So your point is they have a different kind of relativism. Then what's the point? — Hillary
ike I wrote, different forms of relativism. It's only a word both have in common. — Hillary
Okay, but their relativism is a different one. — Hillary
would it not be circular reasoning to suggest "existence is preferable over nonexistence because x", with x being a reason that pertains to existence e.g., "you can only experience happiness when you exist"? Is this a logically valid argument for existence being preferable? — ratgambling
What then did you mean with the comparison between L and E? — Hillary
Then Einstein thought differently. E saw space as really existing with objects in it. And space between them. — Hillary
It's my question. If the relation between It's parts, as L defines space, is different for two observers then would they be different gloves for each? — Hillary
Space is subjective? — Hillary
L says the relations between the parts are dependent in the observer. So how does this apply to a glove? It fits for you but not for me? — Hillary
Not so sure. The distance between objects varies, according to L? — Hillary
How, according to Leibniz, are the relations of the parts of a goive, damned, a glove! different for you and me? — Hillary
What did he mean by that? — Hillary
Trust me Jackson, 180 Proof is clueless about Kant. His Wiki is the full extent of it. — Constance
If it has the properties omnipotence, omniscience, omni benevolence, omnipresence. — ArmChairPhilosopher
The relation between objects stays the same fir every observer in Leibniz' view, — Hillary
Leibniz didn't use relativity as Einstein did. — Hillary
This is why I do not understand things like California's board diversity law (which I guess was just ruled unconstitutional). California tried to pass a law saying that boards of companies in California must have underrepresented minorities on it. Is the assumption that there simply needs to be more underrepresented minorities on boards (why?), or that the underrepresented minorities bring a different perspective (what would this be? Is this on average or overall?) — Paulm12
But it was used to show Leibniz was wrong. All relational properties of a left hand and a right hand are the same. Still they are different. — Hillary
Yes. He considered space as the relation between objects only. Which would make a left glove the same as a right glove. Which the aren't. — Hillary
Those are superficial generalities. What differs is where we take god's nature - what god wants from people, what behavior is moral, the extent of god's judgement. That's where the vast differences are located and the source of many conflicts between creeds. — Tom Storm
One can stay Kantian, obviously. Kant had a wrong view on spacetime though. You could incorporate all scientific progress, spacetime being relative and left-right asymmetric (he offered Leibniz the glove left example to refute his relational concept of time), but in his view space is no material, which is the question. — Hillary
I hate to break it to you but you don't. You may have an illusion of knowledge, just as they do but if you put your "knowledge" to the test, you'll find it lacking. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Christians are all over the place on theology or the Bible. — Tom Storm
Not at all. Christians are all over the place on theology or the Bible. I grew up in the Baptist tradition in Australia. We were taught that the Bible is an allegory and most of the stories myths. We were pro abortion, pro gay rights, pro feminism, etc. Christianity takes many forms and some, like theologian Paul Tillich even hold that we can't know god and he doesn't exist because by definition god is outside of the category of existence which is reserved for corporeal creatures. — Tom Storm
It would be so much easier if the Theists could decide what they mean when they say "god". — ArmChairPhilosopher
Slightly longer version: Knowledge is transferable. If I know something, I can teach you, show you the evidence or the proof. I.e. if there were any objective knowledge about the nature of god, after several millennia Theists would have come to an agreement. They obviously haven't. (There are 41,000+ denominations in Christianity alone.) Thus, they obviously don't know what they are talking about. — ArmChairPhilosopher
And of course the Bible is pretty clear that the issue is of faith, not of reason. That couldn't be said more clearly. — ssu
I don't think so. But it's a great metaphysical question, to say at least.
Of course it's interesting just what "existing" means as there are the intangible, the immaterial things that we do take to "exist". At least for their usefulness. — ssu
It's a joke Jackson (referencing my Kantian thread) hence the wink emoji. — Tom Storm
The only thing I can defend is that god is currently not known. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Believing in God or not is one thing. God's existence or non-existence is another. — ssu
Ok. You're a Kantian — Tom Storm
To make the claim knowledge of god is not possible is a rather extreme metaphysical position. — Tom Storm
BTW - Big fan of Clapton's playing in Cream - Disraeli Gears, etc — EricH
I don't think about it as long as I don't get a definition.
But for the rest, yes, there is a possibility that god exists. I can even prove it to you. Regard this little syllogism:
P1: Clapton is god.
P2: Clapton exists. (And is real and there is evidence for that.)
C: God exists.
Pretty undeniable, don't you think? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Bringing this back to your OP, the assumption addressed in the article is that we can only see things according to our 'type'. It strikes me as stereotyping in an attempt to overcome stereotyping. — Fooloso4
And yet, how I am treated will influence how I see the world. — Fooloso4