Well that was a bunch of gobbledygook. — Terrapin Station
Where have they been the last dozen pages? — Merkwurdichliebe
Sure people my say we learn it from a deity but some of them (if they were really) don't seem to care about human life.
— hachit
...and maybe some deities care about all life. Their purpose is to nurture life, not to nurture humans at the expense of all other life. Wouldn't that make more sense? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Language allows us to acquire knowledge of that which existed in it's entirety prior to our naming it. Some of those things are themselves existentially dependent upon language use.
Hume said that it was possible for events to not have causes. — Dusty of Sky
You're going to hate me for saying this; but, if it comes down to a decision between Biden or Trump, I would pick Trump. As others have said Biden is Hillary with a penis. — Wallows
I call the side that outweighs as the correct moral choice. Despite our MASSIVE disagreement on semantics, I am not sure our views on morality are that opposed.
— ZhouBoTong
Everyone calls it that, and no one agrees with Tim's semantics. What's the point of a semantics of one? — S
Hume skirted around an important aspect of thought/belief. Expectation. — creativesoul
So I am saying that morality is relative, relative to communities, not to individuals, which is what I have arguing all along. — Janus
A common criticism of the Jews is that they killed Jesus. — Ilya B Shambat
The point is that it is the fact that no one wants to live in a lawless society that commits them to moral respect for law as such. Tim is right about this; but he is wrong to conclude that it is always morally wrong to disobey any law. — Janus
Why? We have laws and we have law, and the latter does not consist in any particular law or even any particular set of laws. Do you want to live in a lawless society? If your answer is 'No', then to be intellectually honest you should respect law; but that does not require you to respect any particular law or set of laws. Why would you not respect a particular law or set of laws? I believe it would be because you didn't believe those laws were just or rationally justified. — Janus
Whew! That's a relief.
You are just repeating the same contradictory stuff over and over. You want to claim science is inherently inadequate, but somehow also claim that it supports your view. Any time someone here refutes your position on the former, you flee to the latter and vice versa. That's called being a moving target and it's bad philosophy. — NKBJ
Then it's our own understanding which necessitates the use of empiricism as crutches when we are unable to walk the path of logic without such assistance... right? — BrianW
Or on this kind of online forum. I ask a question. And immediately three or four people get into a heated argument with each other about something else entirely. — tinman917
Yes, as a general surgeon I try and ease everyone's pain. — Wallows
Is logic solely dependent on empiricism. — BrianW
The point is, were he reporting asthma, or moles, nobody would think twice about it, but as the claims are regarded as extraordinary, then much higher standards are demanded. — Wayfarer
Compliance to the law is condemnable in some cases, and certainly not worthy of respect.
— S
In this you set "the law" equal to particular law. Seems like clear category confusion to me. — tim wood
Of course with this you allow yourself to do anything you want because for you there is no such thing as law until and unless you decide it is a law, after you decide if you feel like complying with it - for the moment at least. Obviously with this no issue of morality, because there is nothing to be moral about. — tim wood
Any accuracy in this? — tim wood
As I said from the outset, my aim was to draw attention to these cases, so as to demonstrate the falsehood of the claim that 'there is not a shred of evidence', when in fact, there's quite a bit. — Wayfarer
I've acknowledged that the possibility of past-life memories doesn't conflict with my philosophy. If that amounts to 'bias' then so be it. — Wayfarer
Philosophically, Bacon is particularly interesting for two reasons: In part II of the Novum Organum he tried to improve on existing conception of scientific method by expounding a method of induction which was not simply induction by simple enumeration.
What is the alternative explanation? Isn't it that Stevenson was wrong/misled/duped? — Wayfarer
If for example, it was being claimed that children knew things they could not possibly have known by "normal" means, then those purported facts that purportedly could not be known by normal means would need to be established as well-documented facts and not merely hearsay. And then it would need to be established that the parents and children could not possibly have had any "normal" access to those facts. All of that is nothing more nor less than what scientific rigour demands. I doubt it would be possible to establish all that, which means that this could not count as a scientifically rigorous study, for the simple reason that it relies too much on hearsay and anecdote. — Janus
It means you don't want to acknowledge what you've said. When I read it back to you, you sidestep it. — Wayfarer
So if there's some way that 'memories can be transmitted between generations', then at least there's an analogy or metaphor for the possibility of this past-life memory phenomenon. — Wayfarer
I must have jumped over that part. I get bored watching you try and explain the same shit over and over with little results so I confess I skipped pages here and there. — DingoJones
I didnt realise you had already layed it out in this thread. Like with Janus, I imagine we agree anyway.
Why didnt the people who actually think its immoral answer? — DingoJones
Nobody asked for a short answer, thankfully. Why did you opt to offer one? — DingoJones
It's more like this: that either there is no evidence at all for the possibility of a genuine past-life memory, or there is at least one genuine case. And if there is any genuine case, then you can't rule out the possibility - which is what you're trying to do, right? You want to be able to say, impossible, it can't happen, and draw a line under it, as a matter of principle. But I'm taking issue with the principle, as I really don't believe that in all of these research data, there is not a genuine case. — Wayfarer
What do you mean? I have no agenda . . . and I have I attacked what you say? I had no intention of that. — Merkwurdichliebe
I scored a point? Yay!!!
But, extraordinary claims are made in court too. So, if such ridiculous unscientific testimony is permitted there, where people are sentenced to life, and sometimes to death, why is it inappropriate to permit it here? — Merkwurdichliebe
You haven't ruled that out. I don't need an alternative to the alternative.
— S
You're dissembling, S. All you've said from the very beginning of this thread is, 'I don't care what "evidence" this Stevenson says he's got, we know that this reincarnation stuff is bullshit. And we know it, because science says it couldn't be true, so it's not scientific to believe such things'. Is that a fair paraphrase? — Wayfarer
Oh, and by the bye, his Wiki page alone suggests that a number of scientists took him seriously as an academic, but ultimately rejected his conclusions. So, your absurd claim that scientists and philosophers are unable to understand or open their minds to such phenomena is just that: absurd. — NKBJ
But what ‘alternative explanations’ could there be, other than Stevenson being wrong and the witnesses lying? — Wayfarer
If someone says he remembers something that he could not have known by any means other than actually remembering it, then what ‘alternative explanation’ would cover it? — Wayfarer
Stevenson, again, held a privately endowed chair at a University. He was by no means a sideshow psychic. — Wayfarer
If it was actually about breaking the law there are many many other issues that could have been proffered but this one was chosen because Tim does not approve of drug use. — DingoJones
What Im suggesting is we ask and answer the question Tim and I think others are actually asking “is it immoral to do drugs?”. How about it gentlemen? — DingoJones