What does it mean to say an event occurs spontaneously? If it means for no reason at all or out of nothing, then no. — luckswallowsall
If it means through methods other than straightforward causality, sure. Something can happen in acausal way. But it's still not the same as for no reason at all because there probabilistic laws behind acausality. — luckswallowsall
If one thinks about x, if one takes it into consideration, one is not ignoring x. — Terrapin Station
The whole idea behind overcoming bias, as misconceived as the idea that we can may be, is the belief that it's a feature of human perspective that we can overcome bias. — Terrapin Station
the only point I was making was that science [...] isn't ignoring human perspective. — Terrapin Station
what I'm focusing on is the fact that there is a belief that we can overcome bias — Terrapin Station
You give Satan her role, just as god did. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Here are a couple examples of a belief that we can eliminate bias:
<links deleted for clarity>
Do you agree that those are examples of the belief? — Terrapin Station
I don’t think one has to necessarily be at the event to experience it. Picasso’s experience of the bombing could be what was impressed on him by the nature of the bombing. It’s about his response to the horror. It’s a personal message to the world. Who understands it is another matter. — Brett
Oxygen is not a candidate. The question is mitochondria? — Sculptor
Mitochondria are semi-automomous "beings" that live inside everyone of our cells. They migrate from the mother's cells to the unborn foetus in the early stages of "life", but are themselves no living because they can have no existence outside of the cell. — Sculptor
So is it fair to observe that humans cannot be alive, because they can have no existence outside of an oxygen-rich atmosphere? — Pattern-chaser
The fact that there is not much experience you get from Guernica, and the thing you get, a message, is after you learn some extra info about the painting, hints at how low of a quality that painting is. — Henri
I don't negate objective reality. I believe I have a good hold on what is good and bad, objectively — Henri
Then I have nothing more to offer on this subject that you will be able to hear. :sad: — Pattern-chaser
You present these two paintings... — Henri
I didn't ask what is the difference between literal message of the paintings — Henri
I don't negate objective reality. I believe I have a good hold on what is good and bad, objectively — Henri
An omnipotent being could just create a world were all beings can exist in harmony. — Echarmion
If God exists and He is all good and all powerful why does He allow evil? — MysticMonist
the analogy is poor — Sculptor
oxygen is common to all things, and quite different from the co-dependancy of mitochondria and animals — Sculptor
Which one of the two provides more experience, a sense, a feeling, of "war is wrong"? — Henri
And it doesn't hold much value nevertheless, as I see it. — Henri
I'm asking if you agree that there is such a belief? — Terrapin Station
So do you disagree that there's a common belief that humans can be impartial/unbiased, at least in conjunction with each other? — Terrapin Station
No, I don't. — Pattern-chaser
Good and evil are relative. No, I don't mean that as an open-ended assertion, I mean that good to one species (humans) can be evil to another (bacteria), so it's relative in that sense. It's all down to context. — Pattern-chaser
No, we can't, or maybe shouldn't, reject the human perspective, but science does, — Pattern-chaser
I can't see how, for the reasons I mentioned. Science is based on our observations. Our observations have to do with us beings that, for example, experience time as unfolding, rather than all at once. Our observations are coming through limited beings - both in space and time - and are biased because of this. Scientists can try to eliminate many factors, but they can never know what biases are created simply by being limited, time bound creatures. — Coben
So do you disagree that there's a common belief that humans can be impartial/unbiased, at least in conjunction with each other? — Terrapin Station
Responsibility flows from the ability to act and the duty to do so. An omniscient and omnipotent God has an unlimited ability to act. The duty is self-imposed by the third attribute - benevolence. The combination of all three is incompatible with suffering in a universe created by that God, hence the theodicy problem. — Echarmion
Science has always been grounded in observation, I admit. But "the human perspective"? Science explicitly rejects the human perspective, and aims to observe impartially, in an unbiased manner. No human perspective there. — Pattern-chaser
There's a belief that humans can be impartial/unbiased, at least in conjunction with each other. That's not rejecting human perspective. It's seen as a feature of the human perspective.
I'm not saying I agree that we can be impartial/unbiased, but the view that we can and should be isn't actually rejecting the human perspective. — Terrapin Station
We can't reject the human perspective. — Coben
It's a product as "a thing that is the result of an action or process". A man made thing. It doesn't just happen. It's produced. Maybe more precisely to say - a piece of art is a product. — Henri
I wouldn't say it's communication, especially not in terms of literal messages. It does communication as means to transfer experience, which is the goal. So it's a transfer of experience. If you want to call that communication also, ok. — Henri
Art is complex product, but it's a product. When a chair maker creates a chair, customers are not scratching their heads wondering what to do with "the contraption". When a news writer publishes an article, readers are not bewildered in how to interpret the markings on a screen. Essentially, it is the same with art. — Henri
If you are all-knowing and all-powerful, it follows that you are also all-responsible. — Echarmion
Omnipotence is a defining characteristic of God in the context of this problem.
[...]
...God isn't really a god after all, since she's neither omniscient nor omnipotent. — Echarmion
Then the mistake, imo, is that we can escape from the domain of 'language' at all. — fresco
This all serves to set up the thesis that science neglects experience and the human perspective when, to the contrary, science has always been grounded in experience and observation. — Andrew M
Mitochondria are semi-automomous "beings" that live inside everyone of our cells. They migrate from the mother's cells to the unborn foetus in the early stages of "life", but are themselves no living because they can have no existence outside of the cell. — Sculptor
Philosophy is for critiquing, without that it loses all sense, and becomes some kind of religion — Janus
If all the authors wanted to critique is physicalism and objectivism per se, then why bring science into it at all. — Janus
They may pass judgement in all ignorance of what they’re looking at. Is that proof that art is entertainment? — Brett
And if the audience judges art, not the artist, does that mean the audience determine what art is and that being entertaining is all that’s required? — Brett
If you are all-knowing and all-powerful, it follows that you are also all-responsible. — Echarmion
If god is supposed to care about pigs and cows, she has a lot to answer for. — Echarmion
But if person X believes in God with property A and not B, and person Y believes in God with property B and not A, then I think you could argue that one person's faith in a characteristic of God must be misplaced. — Devans99
↪Brett
I agree with you, art sends a message. — Schzophr
Art may often be entertaining but that doesn’t mean its intent was to be entertaining. — Brett
If someone then comes along and looks on the work as entertaining then that’s nothing to do with the artist. — Brett
I think you’re being a bit slippery there by saying art can be disturbing, which can be true, and using that to legitimise the word ‘entertaining’ that comes before it. — Brett
I couldn't resist. I suggest you blame auto-correct! — Theologian
Faith can be in conflict with reason: people have had and do have faith in all sorts of different Gods. Some of that faith must be misplaced. — Devans99