In any case, yes I have a tactile sensation of the attraction between the magnet and the iron. — wonderer1
The bolded portion seems an odd way of expressing whatever you may be trying to express. Have you actually done the experiment? — wonderer1
No I'm not assuming ill intent. Ignorance on your part seems a simple enough explanation. — wonderer1
those who are willing to give their interlocutors a fair reading — Site Guidelines
You are probably thinking of Hobbes. — Paine
1. You seem to be attacking an archaic/straw version of empiricism, by stipulating that some sort of 'direct sensing' of properties must be available to humans for empiricism to stand up to scrutiny. — wonderer1
Types of posters who are welcome here:
Those with a genuine interest in/curiosity about philosophy and the ability to express this in an intelligent way, and those who are willing to give their interlocutors a fair reading and not make unwarranted assumptions about their intentions (i.e. intelligent, interested and charitable posters). — Site Guidelines
2. I have many ways of detecting the presence of a magnetic field. A simple one is just to hold a magnet near a piece of iron, in which case I will sense the force of attraction between the magnet and the iron. — wonderer1
No, it isn't, because there's no such thing as being incorrect without further ado. If it's incorrect, then it's incorrect for a reason. A sufficient reason, to be more precise, as demanded by Leibniz's Principle of Sufficient Reason. If you cannot grant such a reason, then you are in the wrong here, not me. — Arcane Sandwich
This is poor post quality. — frank
Because he believes that Democracy is the system that is closest to human nature. Human nature, according to him, is naturally good. Democracy corrupts human nature, according to him, but it's the least corrupting option, in his view. — Arcane Sandwich
This is incorrect. — frank
↪Arcane Sandwich
Why does Rousseau believe democracy is the cure for human evil? — frank
According to some, Rousseau was wrong. — frank
Time is making present according to Aristotle, (the present at hand) and in so doing is a counting of time as now, now, now. — Joshs
The Victorians and the rest of the world were shocked when the 'On the Origin of the Species' came out in 1859 — PoeticUniverse
If the misery of our poor be not caused by nature, but by our social institutions, then great is our sin. — Charles Darwin
If the misery of our poor be not caused by nature, but by our social institutions, then great is our sin. — Charles Darwin
Arcane Sandwich
I read the quotes that you mentioned a few times but I have difficulty understanding them. So, I searched on the net and I found an article from Christian Klotz entitled "Substance and Subject, from Kant to Hegel". From my reading, it seems there are two interpretations of Hegel's idea of what the subject is. Let's discuss the first interpretation first: "Thus, Charles Tayler explains the Hegelian claim that the Absolute is equally subject in the following way: “God thus posits the world in order to think himself in it” (Taylor, 1975, p. 108). According to Taylor, in Hegel’s conception the world is understood as that expression of God which is necessary for God’s selfknowledge. In this interpretation, the notion of subject which is involved in the Hegelian claims signifies a mode of being which essentially involves self-consciousness or self-knowledge."
What do you think of this interpretation? — MoK
Because we are no longer mortal creatures when we are in that state of contemplation. And since we are mortal creatures right now, we cannot comprehend it. — Arcane Sandwich
Are you saying that we cannot contemplate when we are mortal? — MoK
The Christian dogmatist claims to know (because he has supposedly demonstrated it) that our existence continues after death, and that it consists in the eternal contemplation of a God whose nature is incomprehensible from within the confines of our present existence. — Quentin Meillassoux
What do you mean by contemplation then? — MoK
Elsewhere in this thread, you mentioned that we cannot understand God's essence even in Heaven. — MoK
I then asked what the point of contemplation is if we cannot understand God's essence. — MoK
I can't claim to have understood the idea of Absolute Spirit. or the 'end of history'. — Janus
Real art: — PoeticUniverse
more great AI art: — PoeticUniverse
Great AI art: — PoeticUniverse
I don't do anger; anger has no brains. — PoeticUniverse
What does motion imply if not spatial displacement of a self-identical object? — Joshs
Speaking of Divinity, we have it that Divine Inspiration is the source for the writing of the two foundational chapters of the Bible, Genesis 1 and Genesis 2, among other of the myriad claims layered upon the hoped-for Supernatural…
As evolution obliterates Eden's immutable human formation, 'Divine Inspiration's claim falls flat.
The Victorians and the rest of the world were shocked when the 'On the Origin of the Species' came out in 1859, quickly followed by the 'Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam'. 'Denial' was the best course of action for the wishers and the believers, as it still is today, somewhat, for church attendance is dropping, even in the once stable northeast. — PoeticUniverse
(The ship was named the Beagle) — PoeticUniverse
I understand it to mean "something that persists identically in time". — Joshs
↪Arcane Sandwich
If 'artefact' means 'something made' then only h.sapiens can really manage that, courtesy of the famous opposable thumbs (although that is common to apes also). That passage I quoted the other day from Norman Fischer about the origin of ownership, tools and language, and with it, the sense of self - surely that's relevant. — Wayfarer
And stone tools were being manufactured long before homo became sapiens. So it goes back a long way, perhaps even a million years. But the more h.sapiens becomes reliant on tool use, clothing, possessions, and so on, to that extent they're already becoming separated from nature to some degree. And then with the advent of the Industrial Revolution and large-scale manufacturing, this takes on a whole new dimension doesn't it? — Wayfarer
Yep. The mention of essence is a response to recent interest hereabouts, mostly amongst a small group of Thomists. A discussion of necessity here will probably the obliged to address less than clear ideas of essence. — Banno
I'm confused here because you say even fictional entities have essences and then say that no essence can be understood. — Janus
The first statement seems to suggest that an essence cannot be some intrinsic thing like being because fictional entities have no substantive being beyond what is said or imagined about them, and also what is said or imagined can presumably be understood. — Janus
But the idea of an essence as a set of defining or identifying characteristics would also seem to be ruled out because such sets must surely be understandable. — Janus
Whether or not Spinoza was a pantheist is a matter of interpretation. An alternative would be to see him as an acosmist. Spinoza held a distinction between 'natura naturata' and 'natura naturans' with the former being the manifest nature we experience via the senses and the latter being something like creative nature or the laws of nature that give rise to manifest nature. — Janus
It's possible. Kant didn't believe in intellectual intuition, yet Meillassoux does. In After Finitude, he says: — Arcane Sandwich
Correct, and Hegel tried to reintroduce it. Yet the historicist character of Hegel's thought is not compatible with Spinoza's system of thought. — Janus
Why should we get involved in contemplating something incomprehensible? — MoK
It is eternal torture as well. — MoK
an equivalently fowl metaphor — unenlightened