one that is inaccessible, and is just there out of logical necessity (because perceptions need to be of things). — khaled
also to assume that we can say something true about it. — Olivier5
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