aside from the context where we're talking about an event that may have had multiple causes rather than just one. — Terrapin Station
Okay, but what is it (ontologically) that you'd say makes anything moral or immoral? — Terrapin Station
Hume doesn't deny the existence of reason only that it plays a back seat role in our moral decisions. Emotion is not reason.There is no Reason without emotion. That is Hume's fatal flaw. He is not alone. — creativesoul
The first ball striking it. — Terrapin Station
.Morality is the rules of acceptable/unacceptable behaviour. Morality is a human condition. We are interdependent social creatures by our very nature. Rules for behaviour are inevitable. — creativesoul
Something being evil doen't make it wrong, and something being good (or "holy", if you prefer) doesn't make it right. — RosettaStoned
An evil act would be good if it helped more than it harmed — RosettaStoned
I disagree. The court was right in it's decision. The men should have waited for Parker to die if they were so sure he would.
This does not, however, apply to your case as you judge yourself more valuable than the other and hence it is not you who should die. — Heiko
Exactly. What is "matter"? What are "ideas"? How do they differ if not just by location (Ideas are in a mind. Matter is everywhere else)? — Harry Hindu
I'm a direct realist. — Terrapin Station
I didn’t pay back my student loans, but that “choice” was fully determined by circumstances beyond my control. The stress of living in the ghetto where gunshots rang outside, drug deals in the parking lot outside my window, the paper-thin walls that made it impossible to differentiate outside voices from the voices inside my head; all contributed to my already fragile mind (I have schizoaffective disorder), fully determining my need to be proclaimed disabled and unable to work. In no possible universe given all of these factors as still holding true would I be able to work. So, I reject your view that “intelligible” actions are not fully determined. — Noah Te Stroete
I don't understand why you can't understand that ideas and external-to-me physical stuff are not identical. — Terrapin Station
Which would just be another assumption made by someone (Berkeley's word is not the final word) who is being skeptical of others' assumptions. What's new? One unfalsifiable claim is just as good as any other. Where's the evidence, not just of other minds, but of spiritual stuff vs. physical stuff, God, etc.? — Harry Hindu
That is what Locke proposed, the separation of matter from substratum, primary qualities from secondary and that is what Berkeley objected to.That fact is that it's obviously incoherent and wrong to try to separate matter from form and properties. — Terrapin Station
The whole problem there is the ridiculousness of for some reason taking matter (or substance) to somehow "underlie" things like roof tiles and trees, but to not itself be properties, forms (not in the platonic sense--in the sense of things like shape/extension), etc — Terrapin Station