Especially the second one is "nice"!
The reason for living? Ooof! In any case not to pass on genes or memes, like modern science says (embodied by people as R. Dawkins, who see people as a vessel for selfish genes........???). I think life itself is the reason. What's life itself? Magic! — Prishon
Why do you think that thats the reason we live?. Sounds circular. Copy me? :smile: — Prishon
mirrors can be a source of joy and horror. — Jack Cummins
How can you know yourself? — Prishon
Who are you? — Prishon
who am i? same as Odysseus (homo viator) told the cyclops, "Nobody" ...
Therefore, Yajnavalkya says to Maitreyi, “Nobody loves anything for its own sake.” All love is love of the Self, in the pure spiritual sense. Not this self or that self, myself or yourself, itself - this kind of self is not the point. It is the universal Self that is actually pulling you in some form, and you are not able to catch the point. There is an illusion that is presented to the sense organs, and under the impression — Brihadaranyaka
You were right Smith, you were always right. — Mr. Anderson
But isn't being conscious in itself the awareness of consciousness? — Hermeticus
interconnected — Jack Cummins
other minds. — Jack Cummins
I DO pay attention. My inner space has been probed by your comment... I can refine the probe (Im not sure if you mean a physical probe; but I dont assume) by refining my questions over and over again, like I can refine my questions to external Nature. The latter can involve sophisticated experimental set-ups. That can also be the case for exploring the internal Nature. Or in exploring you, being the one between the internal world and the outside one — Prishon
You could do this. The probe being questions. — Prishon
Such a probe would have to be masterfully crafted, concise and elaborate, and very telling. It would be the opposite of a legacy, given that it goes back in time rather than forward or maybe I have misunderstood the task. I have no idea what I would offer in all honesty. Which is a severely lacking response, but I don’t know how to confirm such a gesture — Dante
I often denote this sequence of non existence, life and then non existence as 010. — Dante
But what if non existence one has life before it? — Dante
I maintain that the state before life and after one’s life meet the same requirement of being an absence of oneself. — Dante
Look back now and consider how the bygone ages of eternity that elapsed before our birth were nothing to us. Here, then, is a mirror in which nature shows us the time to come after our death. Do you see anything fearful in it? — Lucretius
non-existence and death — Dante
They're in dreamless sleep indefinitely, unaware even of their own existence. — Hermeticus
Premise One: Death is not simply the process of living and then dying but is perhaps more accurately identified as the absence of one’s consciousness.
Premise Two: All forms of conscious life begin initially with an absence of itself, an absence of its consciousness. Via birth this condition is transformed and the consciousness is developed and woken to reality.
Premise Three: Upon dying the individual’s consciousness returns to an absence of itself and ceases to exist.
Inference: Life proceeds death because death precedes life. — Dante
↪TheMadFool
It seems that a lot of problems are solved by the gun.
— Prishon
I think the OP is being ironic.
Gun ownership, gun responsibility/irresponsibility, possession are all separate issues that get tangled together.
Here's my wish list - given that in the US guns are going to be a fact of life for a while - modeled after car ownership.
1) Ownership. Controlled and licensed. Successful completion of both education and training required.
1. a) National gun registry. All guns registered.
1. b) Control over types and capacities of guns. No ownership of guns inappropriate for stated purposes. Every gun owned, owned for a stated purpose.
2) Possession/carrying. Zero open carry except uniformed/authorized personnel. Concealed carry controlled and licensed, training and education required. Also, concealed weapons must not be visible or easily discernable. A weapon seen or easily detectable is on longer concealed, but is open-carry.
3) Transporting. Controlled and licensed. Education and training required. Arms being transported either locked away or disabled and taken apart.
4) Responsibility. Gun owners responsible for their guns at all times while owned, including what their guns might be used for.
5) Penalties for owners for violations. A range, depending on the violation but in all cases severe and understood to be severe, without exception. Including absolute responsibility for bullets and any damage they might do.
Some years ago a woman in the semi-rural town of Hermon, Maine was shot dead in her backyard by a hunter who claimed he thought she was a deer. That is, she was targeted and not killed by a stray shot.
"On a crisp, blustery day in 1988, Karen Wood, 37, a mother of twins, was shot to death in her backyard by Donald Rogerson, a local hunter who said he mistook her white mittens for the underside of a deer's tail." https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=19901122&slug=1105518
https://newengland.com/today/living/new-england-history/karenwood/
The hunter was not indicted for anything. It's my view that being responsible for his bullet, he should have been automatically guilty of at least involuntary or negligent homicide, or worse.
Guns are serious. Too many irresponsible/incompetent clowns and cowboys have them. Let owners, as well as gum wielders, pay their part of the true cost of gun ownership in the US. — tim wood
I’ll take my umbrella with me, obviously. — Possibility
Another poor analogy, — Possibility
My point is that I fail to see the necessity of permanently locking in one belief or another. The only reason I can think of is that it renders my actions more predictable for others. There is an overall pattern to my actions in some areas of life that could be interpreted as a belief in God, and others that could be construed as atheism. But I don’t think the apparent contradiction is my problem, really. — Possibility
Who should be allowed to wear a gun? — Prishon
[...]a lot of problems are solved by the gun — Prishon
Where is the $250.00 in scenario #1 and #2? — James Riley
I don't have a problem paying taxes so that a kid somewhere can get surgery.
Why would I?
Found in many civilized societies. — jorndoe
Where is the $250.00 in scenario #1 and #2?
— James Riley
That's tax. If the government wants to keep it why give it and then take it back? Something doesn't add up. — TheMadFool
You ARE serious!? :lol: — Prishon
Serious, bad sometimes, good sometimes. Seriously sick, always bad. — Confucius
By the same token, they could have loved each other to dead. — Prishon
If one abuses oneself via an activity which involves ab/using another sentient (e.g. sex with a sheep) or ab/using a nonsentient (e.g. sex with a robot gyn/andr-oid), then that's immoral within a negative utilitarian and/or aretaic moral framework. The latter is 'the lesser evil', so to speak, as there is no proximate collateral harm (i.e. a victim) as there is with the former. — 180 Proof
(Btw, I hope to live long enough to "see" fully functional, nonsentient / p-zombie & customizable (adult-form only!) sex dolls sold at an affordable price on Amazon. :party: :yum:) — 180 Proof
:up: :lol:Realer than real (Hyper-reality). — Bernardo Kastrup (on psychedelic experiences)
How do you make decisions when you don't know (something)?
Say you don't know whether it'll rain tomorrow or not. How will you plan for the morrow? You have to assume either that it'll rain or not, right?
— TheMadFool
There’s no final decision either way to be made here. As you say, either it’ll rain or not. You can plan for only one outcome, taking a calculated risk, or choose to include both possibilities in your plans. And all of this regardless of what you believe, which could well change every time you ask yourself the question, or check the forecast. Why lock yourself into a plan until you have to? — Possibility
Why? "Robots" (e.g. electric can-openers, department store escalators, clocks, vaccines, seeds) are not sentient in any manner recognizable by us. — 180 Proof
"There is light at the end of this tunnel :sweat:
"
No! Its another train...:gasp: — Prishon
No entity without identity — Wayfarer
Technically, this is not reincarnation as there is no self that dies and is re-born. That is the difference between reincarnation and re-birth. — Wayfarer
when an artwork is reproduced, what entity travels from the original to the reproductions? — Wayfarer
But the question is: is it an analogue one? — Prishon
presupposes
— Prishon
I can smash every robot in the world without feeling remorse. — Prishon
a person who believes in humanism (= the idea that people do not need a god or religion to satisfy their spiritual and emotional needs)
Most of the brain's activities are sub- or non-conscious. The conscious mind is cut out of all the internal traffic -- or at least, 99.9% — Bitter Crank
The user illusion is the illusion created for the user by a human–computer interface, for example the visual metaphor of a desktop used in many graphical user interfaces. The phrase originated at Xerox PARC.
Some philosophers of mind have argued that consciousness is a form of user illusion. — Wikipedia
Do you really think we treat robots likes slaves? That presupposes robots experience. But they don't. You cojld ask how I know but I know... — Prishon
I can tell you are a tool-user and X is a tool. The only question is whether X is natural born or not; and that might will tell something more about you. — 180 Proof
An air conditioner. A fan. — khaled
The near in blood, The nearer bloody. — Donalbain
Right and wrong
Good and bad
Good and evil
Are three totally different things. Although related. — hope
well, lots of people believe that "private is better" "public is worse". The question isn't whether insured well informed care consumers can get good care in the US, or not. They can. The question is whether the good care they get can be provided for less money (it can) and more equitably (it can). But not within the private, for profit model.
What the US has is a continuum of care quality ranging between excellent and mediocre. Where on the continuum of quality one will end up depends first on money (do you have good insurance) and then on knowledge. One really should get the same quality of care without respect to money or how well can decode the system.
Will everybody get luxury grade care in a single payer, government operated system? It may well be that in the government operated hospital NOBODY gets luxury grade care (private room, order off special menu, private nurses, etc.). And really, why should one get such care? Expensive frills like that relate to the ability to pay, rather than medical benefit.
In the free enterprise system, whether you get care at all can depend on the ability to pay. No insurance? No surgery. — Bitter Crank
If you nationalize the health sector, more people can afford healthcare but quality takes a hit.
If you privatize the healthsector, quality is A1 but fewer people can afford it.
— TheMadFool
There is nothing intrinsically worse about the quality of socialized health care. There is nothing intrinsically better about the quality of privatized health care. — Bitter Crank
Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that studies the first principles of being, identity and change, space and time, causality, necessity and possibility. It includes questions about the nature of consciousness and the relationship between mind and matter. — Wikipedia
This is the same issue Isaac raised. I think that's more capitalism than the state, tho. — frank