Scientific method like all methods has limitations in offering Proofs. — Benj96
Should I object that my use of "necessary" was pretty clearly circumscribed in what I wrote? — Srap Tasmaner
Very true. But perhaps time to a human and time to the universe are very different. We know its rate objectively depends on distance, gravity, relativity etc and also “human time” is somewhat arbitrary : assigned to relatively quick cycles that we can observe. But for something that exists as long as the universe could - perhaps life and humanity arose in reasonable haste. Alas we most likely cannot appreciate that in its entirety I suppose considering we are only here for an average of 70-80 years or so. — Benj96
Interesting, could you elaborate a bit more? Also out of curiosity by what criteria is something “proven” to you or in the sense that you’re using it here?
Is it proven if it’s consistently the same throughout time - ie repeatability? If it stands to reason/ logic, or if you have first hand experience/ have observed it? Or other possible proofs? — Benj96
The natural conclusion is that either universes cannot exist in any other way but one that leads to an observer, — Benj96
I would like to know what’s problematic with this philosophy. — Benj96
And did, practically forever.
Should that bother us? — Srap Tasmaner
I'm perfectly happy to say that art and philosophy are unnecessary in exactly this sense. — Srap Tasmaner
If you want to chat, engage without the insults. — Philosophim
Does this mean all of my personal experiences are art? — Philosophim
Try to engage with more than one sentence Jackson. — Philosophim
Why are a bunch of colored sguiggle lines slopped on a canvas considered art compared to a realistic picture of a lake? — Philosophim
So what I mean by objective is something that exists apart from a human's personal experience. — Philosophim
What are the degrees of art. Why are some things considered more artistic than others? — Philosophim
Feel free to enlighten me! — Philosophim
What are propositions? What is a language? What is science? What are numbers? etc. — Harry Hindu
Currently art is considered subjective. — Philosophim
Unless you are a mean sort of fella.
There were three guys from Sparta
Each had a mean sort of phalla.
They cleaned up the town
Their leader went down
In history books as Fella. — god must be atheist
Yes, that rings a bell. I remember reading somewhere that ( at least some) of the Positivists saw him as their mentor and wanted him to participate in their meetings, but he disabused them of the notion that they were doing something along the lines of what he was, I can't remember specific names either, and I can't be bothered looking it up. — Janus
You're referring to those in the Vienna School who thought that? — Janus
Both Wittgenstein and Popper, for quite different reasons, refused to be identified as part of that school. — Janus
↪Jackson I don't think we disagree in this connection either.
↪Joshs So, would you say the Logical Positivists, and the Analytics whose main concern is with propositional and modal logic, are the odd ones out (are there others?) islands cut off from the diverse mainland of philosophy? — Janus
If philosophers today really do "comprehend their own time in thoughts", does that mean they also comprehend how our own time and its thoughts were arrived at? If you want to say they do, would this be all philosophers, or only some, and if only some, then which ones? — Janus
No, p-zombies are a thought experiment, — hypericin
Courage is great but it means knowing the mean between cowardice and recklessness. — Tobias
Philosophers are the ones that don't seem to realize that as they attempt to re-ask the same questions we asked and solved in the 4th grade. — Harry Hindu
Smolen is a big fan of Leibniz. He has pointed out that it is only fairly recently that scientists have ignored or disparaged philosophy. He points out that scientists of Einstein's generation had more than a passing interest in philosophy. — Fooloso4
I think Heidegger was on the right track when he said that in the movement of thought some things are occluded. Hence the importance of retrieval. — Fooloso4
Some people think that the continued interest in Plato and Aristotle is regressive. I do not agree. — Fooloso4
Progress toward what end?
The goal or assumption of progress in philosophy might be regressive. — Fooloso4
3. Art - What is it, and why is it needed? — Philosophim
Art is largely founded on the subjective, so pulling out an objective result faces its own challenges. — Philosophim
In other words, say someone's actions harm a group of people, I show them how their actions cause harm, and they respond with "why should I care?" — Paulm12
I mean, we can imagine consciousness without reason, so why not reasoning without consciousness? — Gregory
I don't need God to act "morally" in the sense that I think plenty of people who don't believe in God act morally. But personally, I need God as an explanation (or justification) to why objective moral values exist and that our faculties (rational and emotional) correspond to the existence of these values. It may be strange to say but JL Mackie (and his argument from queerness) actually pushed me towards theism as an explanation to why our moral intuitions could track true or false statements. — Paulm12
Personally, I'm committed to moral realism. And this led me to theism, or the belief that God exists to explain moral realism. Of course, there are those who become moral anti-realists because they realize that moral realism may require theistic belief, and theism is "too high of a price" to pay for moral realism. The moral arguments for the existence of God are the most compelling to me. — Paulm12