After 6 hours she stopped her performance and walked towards the audience who fled from her. — Cavacava
This is only a suggestion - but you guys could try telling actual jokes. That's kind of the idea behind this discussion. — T Clark
I accused Nils Loc of being a computer. I think I'll accuse you of being monkey's with typewriters. — T Clark
, "what was the year before creation? "Year -1. Or 1 BC," Says the priest. "And the year before that?" asks the math guy. "2 BC," says the priest. "What was the very first year before creation?" "Year Infinity BC, I suppose," says the priest. "So what number was the next year?" "Erm... infinity minus one BC, I surmise." "Okay... so what year did the switch happen, the switch from the year Infinity - N (here N is a positive integer) to a nominative integer, say, 2432 BC?" The priest thinks for a while and says, "Now I'm going to slug you. Very hard."A mathematician and a priest are having lunch. The mathematician asks — T Clark
Thanks for displaying a low IQ level. Now I know how you are able to cling to your false belief. I told you that laws know nothing, and yet you insist they do.They are the Laws that are everywhere, unchanging and eyeball, know everything that is happening, and guide everything. — Rich
I was going to use that, but I'm guessing that Socrates and Sartre are being misquoted. — T Clark
Any Determinist should feel very comfortable in a Calvinist church as long as they substitute the phrase Natural Laws for the word God. I mean, we are all grown ups. No need to play games here. You have your faith in fate and you are entitled to it. Worshipping Natural Laws that are omnipotent, omnipresent, omnicient, and never changing is quite OK. — Rich
Does that help at all? — MysticMonist
The passionfruit of truth.If science really is the asymptote of truth—an asymptote being a curve that gets infinitly closer to a line but never ever touches it ; the idea is often atributed to Victor Hugo—what would the equivalent analogy be for philosophy related to truth ? — Nuncaltussum
Your ensuing reasoning is solid, and acceptable. It reminds one of the prisoners' dilemma, but is more general, and with a more wide-spread applicability.The CI basically states that only those actions are morally good that can be universal law. — TheMadFool
I think you are thinking of ancient Judaism or of the Sadducees who didn't believe in an afterlife. — MysticMonist
Well anyone can call supernatural natural. — Rich
According to you, Rich, the natural is supernatural.it derives from a supernatural authority called Natural Law — Rich
What the heck? There is nothing in QM that is causal. Bohm's interpretation is causal but non-deterministic. — Rich
Wrong. There are causes but constraints, choices and novelty make the world probabilistic. — Rich
Determinism is simply the religion of atheists and I firmly believe everyone needs some faith in their lives. — Rich
The universe could , in principle, be a mixture of causal and non-causal. Proponents of the Copenhagen interpretation demonstrate quite a string belief in that don't they? — Jake Tarragon
If determininsm was false, then the world would be non-causal. If the world were non-causal, then the rules and laws of QM could not be drawn up.Evidence?? How about Quantum Mechanics to begin with? Unfortunately, for determinists, it all ended about 100 years ago. — Rich
Bit of a self-contradictory wish. If the universe is indeterministic, then the cause-effect chain is ineffective. Control does need cause-effect chain to be working. But it's not. So control is impossible, in a non-deterministic universe.
— szardosszemagad
Choices are constrained and affected by the past memories but are non-deterministic in nature. — Rich
is not at all logical. It is a claim, but it has no merit, due to lack of evidencing or other support. You just make up things as you go, is my opinion.Because of habits, the universe is probabilistic. — Rich
If God does not exist, then you CAN'T imagine a thing greater than god.
— szardosszemagad
If existence is ''better'' than nonexistence, then I can imagine a God that exists which would be greater than one that doesn't exist. — TheMadFool
If existence is ''better'' than nonexistence, — TheMadFool
1. Morality exists
2. It is not man-made, but innate to man and other animals
3. You can't break the moral code you have
— szardosszemagad
1 is true, but 2 and 3 aren't. We aren't just born moral, and don't have to learn it, and strive for it. This is clearly not the case. What do you figure when you see someone that is immoral? Mutant? Every time? — Wosret
All I say is that interferometers are not objective scientific instruments but are devices whose results can only be interpreted within the framework of the dual theory of light. It is something like mutual recognition: the theory gives justification to the device, which in turn gives legitimacy to the theory. — Hachem
4. If God doesn't exist then I can imagine a being greater than God (a greatest being who exists) [premise] — TheMadFool