I'll first make you buy the poison dirt cheap and then once you fall ill I'll make you pay through your nose for the antidote. — The State
The Fregoli delusion is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes appearance or is in disguise. — Wikipedia
No, no, I want to see it from your point of view.
— TheMadFool
Then you'd need to give up anekantavada.
That's why I want to know what your assumptions are.
That anekantavada is a non-viable outlook on life, given that one who practices it will be crushed by other people. — baker
The goal of SPI (Indian Protection Service) was to protect the well-being of natives, and Cândido Rondon created its motto: die if need be, never kill. — Wikipedia
See, you're not practicing anekantavada.
Q.E.D. — baker
It deserves such attention? "Deserves" by whose standards?
Waiting for others only makes one a victim, and if persisted in, eventually, a martyr. — baker
The peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is, that it is robbing the human race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those who hold it. If the opinion is right, they are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by its collision with error. — John Stuart Mill
I believe you but there are those who are not interested in the truth [...] — Abu Hirawa (Misfits 2021)
All compound things are subject to decay', but 'There is, monks, an unborn — unbecome — unmade — unfabricated. If there were not that unborn — unbecome — unmade — unfabricated, there would not be the case that escape from the born — become — made — fabricated would be discerned. But precisely because there is an unborn — unbecome — unmade — unfabricated, escape from the born — become — made — fabricated is discerned' ~ source.
What that 'unborn, unbecome' is, however, is never the subject of speculative metaphysics in Buddhist philosophy.
I should say however that Buddhist cosmology is not based on a linear model of history, like the Christian view, but on the (probably more archaic) cyclical view.
Check out this review. — Wayfarer
The 'instrumentalisation of reason' that the New Left describes. — Wayfarer
The philosophical problem is precisely the elimination of telos, purpose, from ethics. The Universe is deemed to be inherently purpose-less - as Russell said, the 'accidental collocation of atoms', as the Universe goes on its merry way towards the ultimate heat-death.
I'm not pitching for a return to traditionalist ethics. There needs to be of re-envisaging of human goals knowing what we now know about cosmology.
But as I noted already in this thread, the very idea of the 'big bang' lends itself to religious interpretation - that is what the Pope wanted to do, but LeMaitre discouraged him from making pronouncements about it. But the big bang theory was and is resisted by some, because it seems too near to creation from nothing. I mean, when you think about it, it is saying that the entire vast universe burst into existence from a match head, in an instant. Fred Hoyle and many others always resisted the idea. I don't see anything inherently antagonistic between the idea of creation and physical csomology. — Wayfarer
And the other point that really struck me about Russell's essay, a Free Man's Worship is that Buddhism, for example, always knew that 'the whole temple of Man's achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins.' It's not news to them! It's a result of deliberately narrowing the scope of philosophy to the phenomenal realm, the very realm of constant change and decay, and then boo-hooing about it. — Wayfarer
What is also needed is an alternative economic philosophy that doesn't rely on endless growth, consumption and the stimulation of artificial needs. What is needed is a social philosophy that encourages the cultivation of a superior state of being, rather than endless acquisition and consumption. That's the most difficult change to envisage. — Wayfarer
Information theory is the scientific study of the quantification, storage, and communication of digital information. The field was fundamentally established by the works of Harry Nyquist and Ralph Hartley, in the 1920s, and Claude Shannon in the 1940s. — Wikipedia
↪Pop Sorry, no. — Mark Nyquist
It's just your latest non sequitur-fixation, Fool. Like so many so-called "paradoxes", under scrutiny at least one premise doesn't hold up. You're not deranged, just not reflective enough. — 180 Proof
I'm not a therapist. :sweat: — 180 Proof
Well, insofar as theism is untrue, they do amount to the same thing. The (origin of the) universe – finite, unbounded immanence – seems a brute fact. There is no answer to "Why" (that does not precipitate an infinite regress, in effect, begging the question). — 180 Proof
I have by rejecting the "tit-for-tat strategy" premise as nonsense or, at best, a non sequitur with respect to why humans eat meat. — 180 Proof
It's all the same perspective at the end of the day. We pretend what we must look like to the mirror. But, there's no real other view to be described regardless of how many qualifications you stack on it. — Cheshire
I already said that tit-for-tat doesn't apply in this situation because humans tend to operate on a higher level of cognition than our vegetative friends (although maybe that's debatable).
What you're describing is akin to taking anger out on an inanimate object. "That curb stubbed my toe so I'm going to destroy it. Tit-for-tat!". More like twit-for-twat. — emancipate
Yes it is. Your argument is that since some animals eat us, this justifies us eating all animals. Makes no sense. — khaled
No. Some animals eat humans. This doesn’t justify eating all animals.
Lions eat us, this doesn’t justify eating cows. — khaled
I gather that in the Middle Ages "proof" meant logical plausibility for further trial by experience. At best, they were admirable agnostics. — Fine Doubter
As for order, there is no outer limit on its level of complexity. There are subatomic scales, the scale we're at, the cosmic scale. We're nowhere near "completing" our understanding of any of those scales. Comets with a too long orbit to calculate (yet) may additionally be influenced by "fields" we've barely begun to sense a glimmer of. As it was only a couple of years ago observations were strengthening Einstein's gravity wave idea, or they started photographing black holes, it's beyond credence when some big people claim everything is an open and shut case. — Fine Doubter
(On the actually religious side which I want to leave for other threads, often when "god" is mentioned what is really meant is "god pretext" and lots of "god subtexts".) — Fine Doubter
Nonsense. We eat meat for the same reason we use petrolium in combustion engines – much higher energy density than plant-matter and wood/coal, respectively. No other reason, Fool. Vegan / vegitarian diet is, however, healthier than carnivorous (or pescatarian) diet and more suitable for us now that we're anatomically on this side of 'the large forebrain explosion' facilitated, maybe even caused, by our h. sapiens ancestors 'adopting' a significant meat-based diet (much more cooked than raw) hundreds of millennia ago. — 180 Proof
You should at least attempt to figure it out yourself, but if you want me to spell it out for you:
Discriminating against a group for the actions of individuals makes no sense.
"That black guy just shot a man. This justifies shooting all black people"
This is the logic you're employing for animals and plants — khaled
they never founded a state or nation by their own — javi2541997
Tit-for-tat is a strategy in game theory and while non-humans may exhibit that behavior e.g. herbivores eating plants and then plants evolving toxins/thorns/etc., strategies fall in the domain of reason i.e. humans would/have approve/approved it as a legitimate way of dealing with each other and with the world at large.
— TheMadFool
Is photosynthesis also a form of reason? Stretching the definition of reason thin here. Plants do not make a conscious decision about what to eat. Or so it seems. — emancipate
You would (hopefully) tell that person they’re wrong. What would you say to them if they asked you to unpack?
That’s what I would say to you. — khaled
That's not something the plants are doing, humans are to blame.
— TheMadFool
True. But it shows that veganism can be bad for the environment and the animals (and humans) inhabiting it. — Apollodorus
Agree! Somehow it was our fault to make them poor and ignorant. But it is now our duty and responsibility the inclusion of these citizens in jobs and institutions. It sounds so difficult but not impossible :up: — javi2541997
English: it comes from the word "gyp" which means scam.
German: it comes from the word "zigeuner" which means thief
Spanish: it comes from the word "gitano" which means liar
Hungarian: it comes from the word "szégany" which means poor — javi2541997
suffering — Jack Cummins
That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. — Neil Armstrong (astronaut)
Venus fly traps don't eat us. The plants we eat never eat us. — khaled