Not in your mind. It is in the more discerning ones — Gnostic Christian Bishop
It was a hypothetical, goof. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Mine or yours?
Yours.
It is my threat, but you chose to live instead of die and have your hand give your cash.
It is never my choice as I cannot make your hand move. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
It is still your choice, although it is being intentionally impaired.
It is not the others choice, it is only his suggestion, fortified by the products you mention. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Sure you can if you are making the choice, wrong or not, to accept and make your own whatever is being sold to you. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Have we ever had a perfect ideology or leader to follow? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Are you suggesting that a highest judge and authority cannot make a mistake? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So what if any of us are? We are duped and hope we learned our lesson — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Modern Gnostic Christians name our god "I am", and yes, we do mean ourselves.
You are your controller. I am mine. You represent and present whatever mind picture you have of your God or ideal human, and so do I. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
But that doesn't actually contradict it, that just bites the bullet. — Pfhorrest
I am my highest authority, judge and guide. Who is yours? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
his work in self-ontology, cogito ergo sum, is just a silly exercise in futile solipsism. — alcontali
keeping with the Political theme relative to the OP, here in America we value compromise in our democratic process through the two party system. — 3017amen
free market generally acts as its own sanctioning body or mechanism against most inequities — 3017amen
could go on about the virtues of being a Moderate, as I view it as common sense reasonableness, as I draw from both sides. I take a page from Aristotelian logic there :wink: — 3017amen
, I have to call myself libertarian.
Maybe my inability to be pigeon-holed is a failure of philosophical consistency on my part — Virgo Avalytikh
Also curious to hear people's explanations of what gives rise to those perceptions. — Pfhorrest
contributing" to the game are deemed fine and worthy.
If you are a nice, caring, friendly, person but openly criticize the premises of life, even if you are "contributing" you are deemed as unworthy — schopenhauer1
As if liking and not liking is something other than life. Reminds me of the horror story of the man who was disgusted by the idea that his body contained a skeleton, and eventually found a doctor to remove it... — unenlightened
What about learning how to change things you cannot change now? I'd like that much better than the quietly desparate Stoic resignation to the status quo.
Not only that, but there are tons of things in life we try to change, unsuccessfully, although by rights we ought to be able to change them — god must be atheist
Seems like Stoicism really is a fad nowadays. I'll take Stoic apatheia or equanimity over ecstatic bliss, drugs, or other ego-tripping ideals. — Wallows
How do you do that? — Wallows
What were my original goal posts, and what have I said which I later denied saying? — Isaac
Let's have the correct interpretation of Quine then... — Isaac
Yes. Which is most certainlynnot the location of metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, political philosophy, philosophy of mind, ontology, theology... — Isaac
I'm saying there's a scale, based on intersubjectivity, and physics is at one end of it (or near the end). — Isaac
So 'a=a' is really nothing special, it can only be used within some logical system and hence cannot be foundational. — A Seagull
Given my belief in model dependent realism, there is no sense in which something is fact, as opposed to opinion, other than in degree. So for me (and I think colloquially many others) the degree of intersubjectivity determines the place on the fact-opinion scale. — Isaac
IF someone asks me if physics is 'just opinion' I can justifiable answer that it is not, on the basis of this meta data without needing to understand any of the actual data. — Isaac
it must be explicitly connected, presumably empirically, to the real world. If it is not, then it is only of interest to people who want to explore those ideas and worry about its relevance later, ie philosophers.
For non-philosophers it may appear no more than an academic exercise. and a meaningless one at that. — A Seagull
Yes they can. One is an opinion about the modalities of the rule set and the other is an opinion about the meta data. Two different areas of knowledge/opinion. — Isaac
Indeed. But that doesn't prevent them from having an informed and valid opinion about the origin or scope of those rules, that's the point. — Isaac
whose full modalities are nonetheless too complex for a person of only moderate intelligence to grasp. — Isaac
is the rather theoretical ethics that philosophers discuss the same
domain as that empirically experienced by non-philosophers? — A Seagull
But is it the same game they are playing? — A Seagull