Everyone else seems interested in preserving cultures and empowering the working class. — absoluteaspiration
My problem with these goals is that I don't believe it is possible to attain them. — absoluteaspiration
All knowledge comes from evaluating competing theories fairly and in proportion to the evidence supporting them. — absoluteaspiration
Even knowledge of the skills of different individuals belongs to the same category of knowledge. In that sense, all knowledge comes from fairness. If fairness is impossible, then knowledge as such is impossible. — absoluteaspiration
It is not possible to empower the working class for the following reason: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/economics/#5.2 — absoluteaspiration
I don't believe that it is possible to preserve culture because culture doesn't exist in a vacuum. Cultures are necessarily in a state of competition. Ways of life that outperform others will filter into less active societies as we've seen throughout history. — absoluteaspiration
The past is a foreign country, and it must necessarily be one. — absoluteaspiration
1. Science no longer believes in vital principles or vital energies. Therefore, that kind of life doesn't exist. — absoluteaspiration
2. As for life in the sense of "everything", I believe in the Godelian chain of argumentation that there is no universal set. So life in the sense of totality doesn't exist either. — absoluteaspiration
Science is not the ''soul'' authority on truth. — TheMadFool
But the set of all living things is not a living thing. So, if you talk of the universal set, you wouldn't be talking about ''life''. Let's talk of the subset of the universal set - living things. — TheMadFool
Where is the argument that life exists? — absoluteaspiration
Some people use life to mean "everything". This other definition of life is addressed in point 2. — absoluteaspiration
In my humble opinion, Life is a definition and can't be argued unto. — TheMadFool
Your definition of life is different. Please clarify it further. — TheMadFool
Having a definition of "unicorn" doesn't absolve you of the responsibility to argue for their existence. Why should it be different for life? — absoluteaspiration
What is your definition of life? — absoluteaspiration
The biological definition of life - nutrition, growth, reproduction, irritability, etc. very basic. — TheMadFool
Biological life exists, but it does not lead to a "meaning of life" of the kind that we are looking for. If you do pick a "meaning of life" of the kind that we are looking for, — absoluteaspiration
you are left with definitions of life like vitality or totality. But if you pick those definitions, then life does not exist. — absoluteaspiration
I think it's naive to assign a 100% credibility to science (even science doesn't claim absolute knowledge). — TheMadFool
Secondly, using mathematical tools to reject, as you put it, the universal set is a misapplication of math. — TheMadFool
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