So offer me your definition of "coincidental" since you're putting it in quotes like it's a special sort of term.Again, what is "coincidental" about that? — Arkady
No, it's really not. My point was to point out that it was entirely irrelevant to our conversation how deficient theists were.Ok, religious people are stupid in your experience.
Non-sequitur. — Arkady
I know. You were annoyed that a theist might be characterized in a positive light (to the extent humility is positive), so you wanted to be sure to point out that atheists were no less virtuous. That is, you personalized a discussion that was never intended that way because you seem to want to defend the goodness of atheists. My point remains that neither is better or worse per se, but both are equally lacking in support for their definitive statements.I didn't say it did. My response was geared towards your comment about some people "bowing down in humility." — Arkady
Everything coming together by happenstance, resulting in everything from rocks to consciousness.A "coincidence" of what? — Arkady
Ok, religious people are stupid in your experience. How does this impact my conclusion that neither the atheists nor the theists have any inkling of the answer?
(In my experience, the people most ardently claiming for humility in the face of the universe are those with the least amount of epistemic humility: it is religious believers, not scientists, who claim to have all of the answers.)
Do you believe in such a thing as an innate idea? Or are ideas always built up from experience? — Mongrel
No, you've just offered an impossible definition of objective, which implies a view from nowhere, where there is no viewpoint of the observer. Unless you're willing to dispense with the entire enterprise of offering awards for literature because at some point the award will represent only the viewpoints of somebody (whoever that may be), then you've got to accept at some level that one artist is better than the other.There are no objective criteria. "Objective" doesn't refer to agreement. That confusion occurs because people take agreement to be an upshot of something being objective. And saying that agreement gives weight to something being true or correct is an argumentum ad populum. — Terrapin Station
It was me. It was a serious discussion, so you don't get to twat on about how much you think French intellectuals look like "douches" and how much it upsets you that they smoke pipes. I didn't find your posts funny, and I didn't realize they were meant to be funny. I just thought it was the typical, insufferable, adolescent American shite we have to either put up with or delete, every single day. — jamalrob
What is interesting is that every conceivable argument against racism, sexism, or homophobia can be applied to speciesism. Appeals to nature are ad hoc assertions that use the naturalistic fallacy. Appeals to divine law either fail to resolve Euthyphro's dilemma or conflict with independent moral intuitions. Might=right arguments are straight up totalitarianism, as are appeals to cognitive abilities or any other sort of "fitness". Speciesism cannot be held up without leading to a slippery slope. — darthbarracuda
Most millionaires I have met have experienced their fair share of failures on their way to the success they enjoy today. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The problem is that the pace of housing development is not at equilibrium with the pace of population growth. — m-theory
So, even if I got a better paid job, the problem wouldn't go away, it would just go away for me - after a successful application, that is. — Sapientia
The point of this discussion is to discuss why this is, what can be done about it - particularly what the government can do about it - and why this hasn't already been done.
Frequently reported in the news and mentioned on political programs is the severe lack of affordable housing. At least here in the U.K., but I expect it's a similar situation elsewhere as well. In recent years, house building in general reached its lowest level since the 1920s (in 2010, with 112,000 homes being built across England and Wales), and hasn't improved by much since then (in 2015, this increased to 149,000). — Sapientia
I would add as a time for pessimism any ménage à trois involving you, me and Banno. — Baden
How do 3 people sleep face to face??...Oh... :-O — Baden
To be fair, I'm not all that young anymore (26). — Question
