Several people sharing what each perceives subjectively = intersubjectivity. The principle of repeatability is basically saying that several people sharing what each perceives subjectively is a good way to approach tengentially the ideal of objectivity. — Olivier5
I've often wondered about the pessimistic view of the 4 noble truths.
What is the optimistic version?
1. Life is joy
2. Experience brings joy
ergo
3. To continue joy, one must continue experiencing and questioning
4. (I don't have a path for this) — Roy Davies
If you define religion as consisting in worship of a deity, then Buddhism both does and does not (and neither does nor does not :wink:) qualify as a religion, and this depends on its adherents/ practitioners. There are both superstitious and secular Buddhisms and Buddhists.
It could be thought to qualify to an equal degree as a philosophy as Schopenhauer's World as Will and Representation does, except for the twin irrational beliefs in Karma and Rebirth (Schopenhauer's philosophy arguably entertained only one irrational belief, namely the belief in Will). — Janus
The religion of science? — Roy Davies
The quote is from an old post (linked) that further elaborates. That thread was more or less the same topic as this one. — 180 Proof
Ideas might contribute to the successful existence of the entity thinking it, and thus be a positive influence on the entity and idea together, but there are many ideas that can be thought that won't have a noticeable effect on the entity's survival, but may themselves survive or not depending on the environment they find themselves in. An example would be ideas related to a religious cult that self reinforce each other inside the cult, but that outside, would seem ludicrous. From the outside, we would think these are 'bad' ideas and ultimately, the environment they exist in will come to an end. Like an evolutionary enclave — Roy Davies
I would rather say that objectivity is an ideal which we can approach through repeatability (aka intersubjectivity) but never reach. — Olivier5
I assume that you can easily show how the Four Noble Truths are factual. — praxis
Like you, I divided the number of possibilities into 100% — Dfpolis
So you're saying there is a 33-1/3% chance of landing on edge? — Dfpolis
A coin can land on edge or on a side. That is 2 possible outcomes. — Dfpolis
O is too vague — Olivier5
By stating only 2 possibilities (on edge or not) — Dfpolis
That is irrelevant to the way you assign probability numbers. Is your principle that "the truth of (A or not A) => P(A)=50% and P(not A)=50%", or not? If it is, then according to you, there is a 50% chance of a coin landing on edge. If not, all your claims about reality are baseless. — Dfpolis
I deflect that back to you — god must be atheist
Now. X, Y, and Z each toss the coin once. You say that the probabily of tail is 12.5%, and the probability of heads is also 12.5% of any given ONE toss. That is simply absurd. The probability that the coin will land on heads (or else tails) in each one of the three times of the tosses, is 50% times three tosses, and averaged over three tosses.
If the observation decided to be true is 50-50 by each of X, Y, and Z, then the observation's probability is (50%+50%+50%)/3, just like in the coin toss — god must be atheist
It is highly relevant as it relies on the same principle you use to assign a 50% probability to your alternatives. If we can have either A or not A, you say each has a 50% probability. So, since a flipped coin will either end balanced on edge or not, then the probability of its ending on edge is 50% — Dfpolis
There is a simple statistical answer to the OP, which is that the procedure you use, multiplying the odds of discrete events to obtain the odds of a combination of them [ p(A&B&C) = p(A)*p(B)*p(C) ], only works when the events are independent from one another. In this case they are not: if I see a flower on a plant, the chances that my wife will see a flower on that plant are very high. If X sees O, the chances that Y sees O are very high. Etc.
If the probability of event B is affected by wether or not A happens, then the two events are not independent and you cannot just multiply the probabilities like you did. Another procedure applies, though covariance and correlations, more complicated. — Olivier5
Is this post referring to itself? — Yohan
They will, and do, but we have enough problem now with people being influenced by technology - this will make it even more complicated. — Roy Davies
Making someone say to itself:
This is important and will help me survive.
is the expressway into agreement and engagement. — dussias
Ah yes. I agree the title is a little odd. The reason for prompting the discussion is part of a larger idea that interests me about human's relationship with technology as this technology becomes more 'human' and natural in their interactions with people. People will fall in love with digital characters (already are, I think). — Roy Davies
I agree. The concept of conjecture and refutation means that an idea is only as good as its ability to stand up to being refuted. A good idea also has to be refutable in its design. — Roy Davies
That’s an interesting point. Though I don’t know about ideas being ‘true’ or not. Some very destructive ideas can exist in a society and thus keep it going, at least for a while. — Roy Davies
We don't know. Unless we actually know how consciousness occurs within ourselves, we won't be able to judge the presence of inner life in anything else. Evidently there is some sort of information processing going on within us which is responsible for all this but we only have broad anatomical descriptions, not detailed or functional enough either to replicate or in my opinion to base a theoretical framework. — debd
So if you don’t count some properties, then two objects with all the same properties (besides the ones you’re ignoring) can’t be told apart. That’s not surprising.
The indiscernibility in question though is of a type that accounts for all properties.
If you look at a red car of a certain model and then a blue car of the same model, but both of them through black and white video screens, you won’t be able to discern them either. — Pfhorrest
Don't be, yours the blunt edge speaking to the caborundum stone. I understand, and this will hurt me more than you.
The idea is that if you rely on yourself - what you discern of observe, then you're subject to error. How, for example, would you know that all that's true for X is true for Y? If, on the other hand, you rely on the objects themselves, then more likely you will not be in error. Two "identical" cars are by no means at all in-themselves identical, and suitable inspection makes that quite clear. — tim wood
The different cars are discernible in that there are properties of them that they do not have in common: for example, one is here while another is there. If even those positional properties were made the same, then you would have truly only one car, because otherwise you would be in the strange situation of saying that right here in front of us right now at the same time are two (or more) indiscernible cars coexisting at the exact same place and time, even though of course in that situation it would to all appearances seem to be only one car. — Pfhorrest
I can see your link between death and justice, especially the whole idea of capital punishment, although of course capital punishment does not happen in this country.
Apart from capital punishment being viewed as unjust in many ways, such as the possibility that a verdict on someone may have been wrong I wonder if it's also linked to an erosion of belief in life after death. Perhaps there is an underlying idea that a life of remorse in prison is a greater punishment than the oblivion of death. — Jack Cummins
I can see your link between death and justice, especially the whole idea of capital punishment, although of course capital punishment does not happen in this country.
Apart from capital punishment being viewed as unjust in many ways, such as the possibility that a verdict on someone may have been wrong I wonder if it's also linked to an erosion of belief in life after death. Perhaps there is an underlying idea that a life of remorse in prison is a greater punishment than the oblivion of death. — Jack Cummins
Surely, death is an equal event for everyone. All of us will die, some prematurely and even the richest die sometimes sooner than the most vulnerable.
Perhaps rather than bringing death into the matter, it would be better to explore equality with reference to life, rather than let death's angry face glaring at us, poke it's nose into the discussion about justice and equality in this life. — Jack Cummins
Right, philosophy provides a valuable function by providing a view from outside the socially acceptable group think, but one should not expect to be rewarded for providing the service.
There may however be a reward which is built in to the social rejection. If one is tossed out of the social world, the real world is the only place left to go. And whaddya know, the real world is far more interesting than the social world! Yup, it's true, all my best friends are armadillos. :-) — Hippyhead
Is it? I thought sex was physical. You mean to tell me that I've been having conceptual sex with my wife and not physical sex this whole time? Does that mean that my offspring are conceptual outcomes of my conceptual sex as well? I thought that they are physical outcomes of physical processes. Im really confused now. — Harry Hindu