It is not a question here of chewing concepts but of digesting them. I'm afraid you have a digestive problem with the concepts of metaphysical, psychological and epistemological. Why do you think I defend a psychological concept of agnosticism? Let's see if you can answer or avoid the answer. — David Mo
The only words you quote from Kenny are these: — David Mo
I don't think Anthony Kenny is a philosopher very representative of today's academic world. Anyway, his concept of agnosticism seems similar to the one I use: neither theism nor atheism, abstention. — David Mo
According to the author of the text, agnosticism is opposed to atheism and theism on epistemological grounds: lack of evidence. That is the meaning I give to the word. I don't know where you see the problem.
Theism: affirmation that god exists.
Atheism: denial that god exists.
Agnosticism: lack of evidence, then refrain of judgment.
By the way, the article has the defect of stopping at philosophically irrelevant and picturesque uses. To devote a few lines to skeptical religion, frankly... — David Mo
Same for agnosticism — David Mo
Anyone who is legitimately offended by this (as in, it's not feigned for some political end) is borderline mentally ill. Women are actual individuals, with their own agency, desires, and thoughts! The TRUE objectification of women occurs when you only see them as nothing more than a singular representation of some wider political group ("women"). You reduce women to some homogenous mass, destroying all individuality. — dukkha
the academic world it is understood that an atheist is one who denies that god exists and an agnostic is one who neither denies nor affirms. The theist asserts that god exists — David Mo
All babies are atheist until indoctrinated into religion"
2. Religion is a childish belief which one grows out of? — IvoryBlackBishop
See the value of context? I have one to read specific to what we were talking about. However there is a queue, you're right about that. Context is king. — Pantagruel
Again, I only need to read one. — Pantagruel
As soon as my finish my current book on Marx the Critique of Dialectal Reason will be a perfect fit. I — Pantagruel
Will you have read the two books by the time I finish the one do you think? — Pantagruel
Everything you said I addressed in the comment that you quoted. It's a reasonable first step. — Pantagruel
Actually, I've read Being and Nothingness a great many times (which I mentioned and again you contradict), plus Psychology of the Imagination, Transcendence of the Ego, Emotions, Search for a Method, and his biography of Jean Genet (all of which are in my library). Based on that, and a overview of the later work plus a few different critical articles, yes, I'm prepared to formulate a preliminary thesis.
Keep it coming. — Pantagruel
Bullshit.
I will go into more detail later. — Frank Apisa
It is a preposterous presumption to suppose that a new born baby is an atheist….just as it would be an absurdity to suppose a new born is a theist. Newborns are blank slates as far as “gods” are concerned…each a tabula rasa — Frank Apisa
Clearly this has particular interchange has been a waste of time. — Pantagruel
So frankly, if you haven't completely read either then you really don't have the contextual depth to do more than point out that Sartre's later work has a more social dimension than his earlier.
As to your response, from what I can see, it appears "close enough" for me to work with comfortably, mutatis mutandis. — Pantagruel
This certainly reconciles completely with my own understanding of his earlier position, moving in a new direction — Pantagruel
The reading itself has been quite rewarding enough! — Pantagruel
which I actually read — Pantagruel
You have a very selective idea about how to read, which is becoming increasingly evident. Moreover, it is not at all unusual for to consider later and earlier philosophies on their own merit — Pantagruel
Frankly, I have skimmed the Critique and it is evident to me this represents an evolution of his thought into a more expansive, political gloss, not necessarily a contradiction of his early views on personal freedom (which stand on their own merit regardless). In any case, as mentioned, I'll definitely be reading the Critique, and thank you. How did you enjoy it? — Pantagruel
that even under coercion we are technically free to choose. Pretty much sums it up, I can't really say more about that. — Pantagruel
Now I'm really confused. It was the exact example that we have been discussing? — Pantagruel
We have already shown that even the red-hot pincers
of the torturer do not exempt us from being free. — Pantagruel
Per Sartre, even under torture, the victim determines the exact moment at which he chooses to submit to the torture.... — Pantagruel
People choose to endure something because and when it is meaningful to do so. And when people do, historically, it often is meaningful. — Pantagruel
but I'm starting now, and the preface sure seems consistent with the views I've cited" — Pantagruel
. I ascribe to this view of radical freedom, because I know it to be true in my own life. Moreover, what is most interesting, once you have tried and learned that you possess this ability, it gets continually easier to make "radically new" choices. And this can definitely be a great power to have. — Pantagruel
Sartre views our freedom as essentially unlimited. To the point that he characterizes "vertigo" as the sensation, not that we are going to fall off a high place, but the fear that we might throw ourselves off.... — Pantagruel
We have already shown that even the red-hot pincers
of the torturer do not exempt us from being free. — Pantagruel
Sartre views our freedom as essentially unlimited. To the point that he characterizes "vertigo" as the sensation, not that we are going to fall off a high place, but the fear that we might throw ourselves off.... — Pantagruel
I would acknowledge it. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I got that you cannot follow a logic trail and cannot refute it. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Per Sartre, even under torture, the victim determines the exact moment at which he chooses to submit to the torture.... — Pantagruel