'It', the fact, doesn't seem reliant on you, but no one claimed it was.
— Isaac
When people say things like "it's raining", they mean that they have a belief that it's raining (in this case, one they're very confident in ,one with good justifications. — john27
They may well be the same, but since they are not the same by logical necessity, you'd have to provide an argument to support your position. — Isaac
What I'm asking is for you to fill in some of the gaps in the model you're espousing. If an expression (as say, "it's raining") has a meaning outside of the various uses to which that expression is put, where should we look to find it, and on what grounds can that source claim primacy of other sources of meaning? — Isaac
Christians would consider themselves flawed, it being part of Christian doctrine. You're not the one who can save them, either. So, don't feel too bad about it. — Ciceronianus
Truth without coherence or consistency? Lewis is pointing out the consequences of certain christian dogma. Your response to what he says - growth or stagnation - is over to you. — Banno
You don't have to be here. But there might be more courage in staying than walking away. — Banno
Are you aware of the ancient “economy of the soul”? That the soul is divided into a dwelling together of reason and the passions? — Leghorn
...is far beyond you now—now that you perceive that a human being, through the application of reason, can overcome the greatest adversities that fortune might inflict upon him? — Leghorn
There's folk as will give aid to the homeless, not because they wish to avoid torture, but because it is the right thing to do. — Banno
And it was god who set up this arrangement.
On this account god has behaved abysmally.
Or the christian account is incorrect. — Banno
Probably the most controversial and well known part of that debate has been whether different populations have the same intelligence potentials. — Qmeri
'It', the fact, doesn't seem reliant on you, but no one claimed it was. — Isaac
When people say things like "it's raining", they mean that they have a belief that it's raining (in this case, one they're very confident in ,one with good justifications. — Isaac
Determining that meaning is not, by necessity, the same as determining why or how the fact expressed obtains. — Isaac
I'm claiming that the meaning is determined by the full expression, in context. It requires a speaker and a listener, and it has no meaning at all out of context. — Isaac
If you think it has a meaning outside of any language game it might form part of, then you'd have to say where we look to find that meaning. In what does the meaning inhere? — Isaac
Could you join the dots any further. I don't see how you not being the centre of the universe determines what "1+1=2" means. — Isaac
I can believe 1+1 is 2, and believe that it is correct; that doesn't change the fact its an axiomatic statement independent of belief. — john27
If it was a belief, they would pose it as an opinion such as: I think it is raining. — john27
People have a confusing tendency to say "I believe X" when exhibiting doubt or a granting concession that one might be wrong - the very opposite qualities to the supposed meaning of "belief".
Also, a person's spoken beliefs often belie their actions. — sime
Christians hold that the person who inflicts this unjust punishment - God - is worthy of worship. — Banno
When people say things like "it's raining", they mean that they have a belief that it's raining (in this case, one they're very confident in ,one with good justifications. — Isaac
One of these sensations is called reason - when I suppose my reality is true because I'm feeling it with my mind. — Ergo sum
Aristotelian Golden Mean principle to prove the point: there are 3 possibilities (2 extremes and, in between, only 1 right/correct way). Think of Goldilocks (too hot, just right, too cold) and also the Buddhist Madhyamaka. — Agent Smith
Do you see any similarity, John, between the different sorts of objects that fall through the atmosphere and the sorts of ppl that endure loss differently? — Leghorn
. Here is a link to every 9453 pages ... good luck! ;) — Tobias
It seems that in our current culture, you are only allowed to be on one side of that scientific debate: "Genetics do not affect peoples performance or potential. And there absolutely are not even slight differences in the average capabilities of any human populations." Which would simply be an extraordinary and rare observation about a biological species, since evolution pretty much needs variation in capability to work and for many other reasons. — Qmeri
And isn’t this true because the force of the drag of the air on the feather quickly becomes equal to the force of the gravitational pull on it, whereas the drag on the rock takes much longer to equal the pull of gravity on it? — Leghorn
And which of these: the rock or ball-bearing or lead-weight, or rather the feather, do you think conforms most closely to the accepted formula of falling bodies?—that a falling body falls to the earth at the rate of 9.8 meters/second squared? — Leghorn
In three words: "Calvin and Hobbes". You can start with the story of the raccoon run over. True philosophy only has to do with a single problem: death. We are not able to face it. That is why there are so many philosophers. Since we don't know how to die, we don't know how to live either. — Primperan
:100:I don't personally feel a visceral need for pessimism-confirming doomsday, or dystopian post-apocalytic, scenarios. We get enough of that in popular media. — Gnomon