it's not full or actual belief. It's some kind of semi, quasi, pretend belief. — Artemis
might it be that believers so much want their belief that it becomes to them as real? — PoeticUniverse
No, they believe because they so much want it that they suspend other thinking, unknowingly, as a kind of being in denial. — PoeticUniverse
Quite why he said that, I don't know. :chin:everything is countable — Marzipanmaddox
Basically, once you start to count things, you can tell that everything is countable. — Marzipanmaddox
Think of a rock falling from a person's hand towards the ground. This may not seem numerical, but even if it does not naturally appear this way, we can still represent and describe it numerically. — Marzipanmaddox
If it was not selected for or against, then it would not be so prevalent — Marzipanmaddox
I'm saying philosophy is not reliable method of deriving truth because it deviates from the scientific method. — Marzipanmaddox
Sure, some people who read Tolkien might believe theoretically in magic or elves or stuff like that, but do they believe LoR is a historical account of a real world? — Artemis
Not when you believe fiction to be a true account of history. — Artemis
I think he's confusing imagination, suspension of disbelief and actual belief. — Artemis
[Additions in bold.]Whenever we think with the aims of discovery and exploration, there is an imaginative phase where we deliberately suspend disbelief. Edward de Bono's hats describe this well. [ And yes, there is a more formally critical hat [ Black ] that succeeds the imaginative one [ Green ], so there's no need to point this out. ] — Pattern-chaser
That's how we wind up with stuff like Scientology. — Artemis
I don't at all believe that there's any example of looking at this where it would turn out that most people exposed to an utterance reacted violently. — Terrapin Station
But I wouldn't say I ever do that with fictions. — Terrapin Station
Can you give a couple examples of what you're sampling for a claim like that? — Terrapin Station
You've simply assumed it as the default and required that we offer evidence sufficient to convince you of a causal link. — Isaac
I'm asking, and have been from the start, why you feel the burden of proof falls on those claiming a causal link when it comes to legislation, and not on those claiming that the observed correlation is not causal. — Isaac
Stressing in that you're still saying that it's belief. — Terrapin Station
But how can we get something wrong in a system if it is act according to it and there is no objective criterion for deciding which system is better ? :smile: — Wittgenstein
But you're stressing that you actually believe fictions — Terrapin Station
What does that refer to, though? You're saying a belief you're not aware of? — Terrapin Station
What would you say is the difference between a passive belief and an active belief. — Terrapin Station
If you passively believe that Alice entered Wonderland, what does that involve exactly? — Terrapin Station
So nazi Germany beliefs and ideas were okay because all of them thought so. People in the past, agreed on a global level that slavery was okay. We don't always progress towards improving our morality, but we can try to correlate better morals with better living conditions in a society. — Wittgenstein
We have created such social constructs to be safe but does that make it right ? — Wittgenstein
the profound truth of monotheism was something very different from the religions it displaced — Wayfarer
@Terrapin Station: so are you in favor of eliminated speed limits?, perhaps leaving them as recommendations. Does this extend to age restrictions? things like the age one can get a driver's licence - or, as I mull it over, getting rid of licences at all, since these are statistical protection - or buy a whisky shot at a bar or give consent to sex. — Coben
Maybe you literally believe fictions when you're engaging with them, but I sure do not. It seems to me that literally believing them would be unusual (but no problem with being unusual there). — Terrapin Station
It wasn't hate speech per se, it was hate speech delivered by a charismatic authority figure, in the right socioeconomic climate and allowing it to go unchallenged. Basically without the alignment of various socioeconomic factors, hate speech would be little more than words. The factors that enabled Nazism have been the topic of discussion of historians for decades for this reason. To say it was just speech is too simplistic, too local. — Necrofantasia
Have you never heard someone, describing a good story, say "you have to suspend your disbelief"? That's what you do when you're experiencing a story: you suspend disbelief. For the moment, you believe. — Pattern-chaser
You don't believe it. What you do is not be a realism fetishist, because that's not pertinent to fiction. You enjoy the fantasy for what it is rather. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin already pointed this out, but I'll reiterate: creativity and imagination have nothing to do with actually believing. I still very much enjoy Tolkien, but was unaware that I therefore believe in Ents and the Dark Lord! — Artemis
None of this changes the fact that not believing things that are impossible, illogical, etc. doesn't amount to not having an imagination — Terrapin Station
If philosophy were legitimate it would be a science, you would be able to veritably and unquestionably prove your philosophical assertions via the scientific method. — Marzipanmaddox
I am just arguing that philosophy is inferior to science with regards to actually having an argument. Meaning a philosophical point would always lose to a scientific point. I'm saying that worshiping philosophy, arguing that philosophy is somehow above, or even equal to science is delusion. Clearly it is not, if it were, then it would be proven by the scientific method, and thus become science, and at that point it would no longer be philosophy. — Marzipanmaddox
If there was no objective benefit to morality, than moral societies would not exist. They would be no more capable or powerful than amoral societies, and due to the excess effort it takes to maintain a moral society, morality would have fallen out of favor.
It would be seen as needless and pointless explicitly because morality produced no objective benefit, because a moral society was no better off than an amoral one. It would be like drinking snake oil every day, and reasonable people would quickly realize that drinking the snake oil does nothing and then subsequently stop doing that. — Marzipanmaddox
The intention is to suggest that there is an unintelligible infinite variance of color which can never be adequately described. — thewonder
Everything within this universe, everything within the planet earth, is inherently numerical... — Marzipanmaddox
you could argue that Law [...] is, therefore, part and parcel to the machinations of the State in a negative sense. — thewonder
That theory makes a lot more sense if you accept my friend's assertion that High Fantasy is just kind of Fascist. — thewonder
how about the question in my post? If no thing can exist by itself, then how can any set of things exist by itself? — tim wood
But a question: given that "something" cannot be - exist - by itself, then it seems to follow that in existing, necessarily something else exists. Is existence then founded in a reciprocity? Or is there one thing that in existing grounds the existence of all other things? And if one thing, does that exist by itself? (And if it does, how would thee or me know it?) Or does it require itself reciprocity? — tim wood