Hmm - I thought the key focus of skepticism was valuing truth above most things. I think sometimes people mistake skepticism for denialism and cynicism. — Tom Storm
You've lost me. — 180 Proof
"To others?" – to whom?
And what does "value in itself" even mean? — 180 Proof
Nothing about "faith" entails moral character or quality. Remember Kierkegaard's "teleological suspension of the ethical"? — 180 Proof
A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." ~Freddy Zarathustra
↪TheMadFool I think "faith" only suggests that "the faithful" are gullible, placebo-junkies — 180 Proof
I meant that this:
I can't do anything to the actual baby if I have an abortion i.e. if I destroy the fetus.
— TheMadFool
Does not mean the same as, nor implies:
an actual baby should be born even if I destroy the fetus.
— TheMadFool
It also does not mean:
So, if I destroy the fetus, I destroy the baby. That's what I meant from the get go.
— TheMadFool
Also, I'm still waiting for your response to the argument that cleaning scattered seeds is deforestation — Amalac
1. You can't do anything to what doesn't exist (the actual baby doesn't exist, only the potential baby does). — Amalac
I've already dealt with the bigger picture, in this thread, yesterday. As stated, this "detail" and "finer points" question is really just noise. Idle curiosity on my part. No big deal if you don't want to opine on it. — James Riley
I was just challenging your unqualified statement.
As to the usual debate, consider the case where the fetus is killing the woman but she wouldn't want the baby, and would abort anyway if she otherwise could. In that case, does big government first ask the women "Hey, do you want the baby?" And then does big government vet the doctor's determination that the fetus is killing the woman? Does big government get to seek a second opinion from another doctor? Who vets the qualifications or objective abilities of that doctor? Big government?
Personally, I think this is all noise but I'm curious how the pro-life crowd would have big government pursue these issues, logistically — James Riley
No — Amalac
29 Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed [are] they that have not seen, and [yet] have believed. — Wikipedia
Not always. Sometimes the baby isn't the issue. In fact, they might love to have the baby. But the fetus is killing them. — James Riley
No, you destroy the potential baby (the fetus) — Amalac
1. If you destroy the fetus then you destroy the baby (that's what abortion is - potential)
— TheMadFool
No, you destroy the potential baby (the fetus) (I'm thinking about a 1 year old as an example of a baby, but perhaps you can tell me which age you are thinking of). A potential baby is not a baby, and you can't destroy what doesn't exist. — Amalac
But I think 180's point with that analogy is that an actual tree is not the same as a potential tree, and so for instance we would not say that cleaning scattered seeds in a garden should be punished just as harshly as burning an equal amount of fully grown trees, because both are “deforesting”. — Amalac
I was thinking 1955 was about the peak of the lobotomy era. — Mark Nyquist
Advocates of Electroconvulsive Therapy claim memory loss is caused by depression, not ECT itself. — Mark Nyquist
I agree with you 'if you're not feeling the blues there's something wrong with you.' — Jack Cummins
Be glad you didn't have a bad day in 1955. — Mark Nyquist
lobotomy — Mark Nyquist
Peer review and evidence based — Mark Nyquist
junk science — Mark Nyquist
Yes but you have no empirical basis for this. If it’s simply a gut feeling - who cares? — Xtrix
No, if you can't get to sleep if you want to, you lack an ability. If you can get to sleep whenever you want to, you have one.
If you can destroy yourself if you want to, you have an ability. If you can't, you lack one.
If you can make mistakes if you want to, then you have an ability. If you can't, you lack one.
And so on.
Being unable to make mistakes is a lack of an ability.
God has the ability not to make any mistakes. That's an ability. He also has the ability to make them. That's another. — Bartricks
A seed is not a tree. A sapling is a potential tree. A pre-26th week old fetus is not a person. A baby is a potential person. — 180 Proof
My, my, the things we do for women. — TheMadFool
Gibberish. Pro-choicers neither make decisions to abort using this method nor give two shits whether or not the decision is formally consistent — 180 Proof
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do. He may as well concern himself with his shadow on the wall. Speak what you think now in hard words, and to-morrow speak what to-morrow thinks in hard words again, though it contradict every thing you said to-day. — 'Ah, so you shall be sure to be misunderstood.' — Is it so bad, then, to be misunderstood? Pythagoras was misunderstood, and Socrates, and Jesus, and Luther, and Copernicus, and Galileo, and Newton, and every pure and wise spirit that ever took flesh. To be great is to be misunderstood. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Gibberish. Pro-choicers neither make decisions to abort using this method nor give two shits whether or not the decision is formally consistent. They wish to stop their pregancies. Period. These women are moral agents (@ age of consent) and not wards of the state, their husbands or their families. — 180 Proof
There is no "baby" until after the 26rh week (6 1/2 month) of pregnancy. :roll: — 180 Proof
Then, pro-choicers go on to argue,
5. If the fetus is not a baby then I can do something to the fetus
6. The fetus is not a baby (pro-choicer)
7. I can do something to the fetus (5, 6 MP) — TheMadFool
1. If I do something to the fetus then I do something to the baby. (pro-choicers' key statement, the reason why they want abortion) — TheMadFool
2. If I can't do something to the baby then I can't do something to the fetus (from 1, contrapositive: doing something to the fetus implies doing something to the baby) — TheMadFool
8. I can do something to the fetus and I can't do something to the fetus (4, 7 Conj) [Contradiction: Paradox!] — TheMadFool
I think it's more that they're treating normal as healthy and abnormal as sick — unenlightened
I am saying that judgement is a relation between mind and world (body, perhaps), of the species giving-a-fuck. — unenlightened
Thus alien hand syndrome, for example consists of the judgement of foreignness and revulsion towards one's hand — unenlightened
Hell is other people — Angelo
pessimistic — Angelo
optimistic — Angelo
Hope for the best. Expect the worst — Mel Brooks
love — Angelo
The pathogenic model deceives the unwary philosopher into imagining that illness is something other than the judgement of the mind. — unenlightened
It's all in your mind.
Most artist and talkers are neurotic as hell! — Protagoras
The perfect is the enemy of the good — Christopher Hitchens
Give them the third best to go on with; the second best comes too late, the best never comes — Robert Watson-Watt
That said philosophy science and secularism are also therapies to cope with the world. — Protagoras
Most of the planet suffers from anxiety. — Protagoras
Does everything have to be a psychological disorder these days? — Wise Old Lady
Freedom. Being an individualist and somewhat of a recluse this is one of my most important attributes. This can be a complicated subject to fully define as it applies to beings but the basic idea is: You can do any thing you want as long as you do not interfere with someone else's freedom.
No taxes (money)
Free quality health care for everyone (money)
100% employment opportunities (money) — RoadWarrior9
To err is human, to forgive divine — Alexander Pope
Are you saying Buddhism or religion are a treatment for mental conditions? — Mark Nyquist
Paradoxes are markers for failure — Mark Nyquist
It certainly does! I doubt any type of dualism would get far in most psychiatry programs (academic) but psychosis cases always involve mental content. So, to do it right, both the physical brain should be considered and also the physically contained mental content. There is a problem with the psychiatric profession viewing dualism as the physical and the non-physical and discounting the non-physical. A better wording of the problem would be the physical brain and the physical brains mental content.
The profession has done a poor job on the fundamentals.
I hope that's on topic. I should add that some forms of dualism should not be considered such as stand alone non-physical models (because they are bad models). — Mark Nyquist
Religion is the opium of the maases. — Karl Marx
Well spotted TMF. As you rightly pointed out, they are not the typical classical logical statements at all. They are more the sort of example cases from the Informal Logic.
But my point was to demonstrate, how daily life dialogues, intentions, dispositions and thoughts are like, and trying to convert them into the Symbolic Logic and Truth Table formats doesn't work. — Corvus