If we were to populate an entire planet with clones of you, people who not only share the moral philosophy in your OP but follow its implications to the letter, channeling only their most noble instincts in dealing with others and assiduously avoiding what they define as corruption and vileness, what would be the result? I suggest it would be similar to the world that you describe. When we try to hold others to normative primciples of right and wrong, when we understand human behavior in terms of a universal framework of ethics, we will have no effective means of making sense of ways of seeing the world very different from ours , and we will be forced to condemn rather than sympathize with behaviors that don’t fit our norms. In this way, our moral righteousness is part of the problem rather than the solution. As Ken Gergen wrote:
“We do not suffer from an absence of morality in the world. Rather, in important respects we suffer from its plenitude.” — Joshs
Right, and my conclusion is that the number system which was developed using finite intuitions breaks down when extended to infinity (the infinite hotel). And I want to suggest that this may be what's happening with math. The number system using numbers which was developed using finite intuitions (rational numbers) breaks down when extended to model the continuum (with real numbers). — keystone
In the infinite hotel 0.89 = 0.9. Therefore shifting everyone up one room is equivalent to vacating room 1. And since vacating room 1 doesn't create more empty rooms, one should be suspicious about what is achieved in shifting everyone up one room.
In the finite hotel every number has a unique instruction. 0.9 means only one thing: vacate room 1. Infinite decimals are not required for the finite hotel. — keystone
Though on the off side...does it really say that? From what I've been told there are so many interpretations of QM that you can pretty much just have it say whatever you want. — Darkneos
Seems to me that people often profess views for aesthetic reasons rather than because they are convinced of their truth. — Tom Storm
How is this social milieu different/less biased than science? And isn't what's important the soundness of the IDEAS? — GLEN willows
We don’t create reality to match our theories, we create theories to match our goal-driven social realities, and they can succeed or fail in this aim. — Joshs
Kant's pirmary objective is to make moral laws as immutable & universal as the so-called laws of nature. Have you seen anything, anything at all, violate the law of universal gravitation? In Kant's eye an inanimate object obeying every law of nature applicable to it to the tee is perfectly moral as it has, and probably never did and never will, make an exception of itself (re the categorical imperative).
Worth noting is that miracles are, as per Hume, violations of the laws of nature i.e. the divine/god(s) have, for the most part of recorded theology, been associated with, let's just say, illegal activities such as resurrections, walking on water, so on and so forth.
God(s) is/are outlaw(s) in Kantian ethics. Loki (the god of mischief) comes to mind. We need to make (an) arrest(s), pronto! — Agent Smith
Particles are local, and the variables behind their motion, the wavefunction guiding them, non-local. — Haglund
that the laws of physics are non-local. — Haglund
That's not what I'm postulating. I postulate no transfer of information between two localities. I postulate one simultaneous (in the rest frame) transfer at two locations towards the spins. Not between the locations. — Haglund
Time is not involved. There is no causal interaction between the electron spins. Space connects them globally without information going instantaneously or traveling in space. — Haglund
Well, it could be that hidden variables constitute space. This would establish the connection between gravity and QM. So the space between and around two electrons connects them globally. Non causaly, without time involved. — Haglund
The test just doesn't rule out non-local variables. It doesn't matter if you include the observer or not. If there was an entangled pair of electrons 13 billion years ago, then non-local hidden variables took care of the spins being non-causally related. If one of them interacted by spin, the other would automatically fall into one state. — Haglund
Yes. The Bell tests. Bell invented them as he was an advocate of hidden variables (he couldn't imagine an observer, an experimenter with knowledge of QM) to cause collapse of the wavefunction in the past. The test doesn't rule out non-local HV, only local ones. And the non-local ones are needed to explain entanglement and global collapse of the wavefunction. — Haglund
Why? Non-local hidden variables exist without any observer — Haglund
Superdeterminism seems to include the choices made. Non-local hidden variables don't involve choices made. It are the objective variables and are the underlying mechanism leading to the observed chance behavior, like there are determining processes in the throwing of a dice. — Haglund
Experiments don't rule out non-local hidden variables. There are even experiments thinkable to decide if there are these things. — Haglund
In the spin orientation example the spin orientations of both particles are determined when the particles are created. — Edgar L Owen
Consider a volume of free particles that interact. Their particle properties such as energy, momentum, spin orientation, etc. are INdeterminate with respect to each other to a certain degree determined by their wave functions. Now, for particles to interact they must decohere, their particle properties must become exact with respect to each other. That is because their particle properties must be conserved in any interaction. Eg. energy exiting an interaction must equal the energy entering the interaction. In decoherence exact particle properties such as energy are randomly chosen (within wave function limits). Decoherence occurs in all particle interactions. It happens irrespective of whether a human is arranging the particle interaction or not. It's because of this innate INdeterminism of quantum processes that determinism cannot be true. — Edgar L Owen
"There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free will. Suppose the world is super-deterministic, with not just inanimate nature running on behind-the-scenes clockwork, but with our behavior, including our belief that we are free to choose to do one experiment rather than another, absolutely predetermined, including the "decision" by the experimenter to carry out one set of measurements rather than another, the difficulty disappears. There is no need for a faster than light signal to tell particle A what measurement has been carried out on particle B, because the universe, including particle A, already "knows" what that measurement, and its outcome, will be."
Don't agree because quantum randomness is intrinsic to decoherence. It doesn't depend on an observer or experimenter. — Edgar L Owen
Determinism is of course incompatible with quantum theory where quantum events occur randomly. In my view that in itself is enough to consign determinism to the scrap heap of pre-quantum history. No one should consider it seriously any more. — Edgar L Owen
No real idea. But given that cause can't be established for certain what legs does 'determinism' have? — Tom Storm
Eschewing language conventions because one can seems to me a terrible idea, at least if we are to share a language. The same goes for pronouns. Of course, one can use whatever pronouns one likes, so long as he is willing to accept how jarring and odd it might seem to his interlocutors, but to expect others to conform to such usage is absurd. — NOS4A2
We’ve seen where that has gotten us, though. Men are being allowed to compete in women’s sports, or to disrobe in their change rooms, for example. We’re forcing people to use language we would never use otherwise. We’re cutting off people’s genitalia and feeding hormones to children. We are sacrificing much more than truth.
At what point do you say, “no, that’s not a woman”? — NOS4A2
Are concepts abstractions, or are there concepts for non-abstract happenings or features of reality. A tree is no concept. Is an elementary particle? — Haglund
rt is a language like words. Language is meaningful, unless you write a poem for the sake of words. — Haglund
what is a book? Doesn't it amount to uploading one's thoughts onto the worldwide booknet? A mind is identified with its contents (ideas, weltanschauungs) and not with its function as a information processor, oui? As a thinker I'm no different from you, yourself one; however, I'm an agnostic, that's what defines me in the theological universe and you maybe a theist and that's who you are. A person's mind is the unique set of thoughts (concepts, ideas, other information) that they possess and so can be extracted, stored, accessed by a computer and that's, in my humble opinion, what mind uploading is essentially. :grin: — Agent Smith