Personally, I don't think Warren would win because I don't think the US is grown-up enough yet to have a female leader. — andrewk
How do we know when philosophy is just justifying the status quo — schopenhauer1
Since I became vegan... — chatterbears
Moral superiority is the belief or attitude that one's position and actions are justified by having higher moral values than others. — chatterbears
As I have pointed out with my child molester analogy, do you think it is better to point out what is wrong about the actions committed by the child molester? Or should we give the child molester a replacement (robot life like child)? — chatterbears
I am pointing out what is wrong with our actions in regards to animal slaughter. You think it is more "tactical" to offer a replacement, rather than talk about the ethics behind it. — chatterbears
I mentioned atrocities as being a strong incentive to critically assess religion but that can apply to any belief. — Andrew4Handel
You cannot successfully defend religious atrocities by pointing out other atrocities. — Andrew4Handel
The problem is religion has been the source of atrocities as well as more positive things. If something is wrong and inspires cruelty then I think the problems need highlighting. — Andrew4Handel
It does not need to be literally true, to be true to its purpose. — Rank Amateur
Also, I don't know who determined Donald Trump to have a high IQ — BrianW
I find interacting with humans totally boring to put it bluntly. — FranckFriends
I would like to enjoy my remaining time on earth as much as possible but it's way too hard to ignore the true reality of it all. — FranckFriends
I dont understand exactly, but what I learned since Elizabeth Warren decided to run for election, I am not going to be able to read social media at all. Now all the Trump inanity is going to happen in inverse, and I dont have the stomach for it any more. — ernestm
s it true that only a few people are capable of reason, as Plato says? Are there really philosopher kings? — ernestm
I'll be reaching my 50s very soon and what currently bothers me the most is the fact that I'm constantly under the impression that, as quite a very maniac observer/listener, I've gathered so much practical knowledge about the human behavior that nobody can surprise me anymore. — FranckFriends
How typical of the arrogant and ignorant hubris that is so usual. — ssu
Not yet brewed. Waiting on the frost to melt with a little sunshine before I am venturing out into the desert which is sitting at 35*f. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
That is an excellent question for the macro level thinkers but what I am speaking of is our ability, as a state which is a collective of communities, to deal with the influx of those in need. We are a giving community but we have our limits. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So to answer your question, how much is too much for my community, my state? It is when one more droplet of water sends of thousands of little droplets out in ever direction with no plan on how to wring it out. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The human condition is characterized by the probability of suffering and the certainty of death—a fate which human reason cannot accept as reasonable. In the face of this absurdity, the universal reason of the Enlightenment has nothing to say.
In The Myth of Sisyphus Camus elucidates this concept of the absurd. The absurd comes with the realization that the world is not rational:
“At this point of his effort man stands face to face with the irrational. He feels within him his longing for happiness and for reason. The absurd is born of this confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world."
You do realise how much this sounds like just about every religion ever invented don't you? — Isaac
The God debate generates various answers which are then debated. I'm attempting to escape that failed pattern by pointing out that ANY answer that can be offered will just be a symbol, and a mere symbol is not really what we are seeking. The proof of this is that we keep looking, searching, reaching for something, we're still hungry, no matter how many religions and philosophies we invent. — Jake
So, this is of course way too wordy, evidence of my own poor writing skills. A better suggestion could be for readers to simply ignore all the theory above, get out in to nature somewhere, and learn how to lower the volume of thought. And then you will see for yourselves. — Jake
In short the skeptical theist claim is that we do not have any reason based ability to say anything at all about the nature of such a thing as God, if there is such a thing. — Rank Amateur
f it's international, then the little weasels would have nowhere to scurry off to in order to avoid paying a fair share. — S
Jake - just to be clear there is no Catholic doctrine that says God is Everything - that is your addition - Catholic doctrine says God is God, and God is everywhere. — Rank Amateur
Over here at least, the stats show that immigration results in a net contribution in terms of the economy — S
A nurse is technician who only knows how to do something but s/he is valued less than the person inventor who made the nurse's job possible or easier. — TheMadFool
Bezos's wealth surpassed $100 billion for the first time on November 24, 2017, and he was formally designated the wealthiest person in the world by Forbes on March 6, 2018, with a net worth of $112 billion. — Wikipedia
Historically, the origin of the doctrine was an attempt by medieval (or earlier) theologians to reconcile the statements in the NT that could be read to imply that Jesus is separate from his 'father' and from the 'spirit', with the doctrine that there is only one god. — andrewk
Since October of this year, over 10,000 illegal immigrants have been released by ICE at the Grey Hound bus station with nothing but a bus pass, picked up by faith groups, cared for until they can contact a family member already in the USA or they can chose to leave and live on the streets of our state.
Illegal or not, our community cannot handle the influx at the rate that we are looking at. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
He hoped that at some point the capitalist would be done away with -- not by lining the capitalists up and shooting them, but by replacing capitalism and capitalists with socialism. Will it happen? I don't know. — Bitter Crank
The top 20 percent of households actually own a whopping 90 percent of the stuff in America — Washington Post