Yes. And does this extend to the argument that we can therefore hunt like animals do?Picking the "us = good" mentality alone is absent grace, gratitude and humble regard. — James Riley
No. It is possible to live without eating animals. It is not either we eat or die. No one said you can't eat.Are you saying it is possible to live without eating? To eat without causing harm? — baker
The Jains, ideally, believing in absolute harmlessness, end up not eating at all, and thus die of starvation. — baker
Incorrect.Capital gains tax is terrible and disincentivizes investing and also makes taxes extremely, extremely cumbersome here in the US. — BitconnectCarlos
In other words, people should treat animals well because to do otherwise would reflect badly on the people. — baker
There is indeed something more to be said about this point. There's an unsettling thing in saying, in order for animals to be treated with respect they must pass the "have rights" test. Rights, as T Clark said, are a declaration of commitment, but created by humans nonetheless.I really don't think this is meaningful idea. A case can be made for not culling sharks but I don't think it can be grounded in the idea that a shark has rights. — Wayfarer
An apocalypse.However, if we cannot argue with the consumer of pork or beef, then what are we to do about this issue between interested parties? — Shawn
Okay.Accordingly, I'd prefer to reformulate Heelan's characterization of perception more moderately, without the emphatic bias: Like all human activity, perception is historical and cultural as well as physical and biological. Like all human experience, it involves interpretation from a point of view, but is nonetheless rooted in and constrained by physical and biological processes. So it seems, in keeping with the balance of appearances — Cabbage Farmer
Those are his analysis tests to come up with his theory on perception. Semantics (the meaning we attribute to what we perceive), the epistemic validity (how do we support our assertions), ontology of the perceptual world (what actually exists, or what's real in our world as perceivers.What questions are these? — Cabbage Farmer
According to him, yes. See my points above this.How is this a refinement or improvement of more customary ways of describing the interrelations of perception, science, and technology? Does it help us solve those "recalcitrant problems" mentioned above? — Cabbage Farmer
Absolutely not indifferent. Phenomenology cannot exist without disowning materialism, the staple of realism.As I indicated at the outset, it seems to me that phenomenology is indifferent with respect to "metaphysical" doctrines like materialism — Cabbage Farmer
Now explain how it is relevant to my claim. As I've noted, I never claimed that ethics and morals didn't involve facts, only that ethical and moral statements, positions, are not facts. — T Clark
Hello. Your existential crisis is a very common experience. So, this is absolutely real and understandable.whenever I think about where I wanted to be when I was a kid it makes me sad, because it's not here. I'm not doing what I want to do. I feel the world is passing me by and going to hell while I'm working my butt off just trying to pay the bills. I have $20,000 of student loans left after paying for 7 years and going to a public school. I have no ideas for a better job and not real interest, because it would mean I have to work even longer hours. — John McMannis
For one thing, Schopenhauer's argument for morals cites suffering as a condition of humanity. I'd say, he is using a fact that there is suffering. (Those who would argue against suffering as a fact of life need only to look at illness, death, and disappearance statistics (all facts).Explain to me how. — T Clark
The values are vigorously argued, however. A valid argument is what's common among these disciplines. They make use of facts to support their arguments.Morals, ethics, art, and politics clearly deal with values rather than facts. — T Clark
haha! Good catch! :blush:Recruitment officer: We need soldiers!
Draftee: What's the qualification? A heartbeat? — TheMadFool
I'll give you the clues that gave you away:I've been outed. :blush: — TheMadFool
my hunch is, — TheMadFool
Another Wittgensteinian idea I haven't got a handle — TheMadFool
No you did not say self. It was an implication from C's post and yours. It is relevant in the exchanges between you and C.I done see the relevance of this comment. I didn’t say anything about the concept of “self” not that it was a religious idea. — Xtrix
You certainly missed the philosophical part of my comment. That's why I emphasized it as philosophical. Referring to yourself is not what "self" in philosophical terms means, although for practical purposes, they did have awareness.Of course “primitive” humans referred to themselves, just as I said. There’s nothing philosophical about that— people do it all the time, and there are words in every language that does so. If you truly can’t distinguish between this ordinary usage and the technical notion of “self,” then that’s your problem. — Xtrix
Yes.Essentially and in short, a living organism in an environment, trying to survive as well as as possible given the characteristics we have and the resources available to us or which we can acquire. Much like any other living organism. All else is nuance, dependent largely on circumstances and matters at hand. — Ciceronianus
The sense of self is a "modern" notion. Believe it or not, "self" did not exist in the cerebral happenings of humans in the primitive era. This is a modern philosophical idea, not a religious one.So a biological interpretation is what we’ve always known?
I highly doubt prehistorical people thought of themselves this way or spoke of themselves this way. — Xtrix
A bunch of high IQ individuals who couldn't function without a person next to them.I see. Care to share your personal experience? What does it look like? — TheMadFool
Cause of the Antichrist.I don't get why Nietszche is quoted as 'the last word' on anything in these subjects. — Wayfarer
Yes. Very cartesian.If perception itself is existence, then it doesn't need the conditions for existing. — Corvus
Doesn't the fact of an observer presuppose reality? — 180 Proof
No longer a fan. I gave up on him a while back.Never a Nietsche admirer. — Wayfarer
This is understandably a concern. I wouldn't use the word either.Yes, I was horrified at the notion of cognitive hygiene, even when links were given. It seems like cleaning out the negative as if it is 'dirt'. I hope that is not the way forward for management in the mental health professions. — Jack Cummins
I don't have a book reference -- I actually lost my collection of books, which I intend to replace once I get the time and motivation.* By Aristotelian philosophy I mean both the philosophy of Aristotle and of those who generally are considered to subscribe to Aristotle's system. — banana peel
I believe there's essence in every entity -- what it is that necessarily belongs to an entity for its identity. The appleness of apple, for example.which part of Aristotelian philosophy convinces you the most or which one you find it the hardest to argue against. — banana peel
Nonsense. If I don't perceive you, you still exist. — DecheleSchilder
Then, are you an observer or the perceiver? Mental states, as a phenomena, are supposed to be latent (in philosophical term) to the perceiver, but an objective account by an observer, if it could be observed at all.I'm saying there is a class of things (mental states) that cannot be described by observers other than oneself. — RogueAI
This is a common mistake found in posts in perception/phenomenology threads.Do you agree then that there are phenomena in the universe (first-person experiences) that cannot be described by an objective third party? — RogueAI
I concur.We have a legal name if it isn't too: - fraud. — unenlightened
No it isn't.Is the ability to tell a lie constitutive of a right to tell a lie? — tim wood
In a collective mind, there would be. But the OP is talking about a single individual with no prior or current connection to another human or any living animals.I can't see why it's impossible for humans to have social instincts as well. — Hanover
She would be fine if she had innate skills to fend for herself. But as far as seeking another "human" or a male partner, or even knowing she could carry a baby in her, I think it would be that she'd be lacking awareness. Keep in mind this is a single mind. No emotion would develop -- attachment to something, maybe.All of her needs are catered for in terms of food and shelter (let’s suppose being raised to fend for oneself is somewhat of an instinct, she does not recall a time when she had parents, she doesn’t even know what that is.) All she has ever known is herself and her planty environment. — Benj96