'Outside of time' is not the same as 'of endless duration'. — Wayfarer
Is dilution the solution to pollution? — James Riley
The game is not worth the candle, is it?
— TheMadFool
When "the game" is all there is ... the question is moot. :fire: — 180 Proof
The game is not worth the candle, is it?
— TheMadFool
When "the game" is all there is ... the question is moot. :fire: — 180 Proof
That's a good question too. I think the good definitely outweighs the bad, but if I stop to think about it when good is happening, then I lose it. To stay lost in that beautiful rapture would be the key. Not thinking about it as it happens would be the key. Some times I wish my brain would STFU so I could live something without all it's stupid considerations of logic and morality sticking their nose under the tent. — James Riley
I wish it would be so easy to lose the bad when it's happening! I've been trained up somewhat to do that (embrace the suck) but it's not easy to be a tough guy. You can stare at a wound and try to enjoy, or defeat the pain. But I can't keep that up for ever. Too bad thinking about the bad won't make it go away. — James Riley
For one, there is in our culture barely any setting in which it would be appropriate to talk about suffering. One cannot talk about it at the watercooler at work, not at the family dinner, not in a cafe with friends. Not at a baseball game. Doctors generally don't have time for any actual discussions, nor do priests or monks. One must also always be alert so as to not give other people reason to doubt one's mental wellbeing. We're left with self-help groups, but there, the group discussion is guided by whoever happens to lead the group, which limits the scope.
There is something perverse in talking about suffering -- regardless of the setting -- and then going back to one's life (even more so if it's a relatively comfortable life) as if nothing happened.
So it's no surprise people don't talk much about suffering, or mostly only in very superficial, sketchy ways. — baker
Well-trained animals understand hints.
"There is the case where a certain excellent thoroughbred person hears, 'In that town or village over there a man or woman is in pain or has died.' He is stirred & agitated by that. Stirred, he becomes appropriately resolute. Resolute, he both realizes with his body the highest truth and, having penetrated it with discernment, sees. This type of excellent thoroughbred person, I tell you, is like the excellent thoroughbred horse who, on seeing the shadow of the goad-stick, is stirred & agitated. Some excellent thoroughbred people are like this. And this is the first type of excellent thoroughbred person to be found existing in the world. — baker
Negative utilitarianism (seems to) imply that we should all become plants (alive but, get this, no suffering at all because plants can't feel pain).
— TheMadFool
No, don't confuse Negative Utilitarianism (i.e. Epicureanisn) with Transhumanism (i.e. Abolitionism).
So who was it that said having a brain is a good thing
Mr. Scarecrow, Fool! :smirk:
What you say about "abolishing all pain" does not also abolish dissatisfaction or self-immiserating behavior?
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
Better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied. — J. S. Mill
(I know that) I know nothing. — Socrates
Sure, suffering is okay -- as long as it's not you who has to suffer. — baker
moral responsibility does not work as a function of knowledge. — Antony Nickles
And we do this in order to have control and presage our communications rather than be responsible for them. — Antony Nickles
Screw logic! I wanna live!
— TheMadFool
As Freddy might say, logic-usage is an expression of life. They're not mutually exclusive. — 180 Proof
Sure. If we are not able to calculate probabilities for a suggested possibility...then that suggestion is not verified as possible. Its just a made up suggestion.
i.e. Brain in a Vat. — Nickolasgaspar
-"First comes possibility, only then probability. "
-Correct. — Nickolasgaspar
Logic and morality are distractions; leisure time activities — James Riley
For those who fight for it, life has a flavor the protected will never know — James Riley
I think predator and pray and the whole animal kingdom knows that, lives that, dies that, even when they are not fighting. — James Riley
Some people know how to do that consistently, or so they say. Guys like Eckhart Tolle? Personally, I've not yet been able to master it. I have, however, had glimpses of it; the birth of my son, hunting, and a few other times, usually of beauty or danger. — James Riley
You really don't make any sense.
You said:"The concept seems relevant but when you get down to actually computing/calculating the odds, you realize you can't! I'm happy to be proven wrong of course! "
Probability seems relevant? To what ? To Possibility?
Do you calculate possibility? How ?
I am not sure you fully understand those concepts — Nickolasgaspar
You need to be more specific ...what concept and what odds? — Nickolasgaspar
To the degree they survive, 'herd species' are better adapted to false positives (i.e.guessing predators are present when they are not there) to false negatives (i.e. taking for granted predators are not there when, in fact, they are there). — 180 Proof
I'm afraid Newton didn't understand Galileo or Einstein. Clearly, you don't either. — 180 Proof
probable — Nickolasgaspar
Second more important point, I asked you whether you are confusing "possibilities" with "probabilities". — Nickolasgaspar
First of all you can not remove Theory from Science — Nickolasgaspar
Hypothesis non fingo. — Isaac Newton
That would be a good way to go back to the dark ages of human thought. — Nickolasgaspar
In economics and finance, risk aversion is the tendency of people to prefer outcomes with low uncertainty to those outcomes with high uncertainty, even if the average outcome of the latter is equal to or higher in monetary value than the more certain outcome. — Wikipedia
You're quarreling with some of the most profound scientific successes of at least the last century, Fool. Good luck with that! :rofl: — 180 Proof
What about e.g. Mach, Poincare, Planck, Einstein, Bohr, Schrödinger, Pauli, Turing, von Neumann, Feynman, Bohm, Everett, Deutsch, et al? :roll: — 180 Proof
Shut up and calculate! — Nathaniel David Mermin
Do they? Not in my experience. Not according to theoretical scientists, historians, historical novelists, political / military strategies, long-term forecasters (re: e.g. climate change). — 180 Proof
Contemplating gendankenexperiments (in science, history & fiction) are my metaphysical jam! :smirk: — 180 Proof
Yes, language can create as much as solve problems. This is why some believe that truth is to be found in silence. — Apollodorus
I can tell you straight up, Buddhist meditation is infinitely less pleasurable than masturbation. — Wayfarer