I don't believe so. The way I'm reading it is as a "placeholder". That is, we all know we have minds but we aren't going to say it. Too much is at stake. — Rich
That's the important word. That's the substitution word for the action of the evolving Mind.
Natural Laws
Natural Selection
Natural Occurring changes
All are the Mind. — Rich
This is the key phase. Ones eyes and ears should always perk up when "natural" is used. Just think Mind. — Rich
There are far too few human genes to account for the complexity of our inherited traits or for the vast inherited differences between plants, say, and people. — Rich
DNA is made up of smaller parts which themselves carry out directed activity. Biologist have not found the bottom.
Why don't you address the logic of my reply rather than referring to some conflicting opinion which you hold? — Metaphysician Undercover
Hmm. This seems quite odd to me. The British during the early years of the second world war using quite obsolete radar technology were able to get a very accurate position on their bombers flying over Germany on night raids without using the clocks on the bombers. The only clocks that were needed were the clocks at the ground stations back in England. That was over 75 years ago. Today. much of the world is not covered by GPS, due to a lack of ground stations. This GPS clock claim is repeated over and over by thousands of people, but original sources are very few. There are as far as I can tell about an equal number of people in the field who challenge this claim, but rarely ever referenced. I wonder if popularity gets in the way of actual information transmission. Technologically speaking, there is no reason that necessitates a clock on any GPS satellite. — curiosity in action
It seems to me that this may be true when trying to measure time. To me, it still makes sense to say some sort of unmeasured absolute time passes at the same rate for all things all of the time. To illustrate, consider two human beings born at the same time in the same location. One travels to a far away place in space, and returns 20 years later (local time). Even if their watches measured a different amount of time, they have still existed for the same amount of absolute time. — CasKev
It's not your assertion that "murder of innocents is wrong" derives from the values of a particular society that I object to, It's your assertion that this is in some way categorically different from "the earth is flat", which, in exactly the same way, derives from a particular society's opinion about what 'flat' means. Neither come from some outside source, but neither are entirely subjective either, anyone trying to argue that a ball was flat could be countered by showing that a ball is unlike all the other things which we agree are flat; someone trying to argue that murder was good could be countered by showing how murder is unlike all the other things we call good. — Pseudonym
It's not your assertion that "murder of innocents is wrong" derives from the values of a particular society that I object to — Pseudonym
I'm saying that in ordinary language, physics and in mathematics, to determine something is to make a comparison. So it only makes sense to employ the concept when relating states of affairs or parts of the universe to each other. It doesn't make sense to describe the universe as a whole as being determined or undetermined. — sime
Murder is principally wrong because it goes against the nature of life itself. This can't be demonstrated as if it was a scientific fact, but can be demonstrated on other ways. Doesn't the fact that societies around the globe progressively traveled from allowing killing in many situations towards universal ban on killing tell you something? — Dalibor
By 'they' I assume you mean definitions of morality in common usage? Haidt and Graham for example identify five common threads; Care, Fairness, Loyalty, Authority, and Sanctity, but others such a Bernard Gert list them as avoiding being the cause of death, pain, disability, loss of freedom, loss of pleasure, in that order (i.e, you might unavoidably be the cause of the later ones on the the list in order to avoid being the cause of the earlier ones). — Pseudonym
You were comparing two things.
1) The roundness or flatness of the earth.
2) The rightness or wrongness of killing. — charleton
Are you theistic? — ProgrammingGodJordan
Here is an answer:
Whether or not anybody believes it, gravitational theory obtains — ProgrammingGodJordan
If it is something which can arguably be shown to be similar to all the other behaviours already in the group "moral behaviour", then it is a reasonable argument. Others might disagree, but we can have such a discussion based on arguments about similarity. If, however, the culture tries to claim that something belongs in the group which is entirely dissimilar from everything else in the group, and provides no argument as to what it is about this behaviour which they consider similar, then they are objectively wrong, just as wrong as they would be if they decided to just randomly call thing 'car' based on no similarities at all. — Pseudonym
If there are two groups of people in the world and one groups say that cars are modes of transport with four wheels and the other say they are small swimming things that live in rivers, how do we decide whether the thing I'm driving to work is car or not? It's the same question, morality isn't special in this regard. The reality is we don't have two such cultures so the issue does not arise. — Pseudonym
Do you detect that you shall demonstrate your point to be valid, regardless of whatever answer I return? — ProgrammingGodJordan
Do you mean the same way I showed your recent idea (which was bundled with that query) to be false? — ProgrammingGodJordan
That query is in the same realm of your recent idea, which has been shown to be invalid. — ProgrammingGodJordan