Yet he has not, by all his experience, acquired any idea or knowledge of the secret power by which the one object produces the other; nor is it, by any process of reasoning, he is engaged to draw this inference. But still he finds himself determined to draw it: And though he should be convinced that his understanding has no part in the operation, he would nevertheless continue in the same course of thinking. — Hume
Some of us are dealing with crap elsewhere and we don't have the time, energy or interest to participate here in depth. — darthbarracuda
From what I see, it's not only that Hume uses induction when he argues that induction is unjustified, Hume goes on to use induction pointing out evidence that our use of induction is on shaky ground (habit, custom). — Purple Pond
Please read this again. And again.Yet he has not, by all his experience, acquired any idea or knowledge of the secret power by which the one object produces the other; nor is it, by any process of reasoning, he is engaged to draw this inference. But still he finds himself determined to draw it: And though he should be convinced that his understanding has no part in the operation, he would nevertheless continue in the same course of thinking. There is some other principle which determines him to form such a conclusion. — Hume
You've lost me there.Is that the end result of the attitude that a philosopher ought to be is cynicism? If that's not true then, what ideal for a man or woman ought to be? — Posty McPostface
Solipsistic view does not need to be negative, although common sense is gonna get you.The future that I can picture in as a solipsistic mind is self-defeating and negative.The solipsism constantly must always wonder that she can think whether she is solipsistic or not. — Posty McPostface
The future of humanity, of civilization, causes you great distress?I don't know what that future will look like and that causes me great distress. — Posty McPostface
I'm afraid not. Nostalgia is akin to grieving about the past. One cannot grieve over something that hasn't happened yet. What is it, then, that you feel about the future? Dreaming, imagining? Fear of the future? Perhaps, you are longing about the future.Now, having that great piece of information in your working memory, I want to ask if it's possible to be nostalgic about the future .......you've never experienced; but, would like to? — Posty McPostface
Dolphins beach themselves. What to make of this?But look at what we can do. We can even have ideations of suicide. — schopenhauer1
It's called satisfying an instinct. People naturally move towards a source of food, like the refrigerator.What motivates us to do anything in the first place? Well, we usually have to have, at the last, a short-term/temporary goal in mind, and move towards that. — schopenhauer1
Biological needs.Where does this goal originate? — schopenhauer1
Nah. It takes very little to do what we do most of the time. We move towards the door when we hear knocking without thinking of meaning or value.Well, that is where we put our fiat-value on something, to make us feel the impulse to move towards it. — schopenhauer1
No. Loud sound, strange sound, or banging will make us move towards it. We didn't prefer it or prepare for it at the dawn of civilization.Further, this derives from preferences that we have cultivated over time. — schopenhauer1
So, you are willing to allow that hope is evolutionary, but in the same breath brush off our coping mechanism as something we invented? Honestly, Schop. Why do you do this? I know you from before. Early onset of imbecility is not part of your condition.Hope is in the equation, perhaps for evolutionary reasons. It could just be a coping mechanism we happened to have developed in order to keep the goal-factory moving along. — schopenhauer1
Sometimes I wonder why talking past each other is an acceptable method of argumentation to some people.adding more needs alongside food and water does not make those needs meaningful. The commenter is saying that we deceive ourselves when it comes to believing that there is a reason to follow our instincts of survival. Adding more instincts does not invalidate his claim — khaled
I think you should only argue this way after you've explored the evolutionary theory of perception.We humans are placed in a precarious spot at almost every moment of the day. By this I mean that we have to deceive ourselves that what we are doing is meaningful, or is something worth doing, or is just what must be done in our role as (place arbitrary role here- citizen, learner, responsible adult, employee, etc.). Beyond the aversion to discomforts like hunger, heat/cold, and no shelter, we are in a constant state of having to believe that any move or decision is one even worth making. — schopenhauer1
I can see the reasoning behind this -- although I have not read Weatherford.he explains why donations of food to Africa end up suppressing small scale trade. — frank
You tell me. That's a broad question. Care to bracket it?But can markets also be a sign of disintegration? — frank
I laughed at this! :grin:90% of all of my OPs have failed to appeal to more than a few people. Either it's the way I pose topics, the topics itself, or personal animosity toward me. — Bitter Crank
No one. It's not like your idea is different from their idea. You guys are looking at different angles of the same elephant.Who needs to snap out of it? Me or them? — frank
No. The flint is seen as a whole object, the same way we see a "chair" -- you can't separate the idea of chair with "sitting", can you?So the flint has value prior to being recognized as having value? Some sort of mind-independent value? — frank
But then sometimes our uses do have a bearing on what?. — frank
Okay.When I decide to trade the flint, it's a part of me that is lifted up from a kind of unconscious obscurity to be witnessed as a thing of value. Trade takes things out of the shadows. — frank
This is a mish-mash assertion. ...The flint changed for you, your use for the flint has nothing to do with fire .....But note that in the moment I exchange my flint for a shell necklace, the flint changed for me. My use for the flint has nothing to do with fire. If has to do with coming to own the necklace. — frank
I don't know, Schop. You are bracketing, that could not be avoided.For my own learning's sake, How would it have to look in order to hit the threshold of a phenomenological thread? I know of Husserl and his bracketing approach, but I was using the term loosely, not strictly Husselerian. How would the methodology look to be officially phenomenological? — schopenhauer1
What are minutia mongerers? Sorry, I saw this in one of your posts, but still didn't quite absorb it.No choice- we need minutia mongerers. — schopenhauer1
You got it backwards. In my opinion, you do not need a phenomenological method to make a claim about something that could be measured sociologically and psychologically -- and yes (!), with all their interpretive instruments. You are, in fact, if you haven't noticed, performing hermeneutical analysis of what you yourself see around you. You are interpreting the condition of our society asIf you think my more general commentary is not sufficient, please provide an example of how a proper phenomenological account would go to make the title worthy. — schopenhauer1
..andHappiness is really a front for the child’s ability to consume and produce technology by way of outright consumption (passive) or by way of originating or furthering technology. The child is de facto a means to this end. — schopenhauer1
Why not use sociological analysis instead? Of course, a cynical observer could reduce any human action to technology. But is this reasonable?But this is why I specifically called out technology- it is not the output aspect or the economic indicator that represents output. It is the technology that is the basis for the output. — schopenhauer1
First off, what causes the no-choice world?The problem is having no choice.
Back to your point about the reduction..more technology producers why? — schopenhauer1
Sheesh! I just said, you do not need evidence to build a critique. But you'd be welcome to take advantage of the other person's arsenal, if you'd like.What evidence? The point of this discussion is to ask how we deal with speculations for which there is no evidence. — Pattern-chaser
Good question.OK, then I apologise to all for my imprecise use of words, and re-present the topic as: how should we deal, logically, with speculations that are possible, but that come without evidence? — Pattern-chaser
I believe the brain-in-a-vat theory only addresses the idea of our perception of reality and cannot, due to its many deficiencies, form any lasting imprint on reality. — BrianW
For the brain-in-a-vat to create any illusion, it must have perception for its raw materials. Therefore, what part of its reality is it perceiving? That connection between illusion and reality calls for a mechanism which governs their interrelation. — BrianW
Personally, I choose to accept a theory which states that illusion is a part of reality, in that, it is a representation of it, though with certain modifications which may distort or disguise the relation. Nonetheless, they are always related. — BrianW
Does it really matter whether we call it a thought experiment, a theory, a hypothesis or a fairy story? — Pattern-chaser
Heavens, no!This seems to imply that reason itself can reduce or eliminate the emotions... — ChatteringMonkey
You know it's okay to quote the participants of this thread verbatim. I don't see anyone here saying he is dismissing the theory cause he dislikes it.Can we justify - logically - dismissing theses which account for all available evidence, just because we don't like them? — Pattern-chaser
Okay, that does not contradict anything here, though. Meaning, we're on the same page.But he showed, by reason, in a self justifying manner that bias can be checked in place by reason. Meaning empirically that bias can be uneducated from a rational mind. — Posty McPostface
Well, this is exactly what he's saying -- careful examination of the situation. By examination he means using reason as the method. Obviously, if someone needs treatment for a phobia, reason, as implied by his statement, should help you arrive at that decision.Reason can definately help to loosen the grip of some negative emotion/values held... but something more is needed usually to close the deal. — ChatteringMonkey
"Many people have some sort of antipathy/hatred towards rationality. This reason hatred is due to a wrong conception about the nature/functionality of reason. They were thought, or in some cases they were outright indoctrinated, that reason has nothing to do with emotions, that reason has nothing to do with values. It has everything to do with both emotions and values." — Bertrand Russell, In the search of happiness.
Yes, it pertains to prejudice and bias towards and against rationality, which, as Russell identifies, is this misconception about the nature/functionality of reason. But it takes two to tango, as they say, for while a group of philosophers, i.e. Thomas Carlyle, had worked overtime and graveyard shift to correct the directional error of rational argument, another group's blind spot was instrumental in driving our conception of rationality towards the mechanical and the physical.Thoughts? Does this pertain to prejudice and bias or is it more general? — Posty McPostface
Thanks, Tiff. Yes, if you could tell him. :smile:He is doing wonderfully Paul. I can pass on a message to him for you or if you want, you can send him a PM here Paul and I will nudge him to check in on his messages here. :flower: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
No. It's not ranking of values. That's too simplistic -- and probably no one does that. It's deliberation of what needs to be done in the face of an ethical problem. And let's not forget fear-- we could do something about it but too fearful to do it. Or mistake in assessing the situation. Yes, we could be mistaken, too, and act according to this mistaken belief.Are you suggesting there's a ranking of value? Which ones go first? Why? How do you arrive at that ranking? — Benkei
But others can still relate. Ciceronianus said we have a fairly good idea of what you're talking about.Not incomprehensible by the one who experiences it — Blue Lux
So, personal and unique, therefore, unintelligible, incomprehensible, and indescribable by us? Yet, here you are, trying so hard regardless. Are you saying that psychologists are nothing but a bunch of nonsense in concert?Furthermore, this idea of an every life of ours implies that the experiences of people are interchangeable and the same. They are not. Our experiences are incomparably personal and unique. — Blue Lux
We know, as a contingent fact, that matter exhibits an orderly dynamics, which by analogy with human ordinances, we call "obeying laws." This does not imply either awareness or choice on the part of matter. Asking how the laws work is like asking what dynamics links the dynamic of a system to the system it is the dynamics of. That kind of question misunderstands what "dynamics" means. — Dfpolis
No.We are sadistic beasts.. — schopenhauer1
Not really.Think of the Viking beserkers mentality.. We are all that inside. — schopenhauer1
Nah. Just sit still and observe. Just learn to observe.Why? Because..toughen the f*** up right? The world isn't perfect so you have to LEARN through TRIAL and ERROR... — schopenhauer1
Nah. No formula. Learn Schrodinger's cat experiment.You have to follow some formula.. — schopenhauer1
They were not indifferent. They just knew when it's a losing proposition.the Indifference of the Stoics.. — schopenhauer1
Live under the bridge and let the engineers maintain the bridge.You have to DEAL...Everything needs maintenance..needs fixing.... — schopenhauer1