Scientific American has an article... titled "The Hippies Were Right: It's All about Vibrations, Man! — Metaphysician Undercover
What do you think about whether it's right or wrong and why? — Shawn
Seems all the more complex since good as a simple is defined by circular definitions. Again we have this relational stuff arising out of a simple. — Shawn
Don't let history get in the way of your ranting scientistic ideology. — unenlightened
That Apollo pulls the sun on his chariot or Eros causes desire through arrows isn’t really what was abandoned. Mostly because it never really existed in the sense we think— but even if it did, these “supernatural” phenomena continued on well after Thales. — Mikie
They were important in the development of nearly everything in the West. Including Christianity. Should we call them proto-Christians? (Many have made that claim too.) — Mikie
I think the understanding of the world changed. I don’t think the characterization of going from “religious terms” (here apparently equated with superstitions on par with Santa Claus) to naturalistic ones (and hence proto-science) is accurate. I think that’s a story that’s been perpetuated without evidence, and gone mostly unquestioned. — Mikie
The gods were as natural to the Greeks as what we currently call natural, in my view. But who exactly fo you have in mind? Democritus? Thales? Parmenides? — Mikie
The range of Presocratic thought shows that the first philosophers were not merely physicists (although they were certainly that). Their interests extended to religious and ethical thought, the nature of perception and understanding, mathematics, meteorology, the nature of explanation, and the roles of matter, form, causal mechanisms, and structure in the world. Almost all the Presocratics seemed to have something to say about embryology, and fragments of Diogenes and Empedocles show a keen interest in the structures of the body; the overlap between ancient philosophy and ancient medicine is of growing interest to scholars of early Greek thought (Longrigg 1963, van der Eijk 2008). Recent discoveries, such as the Derveni Papyrus, show that interest in and knowledge of the early philosophers was not necessarily limited to a small audience of rationalistic intellectuals. They passed on many of what later became the basic concerns of philosophy to Plato and Aristotle, and ultimately to the whole tradition of Western philosophical thought.
His main argument against their view was what has come to be known as the “open-question argument,” though he actually stated in two slightly different ways. Consider a particular naturalist claim, such as that “x is good” is equivalent to “x is pleasant” or “x is pleasure.”If this claim were true, he argued, the judgement “Pleasure is good” would be equivalent to “Pleasure is pleasure,” yet surely someone who asserts the former means to express more than that uninformative tautology. Alternatively, if this naturalist claim were true, “x is pleasant but x is not good” would be self-contradictory. Once it was established that x is pleasant, the question whether it is good would then be closed, or not worth considering, whereas, he argued, it remains open. The same argument can be mounted against any other naturalist proposal: even if we have determined that something is what we desire to desire or is more evolved, the question whether it is good remains open, in the sense of not being settled by the meaning of the word “good".
Every one of the early Greeks were religious— all believed in the gods and spoke of such, all were educated in Homer. — Mikie
The narrative that these men were essentially primitive scientists is unconvincing. — Mikie
... the universe might not have "come to be" at all but rather eternally transforms (e.g. A. Guth) from one 'configuration of physical constants' into another (e.g. R. Penrose's 'conformal cyclic universes') whereby, occasionally, sentient metacognitive agents evolve and interpret their universes in perspectival terms (e.g. a personified fluke aka "creator").
When asked, Smith, the most reasonable answer, it seems to me, is "All that we know is that the observable universe is here and that we can only measure the age of its currently observable state to be about 13.81 billion years old; that's all we know so far, anything else today – chance or creator – is fiction." — 180 Proof
In hindsight, at least in the Western tradition, philosophy concerns – began with – critiques of religion (i.e. magical thinking) which, in effect, makes space for non-religious narratives and the defeasible, critical reasoning that underwrites the natural (& historical) sciences. — 180 Proof
... Christ almightly! Does everything one doesn't personally agree with have to be a 'conspiracy theory' these days? — Isaac
What's lazy is dividing every position into one of the two ready-made media-friendly tribes on every issue instead of actually reading what people are saying.
How can you endorse anyone getting a phalloplasty — Andrew4Handel
A kinda modal realism begins to take shape ... everything exists (in some possible world). — Agent Smith
Since only 8% regret transitioning, transitioning is a good thing. — Benkei
I think the class 'mental illness' is a social construct, as I already said. This means that there is no fact of the matter such that anything is or is not a mental illness, and one has or does not have anything identifiable like a virus or a wound. — unenlightened
In general, I think the identification of any person as mentally ill is unhelpful. — unenlightened
Attempts to remove it from mental health manuals are political — Andrew4Handel
If it is not a mental health condition then
why the need for the long term ingestion of harmful cross sex hormones (For example testosterone often causes vaginal atrophy in the women taking it.) — Andrew4Handel
Facial feminisation surgeries that can lead to permanent facial numbness. Tracheal shave that can give men permanent speech disabilities. — Andrew4Handel
And the belief that some flaccid arm flesh hanging between your leg is the equivalent of a penis. — Andrew4Handel
This is not a fact of nature, it's a social construct. this is demonstrated by the fact that you already pointed out that what is and isn't a mental health condition changes from time to time, not in the light of evidence, but in the light of changing social mores. — unenlightened
If your position is simply 'everything we're told is true' then you're not responding to the arguments you're simply not engaging. — Isaac
It used to be considered such by the very medical professionals whose current opinion you're now treating as gospel. — Isaac