I'm not sure why we are bringing up Pan, that's not what the pan in patheism is about. — Coben
I agree. I’ve chosen to ignore the side argument - feel free to continue with the main discussion, if you can find it back there... — Possibility
If God exists and He is all good and all powerful why does He allow evil? — MysticMonist
Viewers need to think about these things. They need to actively think, "Why am I being shown an empty office lobby with an opening automatic door and then a streetlamp?" — Terrapin Station
These religious tools that threaten us with the unknown... — Future Roman Empire II
Strawman, strawman, strawman. — Terrapin Station
I'd like to plead for a modular conception of religions... — Matias
...not as homogeneous "things", but as a bundle of elements that are and were composed differently in different cultures and at different times. — Matias
Well then you’re talking about entertainment. That’s different from art. ‘Transformers’ is entertainment. So is Shakespeare, or was. Now it’s an idea, of what art is. Once you begin viewing everything through the prism of entertainment then you have a few basic parameters to judge it by: dollars and asses. — Brett
Look, I just made a comment that she isn't a fascist to Pattern-chaser's comment — ssu
Really? You think Ron Paul is a fascist? How bizarre.
If things go right, we here in the UK may soon see our first-ever socialist leader! — Pattern-chaser
First ever??? What happened to Clement Attlee? — ssu
Why not an appeal to attribute all functions to animals as a whole, as if specific organs/systems have no particular functions? — Terrapin Station
Attempt to solve the problem? By for instance changing the way physics is taught in schools so that kids don't leave it believing they are nothing more than particles behaving according to laws of physics. — leo
I believe many people are potentially open to this message but have never heard it. I desperately needed to hear this message during my scientific studies, but I was surrounded by scientists who boasted that their view is the truth and that anything going against it is essentially religious crackpottery. Took me a while to escape this madness and find some sanity in the words of philosophers such as Feyerabend who, unsurprisingly, was designated by many scientists as an enemy of science, or even the worst enemy of science, while all he was an enemy of was the bullshit that scientists spouted. — leo
And this message definitely hasn't been heard nearly enough, just need to look at some of the reactions in this thread. — leo
The OP and the article it champions is just another in a long line of dialectical tactics to shore up idealism by pushing the most vulgar of science as the most authoritative. Without doing so, it'd die the ignominious death it deserves. — StreetlightX
There is a closemindedness and oversimplification by this culture or significant subculture - and one that is really quite philosophically illiterate despite their intelligence - and this is problematic. — Coben
woo peddlers like the OP need science to be this reductive boogeyman all the better to leave breathing room for their own two-bit idealisms. — StreetlightX
Yet there is the possibility of the AI being... something resembling a Trump-voter... — ssu
Yet knowing all the Worlds telephone books inside and out doesn't make you super-intelligent. — ssu
The real tragedy is that lies have become the new "bullshitting". — Wallows
[A]rt seems to be man made (unless you believe in a God), and all things man made have a foundation, a set of rules or agreement for it to function or be accepted. Except with art we can’t seem to find those rules. — Brett
Perhaps when you are talking in the future to an AI that is fully conscious, aware and independent, you might have an interesting discussion with it about the subject. Would it consider itself alive or dead? It may perhaps see itself as conscious, but not as a living being and it might consider itself hence dead. The dead interacting with the living might sound awesome to it, who knows? — ssu
It is clear that he considered reductive materialism a widespread view among scientists, and that he too saw it as a problem. — leo
Is [philosophy] a self-guided practice, as I have come to understand, or is it a practice that can be guided by some mentor.
Quite a pernicious question if you think about it wrt. to the history of philosophy. — Wallows
Philosophy types (of the sort that hang out around this joint) ought to be able to respond to these people. If they can't be bothered, one has to wonder what the fuck they are good for. — Bitter Crank
I think that at the very least we should have a counseling sub-forum for newbies seeking to further their interest in the field of philosophy. — Wallows
It is easy to win The Survival of the Fittest, just buy a gun and shoot loads of people. — Andrew4Handel
she was a writer that more of right-wing libertarian conservative
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But as typical, everything on the right is fascism according to many people... — ssu
Assuming the facts reported are accurate... — Hanover
Clarification: An earlier version of this story reported that Pothoven’s death came via euthanasia. It is unclear whether doctors assisted her in death, though she earlier requested their help. — Washington Post
She is a socialist... — mnoone
we need statements from the artist saying what the purpose of the art in question is, because the purpose in mind can be different for every artist who has a purpose, and for every work they create. An additional problem with this aspect is that we need to be able to sort out whether a stated purpose is really the purpose the artist had in mind, or whether it's not instead just positioning for the sake of marketing, or maybe it was something that's not very accurate but the artist said it because their gallery, or agent, or whatever, was pressuring them for an artist's statement, or maybe the artist see's the statement about purpose as an artwork in itself, or any number of other possibilities. — Terrapin Station
Is there some way to do such an enterprise in a fully ethical manner? — Unseen
the trendy 'modern' version of pantheism, to which you ascribe, was a confusion with a similar concept called 'animism' by a couple of aging hippies in the 1970s — ernestm
"The term "pantheism" was coined by the Irish writer John Toland in 1705."
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"The term ‘pantheism’ is a modern one, possibly first appearing in the writing of the Irish freethinker John Toland (1705) and constructed from the Greek roots pan (all) and theos (God). But if not the name, the ideas themselves are very ancient, and any survey of the history of philosophy will uncover numerous pantheist or pantheistically inclined thinkers" — Pattern-chaser
There is only one known temple to Pan, as I said, it was called Paneas, and you can find out all the different things people have written on Paneas too, but I will stick to the version taught to Winston Churchill. Thank you. — ernestm
What I said was that they might be more skilled in identifying the objective properties of the music--for example, they can maybe tell you that a guitarist is playing a run off of a locrian scale, that they're playing sextuplets, etc. None of that tells you anything about whether one thing versus another is better. — Terrapin Station
You seem to be talking about taste/preference rather than quality. — I like sushi
- Link to original articlePan - In the classical age the Greeks associated his name with the word pan meaning "all". However its true origin lay in an old Arcadian word for rustic.
Link to original articlePan - The great god of flocks and shepherds among the Greeks; his name is probably connected with the verb πάω (paō), Latin pasco (graze, forage), so that his name and character are perfectly in accordance with each other. Later speculations, according to which Pan is the same as τὸ πᾶν (to pan), or the universe, and the god the symbol of the universe, cannot be taken into consideration here.
Link to original articlePan is considered to be one of the oldest of Greek gods. He is associated with nature, wooded areas and pasturelands, from which his name is derived. The worship of Pan began in rustic areas far from the populated city centers, and therefore, he did not have large temples built to worship him. Rather, worship of Pan centered in nature, often in caves or grottos. Pan ruled over shepherds, hunters and rustic music. He was the patron god of Arcadia.
Link to original articlePantheism is the view that God is equivalent to Nature or the physical universe - that they are essentially the same thing - or that everything is of an all-encompassing immanent abstract God. Thus, each individual human, being part of the universe or nature, is part of God. The term "pantheism" was coined by the Irish writer John Toland in 1705.
Link to original articleThe term ‘pantheism’ is a modern one, possibly first appearing in the writing of the Irish freethinker John Toland (1705) and constructed from the Greek roots pan (all) and theos (God). But if not the name, the ideas themselves are very ancient, and any survey of the history of philosophy will uncover numerous pantheist or pantheistically inclined thinkers; although it should also be noted that in many cases all that history has preserved for us are second-hand reportings of attributed doctrines, any reconstruction of which is too conjectural to provide much by way of philosophical illumination.
At its most general, pantheism may be understood positively as the view that God is identical with the cosmos, the view that there exists nothing which is outside of God, or else negatively as the rejection of any view that considers God as distinct from the universe.