At the risk of taking a joke seriously - since you'd be conceding your position is not provable - it is possible to prove a negative. At least in the sense of proof outside of math and symbolic logic.No, it isn't — Pattern-chaser
Yes, there are areas of scripture that can be taken as metaphorical, such as the length of time the earth has been here. But you can't take everything in scripture as metaphorical whilst maintaining to be a theist in any meaningful sense of the word, and this is not a common position. — S
I am saying that things like the length of time the earth has been here and the universe has been here, iow areas of scripture where religion contradicts theory, are taken as metaphorical. But one still believes there is a God and that there was some guy, for example, Jesus, whose teachings can help one be a good person, come closer to God and so on.If you're one of those "It's all a metaphor" theists, then a) you're not really a theist in any meaningful sense, and b) you're not who I was referring to, and therefore beside the point I was making. — S
In contrast, for some Pagans, nature is capricious, arbitrary, and imprecise. No science, then, in any modern sense is possible. The best that can be done is an effort to describe nature qualitatively - and imprecisely. — tim wood
Time dilation is the effect gravity has on devices that measure time - gravity effects matter, it has no effect on actual time. — gater
Physicists seem to think there are ways to confirm or at least add evidence there are parallel universes. Cosmologists in general don't see themselves as simply making up models that cannot be tested.IOW our knowledge could continue to expand and not just beI haven't proposed any limits or that we have "reached" any limits. We can develop ever more elaborate models that we may think are "closer to reality", but how would we really know? — Janus
Even if we knew that our models do reflect reality (whatever we might think that means) how could we ever know how comprehensive they are? — Janus
Perhaps it would be better to accept that the nature of the real cannot be captured, but only glimpsed, in thought; which should not be all that surprising when you think about it. — Janus
So, why do people (I can't really speak for others here apart from myself) go to psychologists and psychiatrists? To feel happy, I surmise, or at the very least, to feel less unhappy (although, usually that realization is achieved after some substantial therapy) — Wallows
Now, given that there is a universe, is it more likely that there is just one and only one, or that there's more than one? — tim wood
Because you're always talking about yourself, and your feelings, and your state of mind, and your worries, and your insecurities. — S
I can throw labels too.
— Wallows
Good for you. Go ahead. Do you think that would bother me? Just the other day I was called a psychopath, piece of shit with nothing to teach. On the contrary, I find it highly amusing. — S
How did it manifest in? I take meds for my psychotic disorder. Do you think these are related? — Wallows
It's good, then, never to lose sight that science probably will never answer ultimate, final questions. And it's a sign, imo, of maturity to give up spending too much energy on them. — tim wood
I think you might have misunderstood me. — Virgo Avalytikh
What I have said is that levelling a barrage of critiques against the status quo presupposes a political philosophy — Virgo Avalytikh
I am not sure how putting forward critiques in the absence of a set of principles is more preaching to the converted than not doing this. Those principles will likely be at least as polarized politically and appealing, in his case, to part of the Left and certainly not the right.The result is that, in my view, Chomsky does an awful lot of preaching to the converted. — Virgo Avalytikh
This was in response to someone else, but I think it is relevent. Of course it is not unreasonable to hold his solutions to the same standard as the solutions or systems he is critical of. But these are in the end separate issues. IOW perhaps much of his criticism is correct but his solution is terrible - I have often though this was true of some of Marx's analyses. Still, his criticism stands on its own. They need not be hinged. If he puts forward a system as better, well, certainly we are all free to criticize that system. In fact I can't imagine that not happening with great vigor, in the future and in the past. But the poverty of his solution does not eradicate the use of his criticism. Unless we truly have the best of all possible systems and this can be known. Then the response to him can be, yes, but your points don't matter nothing could be done about that and no system could be better. Those are the inevitable lesser evils of capitalism.It's not unreasonable to hold him to the same standard as many of the political philosophers he critiques, — Virgo Avalytikh
Solution. Simple!! Get rid of the "T." — T Clark
If the critique is good, then it is very useful. If it is not, then it is not.Critiquing the status quo - even voluminously or insightfully - is a relatively trivial undertaking. — Virgo Avalytikh
Again, my answer to this is that if pro-natalists are right, suffering will ensue for someone else- will be created wholesale for someone else. If antitnatalists are right, no new person will suffer anything. There is no "risk" in the antinatalist outcome, other then no people existing. But, what does that matter to anyone, literally? — schopenhauer1
No, it doesn't (me agreeing). Another word for them we could use are heuristics, which are rarely infallible, but that's ok since heuristics save us treating all situations invidually and as potential anomalies.Acknowledging the possibility for unforeseen events does not render a belief which keeps them in mind unjustified and/or fallacious — creativesoul
In the context of me saying we have no idea what the mechanism is, I am happy to have someone from the 'we know a lot about it' camp couch it as unknown. I would think however that people probably react in a variety of ways to both what is or what we consider unknown and to what we consider mysterious. Mysterious it seems to me adds in that there is a surprising element to the phenomenon. I don't think that's ridiculous if one is coming from a physicalist viewpoint.It's not just word play. It has significant consequences. If you call something a mystery, you treat it differently than if it were just unknown. — T Clark
He's not mixing in his personal mysteries, he is saying that it strikes him as mysterious. Which is probably true, unless is lying or quite bad at introspection. Mysterious and unknown both cover situations where our limited knowledge encounters something that seems real. One focuses on the epistemological absence, they other add feelings having to do with how the not known thing strikes us given our paradigms. This doesn't take away from any of his arguments.If you want to mix your personal mysteries in with science and philosophy, that's fine, but it undermines the credibility of your argument. — T Clark
I didn't say live your life or kill yourself. I just note, again, that people want to continue living, including anti-natalists.Never existing and suicide are not the same. In fact, that is another pro-antinatalist argument. Either live out life, or kill yourself is pretty damn callous. — schopenhauer1
That's not how I react to people, professionally or regular every day interpersonally. I don't tell pregant women coming to term that they are being immoral. I presume you don't either..If you don't like life, figure out how to cope — schopenhauer1
I don't think that sentence make much sense, but I think that is a line of not reasoning well that Terrapin is handling well. In any case I am not an advocate that the not born need anything or that parents should have goals for them.Also, it makes no logical sense to CREATE people from NOTHING just so they can HAVE goals that they DIDN'T NEED in the first place — schopenhauer1
I didn't put it on them. I see that others who are alive will suffer their lives and now seemingly pointless if you win, so to speak. You think they shouldn't look the future and bring anyone new into it. So you think their feelings are part so wrong view. However they will suffer and it will be experiened by them as harm. And this would be, if antinatalists were successful, an effect of your polemic, and one which might be, since you are fallible humans, based on values that are not prioritized correctly or the wrong ones, or based on some incorrect reasonsing, or based on false metaphysics.Putting an agenda like "long term goals and achievement" above considerations of preventing ALL harm (with no cost to the future child), makes no sense is using the child for an agenda. They have to have XYZ experiences because someone else projected this to be what has to happen for them. — schopenhauer1
I can live with unknown as the adjective.We have an idea of various animals that might have it. Again, it's unknown, not mysterious. — T Clark
This statement is false. The damage doesn't have to be for someone else. The damage is for the person who wants to procreate but doesn't because they're pressured or forced not to. — Terrapin Station
Amen. But even more: we are both. Getting rid of negative emotions, so called, is a bit like saying, get rid of the negative organs (like the spleen and gall bladder are negative, let's operate). Or this brain half needs to go. Or language needs to get rid of nouns. ATP is a bad chemical. Or hopping over is good, but no one should duck.We need both. — Bitter Crank
I disagree. Again, it's nothing mysterious. It's only not fully understood. — T Clark
Yes, of course we all know by now, O would-be Guru, that anyone who disagrees with you, or even has the temerity to ask you to present and justify the reasoning supporting your claims, has failed to understand. — Janus
1. what are the basic things that u need to know in order to become an idea machine? — regel
2. what is the philosophy behind discovery/invention? — regel
3. how to compound interest your intellect and make quantum leaps from things you already know? — regel
5. how to use 100% of your brain? — regel
6. what are the mistakes that makes your mind less
efficient in processing data and learning? how to process data faster?
how to recognize patterns faster?
how to think ? how to make your mind really clear? (methods of
thinking) — regel
7. how to build an infrastructure for efficient and fast research? (technology tools that helps learning and research
and other ideas) — regel
8. how to develop photographic memory? — regel
9. what can open my mind and expand my consciousness to gain access to infinite possibilities?
(sharpening the senses and becoming sensitive, how to intentionally connect the two hemispheres of the mind? connecting to other minds maybe?) — regel
10. how to touch the key to genius and to flowing with the course of nature? (metaphysical secrets) — regel
I wasn't setting the bar. I was saying what I said, which was that the continued catastrophic predictions from both sides about something so incredibly complicated, especially in the long run, is not helping. I don't think people know as much as they claim about the consequences, yet there are so many experts, speaking with great certainty about a really quite unique situation. And there seems to be no difference between long and short term predictions and neither side will admit any possible differences or that there may be positive points on the other side. I see this pattern, as a Yank, in a wide range of issues over here also. No one can admit any point for the other team's position or even that there might be something positive there. Everything is clear and no one on 'my team' has motives other than the stated ones. No concerns on the other side are valid because the other team is, say, globalaists or racists. Or that any position they have might not be so cut and dry. And this affects how the other side is viewed: as stupid, evil and/or crazy. It's actually pretty common on the internet in philosophy forums for that matter - though this one is a bit better - where concessions around even small points are avoided at all costs. It seems to be the Zeitgeist. To think in binary terms and to demonize. To me that ain't working so well. I'd like to set that bar higher. And oddly that brings out sarcasm in others.And there's nothing more annoying then someone who comments that we'll survive either way. Survival? — S
How? — Wallows
What do you mean by "disidentify with them"? — Wallows
But, why? Doesn't the Buddhist have a point here? I mean, there's always some bigger fish out there. Not to sound depressive or anything, just a fact of life I suppose. — Wallows
I don't know. I never got the Greek and now the inherited modern obsession with the Olympics or sport or whatnot. I usually just wallow about and eat and sleep. — Wallows
This seems backward. First, one has to understand one's self to be able to engender any sort of non-trivial change. Yes? — Wallows
the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure. — god must be atheist
I don't think most stoics and others argue that it is happiness, even happiness is something they want to be equanimous about also. I do think they think it reduces suffering, which is not quite the same thing. And also that it makes one more rational, which I doubt. Obviously in some situations it is good to remain calm, but I think that can happen anyway if one accepts ones emotions. The emotions include fear and fear can make one calm, oddly enough, if your body realizes that noise and freaking out will likely kill or harm you.What I am trying to say is that it is an unproven, and possibly false assumption that equanimity is a state of happiness, and we can only accept that it is, if that is one of our basic premises. — god must be atheist
Steal it.All the above I fully accept. With complete equanimity. In fact, I wish I had thought of saying it, and now I am sad because I had not. — god must be atheist