Whereas in Greek philosophy 'reason' was what marked humans off from the animal kingdom. — Wayfarer
Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law. — Immanuel Kant (Groundwork of the metaphysics of morals)
They ate the apple and became self-aware — Hermeticus
I see the clouds of a rebellion (disobedience) on the horizon...better do something about it before all hell breaks loose. — Yahweh
What is true of nonhuman animals that if true of humans would justify killing them for food? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
In traditional theology and metaphysics, the natural was largely conceived as the evil, and the spiritual or supernatural as the good. — Max Horkheimer, The Eclipse of Reason
What's a trait animals lack that if humans too lack it, killing humans for whatever would be permissible?
— TheMadFool
Morality. Animals take no issue with killing other animals for food. If Humans did not possess any moral compass whatsoever all would be permissible. — Pinprick
What do you expect me to say? You make a claim about the Buddha, and I ask for a canonical reference for said claim. You don't provide it. You see no problem with not providing it.
*sigh* — baker
It’s the burden of self. Humans are able to abstractly reflect on their own existence, and existence generally, to think ‘this is mine’. Animals can’t do that. Comes with language and abstract thought. That’s the symbolic meaning of the ‘tree of the knowledge of good and evil’ in my view. — Wayfarer
The real is that which hurts you badly, often fatally, when you don't respect it — 180 Proof
Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. — Philip K. Dick
Yes, that's it. Also the double standard, the noble lie, the special pleading... take your pick... previously noted in MU and EE, shows itself again. If religion doesn't attempt to be factually correct, then it is not answerable to anything. — Banno
Why when animals are able to form order and organisation without this does the human stand alone. — David S
But so far researchers have failed to locate lawyer bees. Bees don’t need lawyers, because there is no danger that they might forget or violate the hive constitution. — Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens)
It was an innocent (enough) quip at case-based abortion and neglect of the mentally ill in society. Not a quip per se more of a satirical statement that promotes awareness. — Outlander
unconditional savagery — Outlander
Here's an instance where I should just ignore a question that is basically incoherent, but I won't.
(1) Being "money-minded" is not the same as being generous -- that's unrelated, not what I said or implied, and basically out of nowhere.
(2) What I was talking about with "mostly money" is taking out of context and was in response to a prior post about the reasons for why media isn't covering the story of climate change as well as they should. I mentioned money, because media is sponsored mainly by advertisers. The larger the audience, the more money per advertisement. If the stories don't get a large audience, or enough eyes or clicks, then there's less money to be made. I mentioned that as ONE reason, among others.
If you have nothing worthwhile left to say, it's not imperative to continue talking for its own sake. — Xtrix
What's the difference between having no hammer and having a broken hammer?
Same as the difference between having no car and having a car with an empty fuel tank ... having no body and having a dead body ... etc.
How does one know whether a proposition is factually true?
Equivocating "know" again. Just look: It's raining iff it's raining. Also, sound inferential arguments.
Justification?
Foundherentism (S. Haack) works for me. — 180 Proof
The problem with most positions in this thread is with people's obsession with "absolute" concepts. — Nickolasgaspar
Only a Sith deals in absolutes — Obi-Wan Kenobi
Yep.
@TheMadFool, what do you make of dimosthenis9's first claiming that religion is needed to keep the common rabble in their place, then agreeing that folk must make moral choices?
Why deny choice to the rabble? — Banno
You can repair the hammer. — Tom Storm
false wisdom is worse — Cabbage Farmer
Then it should be easy for you to provide at least two canonical references that support the above. TY. — baker
Sorry I can't respond to your request but for what it's worth, Buddhism is, inter alia, an argument, the key premise being the doctrine of impermanence (anicca). — TheMadFool
Not if it reaches childhood at least. We let life take care of that. — Outlander
More broadly, there was a time when man needed to eat animals to survive, perhaps before agriculture and when berries and nuts were scarce. It's already hard coded in our DNA. Sure, it can be changed. But who wants to go ahead and do that. Animals on the other hand, never needed humans to survive. Long story short, we needed them (in our stomach) to survive more than they needed us to do the same, which means they have the responsibility to be eaten. Heavy hangs the head. Besides, we can't eat each other. You'll catch "the kuru". — Outlander
Thank you. I have drawn a couple of conclusions about this, but am yet thinking it over. I will post something later today. — Michael Zwingli
There is no trait absent in animals which if absent in humans would cause humans to lack sufficient moral value so that it would be immoral to kill them for food. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Then it should be easy for you to provide at least two canonical references that support the above. TY. — baker
Since topic deletion is most probably impossible, maybe you can make some modications or additions, that will justify your ideas based on scientifically/technically correct data. I can help in that, if you like. — Alkis Piskas
I am currently chewing over...thinking about these two "principles". I have another question. Is "the indiscernibility of identicals" a proposition of Liebniz, as is "the identity of indiscernibles"? — Michael Zwingli
That's right but consider how knowledge is, ultimately, an assumption just like a belief.
— TheMadFool
Stop. :shade: You're just abusing words again because you can. :point:
In short, knowledge, true knowledge is an illusion ...
So ... for instance, 'the gravitational constant' or 'both your parents were born before you were born' are "illusions"? You're talking out of your bunghole again, Fool — 180 Proof
To know a falsehood =/= "false knowledge". To know a falsehood = illusion of knowledge (i.e. delusion). — 180 Proof
It is possible – in more cases than not likely – to be wrong about 'knowing'. — 180 Proof
Not (involuntarily) "evil".
"By nature", we akratic apes are (all-too-often) foolish / stupid. — 180 Proof
No one knowingly does evil. — Socratea
Do not attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity — Robert J. Hanlon (Hanlon's razor)
Humans are neither good nor bad, but they can often be relied upon to do the wrong thing. — Tom Storm
Predicate =/= noun, no? — 180 Proof
In other words there's no reason why one cannot know a falsehood.
— TheMadFool
Hence,
Now that is a neat, reasonably coherent way to think about these terms. You are not obligated to think in this way, of course - you will do as you will. But if you keep this hierarchy in mind you will be able to follow the philosophical discussions around these issues with some clarity, and event to critique a few odd alternatives.
— Banno
If you claim to know a falsehood it is because you are not using "know" in the way specified. So you are on your own. See how you get on — Banno
Or are you asking is it possible for us to know that something is untrue? — Tom Storm
The proof is not a deduction, it is a definition. — Banno
"I know it (is true) but it is not true" is a contradiction.
IF you can't see that, then you are on your own. — Banno