If you feel guilty for eating plants then the source of that guilt is misplaced or fanciful. — Nils Loc
IMO what T Clark says about the anachronistic "JTB" word salad is demonstrable true. Knowledge is falsifiable (i.e. fallibilistic), therefore not a matter of "justification" (re: the problem of induction, infinite regress of 'foundationalism', self-inconsistency of positivistic "verificationism", etc). Read Peirce-Dewey. Read Wittgenstein (re: PI, OC). Read Popper, D. Deutsch, N.N. Taleb. Read Sextus Empiricus (re: Pyrrhonians). — 180 Proof
Plato was an aristocrat, and quite well off. Not for nothing did Diogenes the Dog mock him for his vainglory (and other things), trampling on the carpets of Plato's house.
A person who has no need to make money often looks down upon those who must make money. We pay people for their knowledge all the time, and have always done so. For example teachers, doctors, lawyers are all paid for using what they know to the advantage of their students, patients and clients. It would be wonderful if we didn't have to pay for anything, but the idea that philosophy is a "higher knowledge" they shouldn't be paid for is silly, for more than one reason. — Ciceronianus
Well, I doubt anyone would refuse if the donation was generous enough and could be used in a good cause.
But would your equation be "Philosopher + Donation = Sophist"? — Apollodorus
I whine and complain about the needless tangle of words with which western philosophy ties up important philosophical issues. None is sillier or more misleading than justified true belief.
— T Clark
:clap: :100: — 180 Proof
As once I said, ideas enslave as much as they emancipate.
— TheMadFool
In a sense, that is the message of Taoism. — T Clark
Śūnyatā (emptiness) is the ninth 'view' (Sanskrit: dṛṣṭi), the viewless view, a superposition of the eight possible arrays of proposition P [and its 'inseparable contradistinction' (Sanskrit: apoha)]. — Wikipedia
I'm fed up with your questions!
— KDT
Who is KDT? — Prishon
Once upon a time Religion and State marrily hopped along together. — Prishon
In geometric terms, the eternal triangle can be represented as comprising three points – a jealous mate (A = science) in a relationship with an unfaithful partner (B = the state) who has a lover (C = religion)...A feels abandoned, B is between two mates, and C is a catalyst for crisis in the union A-B. — Wikipedia
I know it is off topic but I liked this phrase. Again, we can get into philosophy of language.
Barking up the wrong tree it is related to a dog who is wrongly breaking at something meaning that a person is saying arguments against the wrong listener or context.
I have in my language a similar phrase with the same meaning: ¡a otro perro con ese hueso!
(give that bone to another dog!)
Another thing we learned today. Cheers! — javi2541997
Nontheless it was a nice polemic. And eventough God and the gods are there I prefer not to gove a goddamne thing about them. Insofar Im concerned they are dead. I use him only for interpreting QM, which he or they created. — Prishon
What would they do? Make you admit? — Prishon
I'm fed up with your questions! — KDT
Then you have to admit that God HAS an influence on epistemology. — Prishon
I didnt speak about the amounts of money. There are people who own 100 million euros while on the other hand there are people struggling to make ends meet. Thats immoral! — Prishon
God didnt like pure chance. In fact he couldnt even imagine it! Thats why he created hidden variables.
— Prishon
Dont you think this is ironic. — Prishon
Explain what? — Prishon
I dunno whats the reason behind hatred or essential dislike. Why do you ask this? Whats the connection with the old Greek. Money cant buy anything but you CAN buy a book that contains wisdom. — Prishon
Money, what it stands for, is an old enemy!
— TheMadFool
Why should asking money for wisdom make the widom less wise? I rather pay some money for good wisdom than getting bad for bad.
(thats 5 dollar please) — Prishon
Why should asking money for wisdom make the widom less wise? I rather pay some money for good wisdom than getting bad for bad.
(thats 5 dollar please) — Prishon
Does it get your adverse juices flowing? I guess yes. I cant see the irony in what I said. God didnt like pure chance. In fact he couldnt even imagine it! Thats why he created hidden variables. — Prishon
Its very relevant to the discussion. If God cant create pure randomness then this has implications for QM. — Prishon
Just think about this. Einstein thought the universe is deterministic on the grounds that God dont play dice. So God matters. — Prishon
Was I that unclear? My point was how is an ordinary person expected to tell the difference between bullshit and acuity? Much of the time I can't even tell the difference between good and bad products, let alone metaphysics. — Tom Storm
Testing the limits of extrapolation for the sake of public interest. The boat has indeed run ashore. — Cheshire
The difference with me and the arrow-struck hero being that I trie to remove the arrow. Knowing who shot the arrow and how the arrow is shot and how it has hit in the first place can be helpful. — Prishon
The man would die and those things would still remain unknown to him. — Wikipedia
It's interesting because it's contrary to a JTB approach to knowledge. The same person saying it's best to avoid being wrong by not defending or owning a position is also defining knowledge as something absolute or rather something defensible with justification and belief. While casually over looking neither have a bearing on the T requirement. Justify and believe all you like but T isn't implied. Yet, credence is given for never assuming T, compared to not assuming it. The man defines knowledge as something unattainable, promotes claims of ignorance and 2000+ years of intuitional learning is spent on attaining absolute truth. How is that type of Irony able to exist in a world without a God?
It simply can't. Interesting? — Cheshire
The fool really did see things others didn't because he wasn't tied to the accepted creed. — T Clark
being a fool was a dangerous profession. — T Clark
like some fools, he was put to death. — T Clark
It's just as if a man were wounded with an arrow thickly smeared with poison. His friends & companions, kinsmen & relatives would provide him with a surgeon, and the man would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know whether the man who wounded me was a noble warrior, a priest, a merchant, or a worker.' He would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know the given name & clan name of the man who wounded me... until I know whether he was tall, medium, or short... until I know whether he was dark, ruddy-brown, or golden-colored... until I know his home village, town, or city... until I know whether the bow with which I was wounded was a long bow or a crossbow... until I know whether the bowstring with which I was wounded was fiber, bamboo threads, sinew, hemp, or bark... until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was wild or cultivated... until I know whether the feathers of the shaft with which I was wounded were those of a vulture, a stork, a hawk, a peacock, or another bird... until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was bound with the sinew of an ox, a water buffalo, a langur, or a monkey.' He would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was that of a common arrow, a curved arrow, a barbed, a calf-toothed, or an oleander arrow.' The man would die and those things would still remain unknown to him. — Wikipedia
Why then is it that, to my reckoning, to misunderstand is worse than to not understand? Socrates: To know that I don't know is better than to think you know when you actually don't know. :chin:
— TheMadFool
It's a little more than misunderstand I believe. I suppose knowing wrongly in the classical sense implies something to over come prior or during getting it right. There's no knee jerk reaction to guarding or defending ignorance of something. But, a well entrenched mistake can have a lifetime warranty. — Cheshire
Throughout the ages the question has remained - how can an ordinary, perhaps foolish person tell the difference between the two? This can be an issue even in cases where the differences are more apparent. — Tom Storm
Well said. But what about philosophers that accept donations — Apollodorus
Yep, it might even come cheaper and leave you some extra pocket money for other things .... :grin: — Apollodorus
serve as knowledge in the absence of higher forms of knowledge — Apollodorus
Death is the only god.
Def: God - that to which one devotes one's life.
— unenlightened
Re: (every) event horizon. — 180 Proof
They had a name for it - phonophobia - and it was a nightmare. Even the slightest sounds gave me the jitters; loud noises and panic attacks. I decided to build a sound-proof room in my house which would serve as a sanctuary, a place to escape from the cacophony that was the world and so I did. I walked into the room with high expectations, closed the door - the silence was deafening! — Some Guy
The profit driven world economic system which puts profits over people at every point.
We call it capitalism. — StreetlightX
Aye, there’s the rub. There is no way to be certain in making a decision without some degree of ignorance/exclusion. As I said, it’s about how much inaccuracy you’re willing to overlook. — Possibility
Oversimplification, but I’ve come to expect that from you. It’s only ‘the same’ with regard to the specific decision to take or not take an umbrella with you. — Possibility