Once you're addicted to the spice melange (French for mixture/medley) in the Dune universe you're in a bit of a pickle. Withdrawal is fatal. — Nils Loc
I don't know what you are referring to. — god must be atheist
Or you think having a Jewish and a German conglatulatory exclamation is a contradiction, when said side-by-side? I really don't know what prompted you to say there is a contradiction there. — god must be atheist
. I can't name names, — god must be atheist
Congratulations, mazeltov, zum Wohl. — god must be atheist
Yes, every word counts, and no extraneous effort needed to make them get your point. Same with stand up comedians -- if they need to use more words to make the audience laugh, they've already failed. — Caldwell
Depends on the animal. A rabbit is probably closer to innate. — schopenhauer1
If you mean innate knowledge of what to do, no. The ability to deduct, inference, predict, may be different in us due to linguistic-minds that allow for higher degrees (or degrees at all) of constant deliberation and decision-making. — schopenhauer1
However, with these greater degrees of freedom we have, we are still (mainly) driven by certain necessities (survival, comfort, entertainment). — schopenhauer1
So here we are with this highly deliberative/deliberating brain that must contend with unmovable circumstances. Thus you have a gap in this particular human animal, not seen in the rest. Here is the existential gap. — schopenhauer1
Why do you say this? — dussias
Where do you live? — dussias
When you say "being allowed to live" I can only agree with you if you live in a really shitty situation, where you are controlled to an important extent. — dussias
Do you know about life in North Korea? Cuba? — dussias
What would you have instead? — dussias
This is where we find ourselves. — schopenhauer1
Humans socially construct almost all cultural elements- which we use to survive. — schopenhauer1
I doubt that anyone would say that they reason like humans do, because they are not humans. But the question is do they reason in some other way?That's assuming animals can have "reasons" in ways that humans do. — schopenhauer1
This goes beyond the job itself to the needs behind needing the job. Remember group-think. — schopenhauer1
Are you going to put out defenses, like a squid its ink, that reinforce not resenting the situation because of X reason (Don't be a whiny bitch.. etc.)? — schopenhauer1
Why? What's the alternative? — dussias
Kind of circular then: there is no proof of the existence of an unbeliever's g/G - well, of course, but vacuous. I think ↪TheMadFool
was saying something more (yet unspecified) than this. — 180 Proof
You charged the original poster with, "If you get upset by them I think it says more about you and your agenda than theirs." — JerseyFlight
To test the accuracy of this statement I asked you several questions, none of which you answered. — JerseyFlight
What you fail to see is that your bias (and that's what it is) is bent uncritically in favor of religion. — JerseyFlight
If this was not the case then why not say this position is equally true of Nazis? It's because your cultural stance on Nazis is entirely negative, while you live too far apart from (cannot comprehend) the historical atrocities of religion. — JerseyFlight
Maybe we can drive the point home more. Suppose some fanatics from Isis wanted to come on here and start talking about Allah, would you still claim, "If you get upset by them I think it says more about you and your agenda than theirs." ? — JerseyFlight
I don't think so. Why? Because you live in a time when you can see the dogmatic violence of Isis, understanding the dangers of religion requires more than your immediate impression. Suppose someone from Isis came on here long before they starting pillaging and mass murdering, what an ignorant fool you would look like right now. — JerseyFlight
I'm as anti-religious as they come and I think threads like this one are just as low-quality and (for lack of a better word) disruptive as the shallow little-reasoning religious threads are.
I generally think the best solution to that kind of problem is to ignore it (on the users' part; the mods have recourse to deleting on account of low quality or evangelism).
In which case I shouldn't even be making this post, but I am anyway. — Pfhorrest
Not according to any believers, theologians or religious traditions I'm aware of. — 180 Proof
No they aren't. In fact very few conceptions of god are the same. — MSC
Inquisitions — JerseyFlight
Which g/G is that? :roll: — 180 Proof
That doesn't answer my question. — JerseyFlight
Is this equally true of Nazis? — JerseyFlight
They have an agenda, I presume, which is to christianize the world. They go head-butt about it, and they don't listen to reason. — god must be atheist
And I believe that having the opportunity to choose whether we die fighting or just die is beautiful.
What do you think? — dussias
Yes, you can have depressed animals, but not ones that wish they were never born. Not ones that know they don't live in a utopian world. Not ones that can at any moment, hate what they have to do to get by. — schopenhauer1
Again, this debate of animal communication is not really the debate I am having. Can a chimp discuss the details of Kant's view of metaphysics, or whether today's political climate is crazy? No. Resenting doing the very activities that keep us alive, make us more comfortable, and entertain us, in other words, existential matters, seems to be in the realm of humans. No I have not talked with a penguin to see if this is the case, nor have I dialoged with a koala to see their take on the matter. — schopenhauer1
This is just all forms of anthropomorphizing. — schopenhauer1
Also, I think your indignation is inappropriate here.
If we were to step back, can we admit that humans have certain capacities/mental functions that other animals almost certainly do not? If we cannot admit that, then we can't go much further. It's like asking, "Can we admit that humans don't have the functional capacity to fly without technology?" and you said.. that's being a bigot against humans. — schopenhauer1
. We have, seemingly endless generation of ideas (conceptual thinking), some of which can be evaluative as to what we must do to survive, keep comfortable, and entertain ourselves. — schopenhauer1
:lol: :rofl:If you want to take your own advice, you may wanna start here. — Zn0n
The kind of thought that says, "I hate having to eat my kibble..I hate having to play fetch with this guy.. I hate having to go for a walk all the time..." seems not in the repertoire of dog psychology (or other animals for that matter). — schopenhauer1
That is more-or-less what I'm getting at. Humans, on the other hand, can resent what they are doing at any moment. We have, seemingly endless generation of ideas (conceptual thinking), some of which can be evaluative as to what we must do to survive, keep comfortable, and entertain ourselves. — schopenhauer1
Ignoring what a ridiculous statement that is in context to the comment you replied to, are you saying white (male) humans enslave? Because that's blatantly racist (and sexist).
Ironically it's infact racism and sexism that is one of the excuses that was and is used to enslave others. — Zn0n
The tendency to enslave others has nothing to do with skin color but level of psychopathy/sociopathy and/or how much they obey a cruel system. — Zn0n
Humans are the only animal that can really hate any and every moment. Other animals may feel pain in their own way, but they don't seem to despair of their situation, or not to the full understanding we do, with our linguistic, self-reflective brain. Yes, you can have depressed animals, but not ones that wish they were never born. Not ones that know they don't live in a utopian world. Not ones that can at any moment, hate what they have to do to get by. — schopenhauer1
We certainly are driven by survival, comfort, and entertainment, but we know our own disutility in all these areas. — schopenhauer1
We know it sucks to be very hungry, that we need to make various goals in a complex world to gain items to consume for our survival, comfort, and entertainment. — schopenhauer1
Times are changing. Ninety minute lectures may fade away. I hope so. — jgill