I don't think so. Therefore, the god of the gaps is immaterial in every sense.Is there a non-empirical dimension? — Ludwig V
hope is more of a religious thing. — Fire Ologist
If God had no relation to the empirical world, God would have no use for us, and we would have no use for God and no reason to seek God or evidence or any content to refer to in any discussions using the term “god”. — Fire Ologist
That, of course is completely different.... depending on how you define murder. Here's a list of things you not only may but must kill your own tribe members https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Leviticus-Chapter-20/Thou shalt not murder. — BitconnectCarlos
Deuteronomy 20:17 But thou shalt utterly destroy them ; namely, the Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee:
The two words are no more similar than the two attitudes. Why say one when you mean the other? I came by the intellectual rejection of Christianity first and later all organized religions and religious doctrines, through honest inquiry, not from an aesthetic response.No, I mean by repugnance just the intellectual rejection. — Astrophel
That was by way of a sardonic guess at how long it will take for religion to be eradicated from the world. Not the delving into what's been lurking under it.I can't wait to see what that's like. Literally: I have 20 years left on Earth, at maximum stretch. — Vera Mont
For you. I wish you safe journey. I'm already here.This is the beginning. — Astrophel
Everybody has to die, but the distribution of suffering is quite uneven. But there was still that "why?" attached to the "just this", which renders your acceptance incomplete.Here, the term is applied with complete acceptance of the arbitrary nature of our circumstances. Born to suffer and die means born INTO suffering and dying. — Astrophel
Done.Look, if you want understand atheism (the OP) you need to understand theism, and to understand this, you have to move decisively away from things "theological" that carry significance already assumed and accepted. — Astrophel
Where have I expressed any such repugnance? All thinking interests me. I reserve repugnance for exploitation and cruelty.I do appreciate your repugnance for religious thinking — Astrophel
I can't wait to see what that's like. Literally: I have 20 years left on Earth, at maximum stretch.but all I am trying to get across is that when God is, well, put to rest altogether, not a peep, then IN our existence in the world there remains a very important residuum, — Astrophel
The third way: avoid it where possible, inflict as little of it as possible, relieve as much of it as possible.ou can embrace suffering, as Nietzsche did, OR, you can observe suffering for what it is, which is qualitatively very interesting. — Astrophel
I see that all my striving at the keyboard has been in vain.So atheism is just a response to theism, and theism is constructed out of irresponsible thinking. Responsible thinking categorically removes these terms to see what is really there, in the world, that is behind it all. This is suffering. Now, one can move further along analytically, but this simple assumption has to be acknowledged. — Astrophel
Not believing it doesn't mean I dismiss it as unimportant. I can both interested in and sympathetic to a belief without subscribing to it myself. What I reject out of hand is that lukewarm admission that there may be some kind of supernatural something behind or underneath of the universe, and that something could be called God - because we can't prove it ain't so. Why should we bother with such a fruitless conjecture? Just not to be called atheist?It is not enough, it seems to me, to dismiss the whole business as superstition. — Ludwig V
It is and does. Psychological support is one main function of faith, especially when a person is undergoing some difficult ordeal. Social cohesion is another important function of organized religion - a common core around which the community can overcome its personal disparities. Religious tenets encourage good behaviour toward members of one's congregation. It also matters greatly to people who have that all-too-common human craving for a 'higher' purpose, a meaning to their insignificant individual life, a sense of being 'part of something bigger than themselves'.It would be reasonable to suppose, wouldn't it, that religion addresses issues that are still important to us? — Ludwig V
How could it be otherwise? The impulse to look for pattern in existence is also the root of philosophy. The fundamental childish questions: What am I? Where did I come from? How do I fit into the big picture? are answered by earliest known origin stories, the established religious texts and the latest philosophical treatises.There are many themes built in to religion. It addresses human concerns, but also, as Nietzsche so emphatically pointed out, is involved in the power struggles in the new, complex human societies in the new cities. — Ludwig V
I think it might be built into our psyche, and got into the language automatically, through our tendency to make a narrative of our experience. Literature, religion and philosophy all grow increasingly complex as man's knowledge of the world grows.Personification of the inanimate in that way is built in to our language. — Ludwig V
Nope.But consider: you don't think there is a basic problem with our existence that stands outside of, and prior to, the language and cultural institutions that rose up out of a response to this? — Astrophel
We're not born to suffer and die. We're not born for any reason at all. Life begets life, willy-nilly. The universe expands.Why are we born to suffer and die? — Astrophel
I didn't bring them up. I responded to:Well, it was you who brought up "my internal experiences" — Astrophel
Where you take that, I don't quite follow. Is it that you want me to agree that there is some kind of otherness in sentience? Something beyond or behind the processes of the brain? I can't do that, because I do not believe that.If you say there is no spirit, loosely construed, in the real world, I would ask, what is it that you refer to when the matter of thoughts and feelings and intuitions arises? — Astrophel
I have no idea: it's your distinction. You have not explained the difference between internal and external experience. Are you just getting all this mileage out my using the word 'internal'? It wasn't essential. It has nothing at all to do with spooks.What are external experiences things about vis a vis internal things? — Astrophel
No! Brains are inside the skulls, which are part of the bodies and inside the skin, of sentient organisms. Everything in sensory and conceptual experience is neurological. Everything we know about the inanimate world comes through neurological process. You can't think, intuit, feel, remember or discern any external things without your brain!Brains are external things, no?
aboutOpinion about what? — Astrophel
I do not agree with that opinion. I do not see a problem in existence.a basic problematic built into existence that gave rise to the worshipping and the rest. — Astrophel
I don't understand. What is the standard that comes to the general mind when [some?]one dismisses the concept of spirit? Is there some reason I should meet that putative standard?This is a question about your reference to "spirit". So when you examine your internal experience, what you find is a kind of content that really doesn't conform to the standards of existence that are generally in mind when one dismisses this concept. — Astrophel
Is there a boundary between internal and external experience? How does one discern that boundary? And these very different kinds of experience transmit different kinds of information? Can you give a neurological explanation as how that works?Put it this way: when you say you don't think there is such a thing as spirit, you implicitly draw on some standard of what the world really is that rejects the positing of spirit, and so I am assuming this standard refers to what is not your internal experience, but in your external experience. — Astrophel
Sorry. I can make no sense of that paragraph. My best guess is something like: delving into the human psyche reveals that it differs from inanimate objects. That much, I have already stipulated as self-evident. If that difference between life and non-life is supposed to be a "spirit", I accept that as a metaphor, not as a physical entity.The point really was to simply say that a human "world" when observed closely, as a scientist would observe, is found to be not a world of objects. An inquiry intent on discovery of the nature of what is "there" in one's "internal experience" will notw above all that this is nothing at all like the external counterpart of this world: the world of shoes, rocks, telephone polls, morning dew, etc. — Astrophel
That's a widely held opinion.Before there was worshipping, Gods, and all the trappings of these churchy fetishes (I like to call them), there was a basic problematic built into existence that gave rise to the worshipping and the rest. — Astrophel
How nice for one! And the subject of this thread is rational?But now we're playing the "human behavior game" and not the "philosophy game." In the "philosophy game" one strives for rationality at all times. — BitconnectCarlos
Fair enough. We can be bizarre to each other.The idea that because people are necessarily limited, you're allowed to rationally reject, wholesale, the concept of god (not God) is bizarre to me. — AmadeusD
My internal experience.I would ask, what is it that you refer to when the matter of thoughts and feelings and intuitions arises? — Astrophel
Without intelligent makers, there would be no couches or shoes.If one is curious or envious, say, this surely is outside of the category of being a couch or a shoe. — Astrophel
Even if that were the case, the impasse is broken and the rescuer can take action. Morally, it makes no difference whether the tie-breaker is love, anger, fear or chance.So we can act in any number of ways. Maybe we're mad at our child that day and choose to save the other. — BitconnectCarlos
Maybe so, but I also doubt reason plays much of a part in this example. More likely, the man makes no decision at all; is incapable of a coherent thought, let alone and ethical consideration: he just jumps in and saves his genetic legacy. Once he can think again, he may very well intend to go in after the other kid - in fact, almost certainly will do so, even if reason tells him it's too late.Reasonable action is action in accordance with what we are believing to be true/reflects the nature of reality. — BitconnectCarlos
OK. I'm not invested in the moral dimension of a situation that involves a split-second response from an party with a deep vested interest.However, I believe that a father has greater moral duties to his child than a stranger. — BitconnectCarlos
There isn't time. If both drowning children are your own, or both are strangers, the primal impulse is to save both, or failing that, the nearest one. In that situation, you don't weigh odds, and you don't know the result: you simply act.If we believe we all have the same exact duties towards all children then why not flip a coin? — BitconnectCarlos
Yes; I believe it's the biggest and most powerful religious organization in history.RCC = Roman Catholic Church? — Ludwig V
It's not morally relevant. But if the choice is 1/1, some other factor must tip the balance, else the would-be rescuer is paralyzed by indecision and both children drown.I was commenting on an idea brought up by Benkei that filial relationship is not morally relevant (ought not to be viewed as morally relevant) - thus, one morally ought to show zero bias when it comes to saving e.g. two drowning children with one being a stranger and one being one's own child. — BitconnectCarlos
How would that be better than letting emotion decide?Perhaps a coin flip ought to decide it. — BitconnectCarlos
Allowing a natural process with no predetermined outcome to take place and striving toward a goal are very different things.Some families can be toxic but I do not believe the dissolution of all families would be something we should strive towards. — BitconnectCarlos
Who declared it immoral to choose one's own child over another child? If it's a question of being able to save only one from an external danger, making the decision emotionally would be accepted by most people. However, if it's a question of sacrificing an unknown child in order to save one's own (say, with a heart transplant), most people would consider that wrong.Apparently you'd consider a father morally blameworthy for saving his child (showing preference) over a random child because it would be immoral to favor one's own kin in moral decision making. — BitconnectCarlos
That's not always or necessarily a bad thing. But I very much doubt ethical public decisions would contribute to such a dissolution.Complete dissolution of the family unit. — BitconnectCarlos
Sure there is: human psychology. That subject interests me greatly in all its variety and complexity. I'm interested in mythology and anthropology. Obviously, the lure of magic, wish-fulfillment, personification of natural phenomena and all those impulses that begin with ritual and eventually culminate in huge international institutions like the RCC, is very much a part of that interest.But isn't there something "behind" the stories that a person cannot wimp out on even if she tried? — Astrophel
Not in the arithmetic of military strategy. If it is strategically right to take out a munitions factory, a bridge, a railroad junction or a communications tower, the civilians working there are only one part of the equation. In the example, the consideration is how many lives on our side would potentially be taken by the cannons or tanks bombs or whatever is produced in that factory, compared to the people on their side who produce those weapons. 200 of them is pretty cheap for an effective strike against the weapons that could kill 4000 of us.Isn't bombing an armaments factory where there are no soldiers and knowing you will kill civilians "going after the civilian population itself"? — RogueAI
just there:What the hell are you talking about? where is anything like that mentioned? — Sir2u
If you had known about roles you would not have made the comments you did about mothers having side hustles as taxi drivers to earn some extra money and selling lawn mowers of dubious quality. — Sir2u
In response to a previous post, attempting to clarify this:Who said anything about its quality?) — Vera Mont
You did, or do you not remember what you write!
" It's okay for a shopper to pocket the odd can of tuna because prices are too high, and for the seller of alawn mower to lie about its condition to get a better price?" — Sir2u
Personal and professional ethics are quite different. Each role a person plays within a group, the person adopts the ethics of that group. If your are a mother, teacher, shopper, taxi driver for the kids your role dictates the ethical rules you follow.
For example, as a shopper you expect prices not to rise too much and curse the supermarkets when they do, but as a seller you try to get the best possible price for the second hand lawn mower you are selling. — Sir2u
Behaviour, yes. Ethics, no.The women's behavior changes depending on the role she is playing. — Sir2u
Fairly narrow ones, actually, in a different conversation, with links where appropriate.You are the one making broad claims about the laws — Sir2u
I'll get therapy and hope eventually to get over the loss.I will no continue to answer your comments, good bye. — Sir2u
Lincoln, by his own declaration, was willing let the institution of slavery stand, so long as that tolerance kept the union together, but he was determined to stop it spreading to potential new states and allowing slave states to gain a majority. According to the constitution, the slave owners got extra legislative seats due to the three-fifths compromise.My point remains that the reason for these hostilities leading up to the Civil War was that the Lincoln election spelled an eventual end to slavery and the only way to stop it was to fully remove the South from northern control, which was to remove those votes from influencing southern policies. — Hanover
[Lincoln] did not publicly call for emancipation throughout his entire life. Lincoln began his public career by claiming that he was "antislavery" -- against slavery's expansion, but not calling for immediate emancipation.
Are you saying that a woman who has a child can't also have one or more jobs? (Many single and married mothers, in fact, do.) And she's not allowed to sell her lawn mower? (Who said anything about its quality?)If you had known about roles you would not have made the comments you did about mothers having side hustles as taxi drivers to earn some extra money and selling lawn mowers of dubious quality. — Sir2u
And neither is an ethical response and neither is a decision to take specific action.Your bitching at the super market is caused by the same thing as you wanting a bit more for the lawn mower, looking after yourself and your family. — Sir2u
That doesn't become an ethical consideration, nor yet a change to some different set of ethics, as long as the parking space she's grabbing isn't the handicapped one, and changing checkout lanes doesn't involve shoving in ahead of a doddery senior.While the mother knows that waiting in line to drop of the kids at school is the correct thing to do she will probably hurry to grab a parking space in the supermarket parking lot. It is a perfectly acceptable thing to do in the supper market, just like changing check out line to get out quicker. — Sir2u
They're as available on line to you as they are to me.I would certainly like to see those laws. — Sir2u
I see no way in which a non-schizophrenic can manage that feat of multiple-think.I think I made it quite clear the morality of the person does not change from role to role, but the ethics attached to that role does. — Sir2u
If the deciding agent uses a different set of rules, of course. That's why we can't tolerate heads of state with principles: we need them to be morally flexible for every occasion. It's okay for them to be sworn in on a stack of bibles, as long as they don't take the Christian ethic too seriously.But you do agree that depending on the role the outcome of an ethical decision may be different? — Benkei
I don't know what the laws are in your country, but in Canada, there are exceptions, where the lawyer is required to divulge information or is permitted to divulge it at his own discretion.If I would represent a client for murder A and as a result he also confesses murders B and C from 5 years ago to me then as a lawyer I'm prohibited from disclosing B and C. — Benkei
; in cases of child abuse, intention of harm and or a court order for any of several reasons, client privilege is void.Public safety can trump privilege where a lawyer reasonably believes that a clear, serious and imminent threat to public safety exists.
If the winners were smart they would use the money to create a business that spread the profits to more people, thus lowering the inequality. — Sir2u
It would, if every jackpot sere that big and every jackpot had a winner. That would be $816,000,000 put back into circulation, rather than being spirited to off-shore bank accounts or tied up in overpriced pictures and jewellery and boats.I don't really think that giving one person every month getting the $68 million dollar is going to make much of a difference in the overall distribution of wealth. That would be 12 people a year in a population of about 40 million people. — Sir2u
That's okay, as long as they're blowing it on goods and services that provide jobs to people.And from what I have seen, a lot of them blow it all away in a couple of years. — Sir2u
Yet another small business soon drowned by big business would do no more for inequality than taxing big business and investing in public infrastructure.If the winners were smart they would use the money to create a business that spread the profits to more people, thus lowering the inequality. — Sir2u
They're actually governments.But if we really want to look at inequality we should be looking at the companies that run the lottos. — Sir2u
Incidentally, they also run a bunch of casinos and racetracks. The revenue, after reimbursing retailers and services, goes to local communities, charities, health and sports organizations.The Interprovincial Lottery Corporation, constituted in 1976, currently has as its shareholders the governments of the 10 provinces of Canada. It conducts 3 national lottery schemes: Loto 6/49, Super-Loto and the Provincial. These national lotteries are managed by the 5 provincial organizations within their respective territories.
Yup. The irresistible lure of the golden ticket. 'Twas ever so. At least they get some of it back in the form of social services and help.The owners of these thing are richer every day which increases the inequality because most of the money comes from people that cannot afford to be spending the money buying tickets. — Sir2u
That gives you a unique perspective on civil war and how it is taught in school a few generations after the fact. I know more about the US one, and how it's been represented in popular media - romanticized, for the most part, endlessly memorialized, fetishized and re-enacted, while it was by all practical accounts by far the most costly of all America's many conflicts in terms of human lives and suffering. I have an idea the Russian one was similar in destructiveness and long-term after-effects.I am from Russia. — Linkey
Some similar schemes have been proposed for democratic voting procedures, effectively turning every election into a plebiscite on some key issue. The efficacy of such a system depends on voters being fully and accurately informed on the issues, and if that's in the purview of broadcast media, we in North America are toast.And theoretically, it is possible to find a solution to this problem: if each voter, when voting, indicates on a ten-point scale how important this decision is to him personally, — Linkey
The concept of roles in sociology and psychology is very well know and documented on the internet. — Sir2u
Yes, I believe it is, and that something of the kind has been practiced by groups in various settings since the beginning of people. It works in groups small enough to be personally connected, each to each, and doesn't seem to work in large, anonymous ones.Everything that's produced is pooled and shared. I'm wondering about whether this is something that dwells in the human potential or not. — frank
The kind in which every individual is valued and respected.If it's cultural, what kind of culture reinforces the idea. In what kind of culture does ownership become a ghost? — frank
Each of them have their rules of engagement and they are opposite to each other. — Sir2u
No, of course not. But it would be basic courtesy to back up a broad claim with at least a real-life situation in which it might apply.It is not my job to educate you and lay everything out so that you can just sit back and relax. — Sir2u
That is what I was doing when I asked for examples of how someone's ethical decisions would be guided by different principles or standards in that person's various roles.I you want to participate in the threads it is your obligation to either ask for clarification of someone's ideas — Sir2u
If people decide it is the legal way to settle their territorial claims or religious differences or political disagreements, of course it's legitimate. This was not even an issue until the 20th century: imperial aggression, crusades and national expansion, as well as local disputes, were simply accepted as perfectly normal.Is it legitimate to wage armed conflict though? — schopenhauer1
Sure. What human endeavour on a mass scale is not absurd?Is it not silly that conflict has any legitimacy? — schopenhauer1
That's not a question about the legitimacy of war in general. It is a question about allied strategy after a particular conflict was already underway. Should Poland and France ever have been in jeopardy? Of course not. Should Germany ever have been in the state of national upheaval that spews out a Nazi leadership? Of course not. Could the entire giant debacle have been prevented? Of course.Should for example, it have been legitimate to make the Nazis totally surrender Germany after they attacked Poland and France, or should the Allied militaries simply have contained the Nazis once their troops had reached the German borders in 1945? — schopenhauer1
War is armed conflict between two or more groups with opposing objectives.What is "war"? — schopenhauer1
Legitimate is a legal term. Any act that conforms with the pertinent law is legitimate. Laws are drafted and legislated by human agencies constituted for the purpose. If a war falls within the currently accepted international definition, it's legitimate.Do you think war is can be legitimate? — schopenhauer1
Whether you say it aloud or just think it, considering a war legitimate means you agree with its objectives. That may imply - or someone may infer from it - that you accept whatever methods are used to attain those objectives. This could the 'ends justify mean' territory - can't be too sure about implications.Tacitly saying that war is legitimate, means something..but what? — schopenhauer1
Yes. And people keep making new rules in futile attempts to cover the changed situations. And people keep breaking those rules.Also, as ssu is at pains to point out, the nature of war changes over time, and looks quite different from ancient times, to the 1200s and Ghengis Kahn, to the 1700s and in the colonial territories, to the 1800s and various imperial wars, or civil wars, to the 1900s with total wars... — schopenhauer1