There is no morality without moral beings. Moral beings are real. — charleton
So the manifold is consciousness? — bahman
I guess much of this has to do with the psychology of belief, which I've been interested in for quite some time. — Sam26
I think the difficulty I have with 'objectivity' is that it embodies a kind of implicit normative epistemology. It presumes that the criterion of what is real, is that it can be assessed as an object. So implicitly it accepts that the judgement must be grounded in respect of some truly existing object, or a matter of fact which is amenable to precise quantitative analysis. I suppose it seems a rather positivist attitude, which nevertheless presents itself as impartial or disinterested. — Wayfarer
Sorry, I find 'humility' irrelevant to being "careful about our claims". Any philosopher would tell you that being careful about making a claim has to do with being careful about becoming dogmatic about anything. A humble person can be dogmatic in belief. These two qualities aren't exclusive. Hence, a humble rationalist could very well be dogmatic by explaining that arrogance lies in rejecting reason as the ultimate test of truth.Shouldn't we be more humble about our beliefs given the evidence of the past, and given what we know will inevitably change in the future. Compare what we know, to what we don't know. The gulf is so vast it makes me wonder why we are so dogmatic about science, religion, politics, and a whole array of other subjects. Obviously some areas of study are more prone to rationality, and others are more prone to irrationality, but still it seems that we need to be careful about our claims. — Sam26
So where do you get the consciousness from? — bahman
You have identified two ways of probable belief. Statistical, which could be measured to some degree, and practical, which relies on facts -- were Plato and Aristotle both alive in the same era, for instance. If we are sincere about making and articulating a belief, we know that our beliefs must obey some form of reason. And note that I say some form of reason, because I don't necessarily mean epistemic. Your belief that Plato taught Aristotle must have been triggered by what you've read, heard, or learned from others. The same way your belief that you would die before the age of 90 was triggered by knowing some statistics on aging and men.Statistical probability is a proportion of some reference class. So if it is statistically probable that I die before age 90 this is because the proportion of men (suitably similar to me) who have died before age 90 is quite high. Perhaps 7/10 men suitably like me die before age 90. That is what it means to say something is statistically likely. But what sense does it make to say that my belief that Plato taught Aristotle is statistically likely to be true? Statistically likely given what reference class? — PossibleAaran
So the manifold is consciousness? — bahman
Is the manifold continuous? — bahman
All particle are interacting with each other and the motion of the whole is given by Schrodinger equation. That one process. Materialists claim that consciousness is the result of process in matter. — bahman
There is however one process which describes the evolution of whole since all parts are interacting with each other. This means that there should be a single consciousness if we relate consciousness to motion of parts. — bahman
However, even within this group, if inquired for more details and precision, there will arise vast differences in understanding or description. — Rich
Let me guess what that 'innovation' is ----- lay-offs (not the driver-less trucks).“That one innovation,” he continued, “will be enough to create riots in the street. And we’re about to do the same thing to retail workers, call center workers, fast-food workers, insurance companies, accounting firms. — Uneducated Pleb
Rather as one cleans the kitchen, knowing that the cook will immediately make a new mess; the goal is not that the kitchen be in a state of permanent cleanliness, but that the dirt is fresh — unenlightened
The only certainty that we have is that experience exists. Therefore we cannot prove the existence of any being at all. This means that there is a gap in all ontological arguments. — bahman
If you do believe that, when do you think the instinct "decoupled" from linguistic-based cognition? — schopenhauer1
I would think this is the opposite of instinct. This is learned behavior, and not the kind where we just can't "help" but learn, but ones where the culture/family/community transmits information and instruction. — schopenhauer1
Hmmm.Are there other theories about them than UFOs? — BlueBanana
bespoke analytical framework — Kovacocy
overlay of historical bubble comparison — Kovacocy
opaque pricing mechanism — Kovacocy
Ponzi capability — Kovacocy
game theory — Kovacocy
Sorry, I was late to get this.While I am glad to be here, with heavy heart I would like to let you know that Mars Man (or Oliver Carter in real life) has passed away.
I am not sure if many of you remember him, but he was a ray of sunshine. — hyena in petticoat
Personally, I don't see any problem receiving an award, the moral issue is with the people issuing the award, receiving it could be seen simply as an act of kindness, not wanting to reject that which is offered. It's not that rewards should not be used to incentivise moral behaviour, I'm not of the view that morality is dictated by intention, it's that they should not be required. — Pseudonym
Fair enough. I'd imagine Mill would, though.I don't think Kant would oblige you to reject the award. He would merely not characterise the motivation for the act (and therefore the act itself) as a moral one. You may make yourself a cup of tea, in Kant's theory, and it is not an example of a moral act. But he's not against people drinking tea. — Cuthbert
For Kant, one must follow a duty based on the rational assessment of that duty, acting to obtain a reward is not moral behaviour. — Pseudonym
If he's not knowing, then I think he's doubting. Agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
What's the significant difference between this question and mine? — Agustino
I think it was fairly self-evident what I meant. In any case, the "why" question deals with the reason for there being objects of experience at all as opposed to the question of what they are ultimately composed of. — Thorongil
I don't think nihilism is the end result of having no reason why objects are. I find existential philosophers arguments to be compelling -- even in a nihilistic universe, an absurd world, we still can find meaning in life. — Moliere
In other words, the more important question is not what objects are, but why they are. — Thorongil
He wouldn't, but that's exactly what doubt is, being unsure. — Metaphysician Undercover
One question that interests me, is why did the Platonist school, even though it was more widespread than Stoicism, didn't produce important historical figures like Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and the like. Would it be because of the overly theoretic aspect of Platonism? — Agustino
I was wondering why not ask, why had Stoicism been adopted as a practical philosophy and practiced in everyday life? (Stoicism was purported to be the basis of Christianity). And meanwhile, you could also argue that Platonism was truly a scholastic endeavor.What's wrong with asking that? — Agustino
One question that interests me, is why did the Platonist school, even though it was more widespread than Stoicism, didn't produce important historical figures like Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and the like. Would it be because of the overly theoretic aspect of Platonism? — Agustino
Suppose that a person is overcome with a severe illness causing delusion, and hallucinations, with the appearance of all sorts of phantasms, paranoia and suspicion of everyone and everything. This person would be completely unsure of what was real. Wouldn't this person doubt everything and know nothing? — Metaphysician Undercover
Or we can say, a point where one's doubt is baseless.Eventually there is a point where your doubt is pointless. — Banno
As I am, possibly, one with Bergson, I'd like art to tell me what it is out there. An artist has succeeded in his endeavor if the audience experiences some sort of discovery, a feeling of awe, or an agreement with what's being conveyed. It is perhaps a travesty to be always two clicks away from an opus or a masterpiece -- I thought art should encourage meditation or understanding of the universal.What relation does the ubiquity of art in the modern world have with it's perceived value? Does great art have a real value underneath the socially constructed one, or has "great" art literally become worthless in a globalized world? — Noble Dust