But that is not the claim here. Good and evil, these are just analytic terms that emerge out of what is there in the giveness of the world. Put plainly, ouches and yums actually exist, but they're not things "at hand". — Constance
But that pain in my kidney cannot be second guessed — Constance
The whole thing is political theater. — Relativist
Streams are discrete, meaning that they aren't all experiencing one another at the same time. They have a subjective point of view, hence they have an identity. At one point I was an atom, experiencing the world as an atom, and then I was merged with other atoms to form a nervous system. — Dogbert
There are possible worlds where my stream of consciousness remained at the level of commonplace matter. — Dogbert
I don't see it. Put plainly, when you have an ethical issue, the ground for this takes one away from structure and into the value dimension of the world. The prima facie prohibition against stealing something dear to you is the fact that it is dear, and this dearness is not a structure of anything, Saying what it IS has a structure, but the bare phenomenality has none of this; and yet, if this phenomenality were to be absent, the ethicality would be absent as well. Thus, what it means for something to be ethical defers to the manifestation of what is important, and importance here is a nonformal (non structural) actuality. Ethics has its determinative ground here. — Constance
See the issue: ask me what a dog or a cat or an interstellar mass IS, and language is forthcoming; and ask what this explanatory language IS, and more language is forthcoming; and this circularity has no end. But what of the "presence" of what is there? This is "apprehended" IN language, yet stands entirely apart from it. — Constance
To establish what ethics IS, we do not look to good this and that, for this begs the foundational question: what is the nature of something being good...at all? This is the determinate question amid the prevailing indeterminacy of purposes and uses in which the good is embedded. — Constance
Not structuralism. — Constance
his is a hard question. To say what happiness is IN a context of relations, uses and purposes is one things, but then, what about "out" of these contextual indices? — Constance
I agree, excluding the occasional nuclear war. — MoK
I'm not confident that I will be dead before things spiral out of control, and I'm an old man. — BC
We are in dire need of good leaders in this "West". I see danger all over and escalating. Let's hope it doesn't spiral out of control. — Manuel
I don't see why we should believe that discourse of the "West" (whatever that means) can no longer be given. — Manuel
Reactive fury is a counterfeit of power: it shouts, it strikes, and all the while it gnaws its own heart — praxis
, I can say for myself with a high degree of confidence that the former USSR and the USA were not so different states in the mentality of their citizens (which may sound like wildness now), — Astorre
I think this thread is finally coming to a close. — Sam26
If the probability is, say, 50/50, I would agree, but the probability is high based on the evidence. Most of our knowledge is probabilistic, but we don't say "It may or may not be true." Moreover, we don't claim "to know" if the probability is relatively low. I'm claiming to know that the conclusion follows, not, obviously, with absolute certainty. — Sam26
Are we truly entering an era of multipolarity? If so, what are the philosophical consequences of a world without a dominant cultural “center”? — Astorre
Could this shift lead to a new "Iron Curtain"—a bifurcation of global norms, technologies, and values? — Astorre
The ethical question I have is THE ethical question: What is the ground of ethics? — Constance
Therefore, it is probable that consciousness survives bodily death in some form, preserving enough continuity for veridical representation. — Sam26
All these objects emit different wavelengths.
How do we learn that object X has the same redness as a postbox, Northern Cardinal and sunset when it will be emitting a different wavelength. — RussellA
Nelson Goodman proposed that "red" doesn't name a universal redness, but just applies to an object:
Red = {postbox, Northern Cardinal, sunset} — RussellA
but we can talk as if there were an abstract thing {a,b}. — Banno
And I hope has the sense not to ditch it yet? — Banno
That's why nominalists (e.g. Quine) didn't like taking it for granted in logic. — bongo fury
The set of all of our theories of set theory is public, but here we are attempting to figure out what the members of that set are. — Moliere
I don't think that's at odds, per se, with defining a set as a collection of objects, or individuals. — Moliere