But does she know what it's like to be unable to express emotions, things as simple as fear and pain, without the possibility of being outcast and labeled weak? Does she know what it's like to have pent up aggression with no way of relieving it, and to be ostracized as dangerous and problematic when that aggression shows? To fear being accused of rape, and labeled a monster even when found innocent? — Not Steve
No, that's not for me. — Pattern-chaser
True, but it is not true for those foolish enough to believe in the supernatural. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
↪Pattern-chaser
My mentor, Dfpolis - a contributor here, showed me this. Said he was the only one teaching from it on the internet. The book is out of print. Intentional Logic by Henry Veatch discusses the nature of logic from an Aristotelian perspective, contrasted with the analytic approach of Russell, Frege, Quine, and others. It argues that logical concepts are tools of knowledge that enable us to know the real world, independent of our consciousness … — Daniel Cox
We do not know. I do not know ... and you do not know. — Frank Apisa
I can live with doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. I think it is much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers that might be wrong. If we will only allow that, as we progress, we remain unsure, we will leave opportunities for alternatives. We will not become enthusiastic for the fact, the knowledge, the absolute truth of the day, but remain always uncertain … In order to make progress, one must leave the door to the unknown ajar. — Richard P. Feynman
It does not produce matter. Its all transitory. — Devans99
Time had a start. — Devans99
Please don't respond to my threads anymore. — YuZhonglu
Wow, yeah, I didn't realize we all had to bow to Imperial America and conform to American English. — NKBJ
Your definition simply does not cover all that philosophy is. You're leaving out all the "conifers" because you want to limit it to only what is "deciduous." — NKBJ
I think the start [o]f time requires a first cause... — Devans99
A "fact" is just an opinion that a person is confident about. — YuZhonglu
You will see that arguments B, C and E do not use cause and effect as an axiom. — Devans99
We have a timeless, powerful, intelligent first cause — Devans99
I say at the start of the OP that I'm assuming the first cause is God. — Devans99
Maybe ask first whether the non-material can exist. I'm of the opinion that it can — Devans99
Your suggestion of divine powers is not logically derived from anything. My suggestion of a non-material nature of God is logically derived. I suggest we can make progress by sticking to logic rather than speculation. — Devans99
"poor" people, aka people unwilling to work harder and longer. — Waya
Although you have not - probably wisely - defined what God is, I see no reason to assume She is bound by the same constraints that apply to us humans. [And no reason to assume She is not so bound.] Perhaps She has divine powers that make things different for Her, or maybe our misunderstanding of (in this case) time leads us to misunderstand? And so on. Speculation often only leads to ... more speculation.Does cause and effect apply to God, for example? — Pattern-chaser
God is timeless so he is beyond cause and effect. The only way out of the infinite regress of time stretching back forever is to have a timeless first cause. — Devans99
The "2nd law of thermodynamics" is not a law, in the sense that it does not bind us, the universe or God. It's a guideline we have discovered that appears to apply to most of the things we know of, most of the time. It might apply to a material, or non-material, God, but if it did, how would it apply?What do you hope that this topic will (could) achieve? Surely it is possible that God is non-material, but if She is, what of it? — Pattern-chaser
Anything material is probably subject to the 2nd law of thermodynamics - it becomes disorganised with time - ages and dies effectively. So there is an argument that a material God would be dead by now. So the argument of material Vs non-material God could be cast as dead Vs alive God. — Devans99
I suggest that, sans evidence, we are constrained by logic to refrain from reaching any conclusion at all — Pattern-chaser
We can make some deductions. For example, how did material God get away from the Big Bang? It would [have] blown him to bits setting that off. Hence non-material God seems more likely. — Devans99
I don't see for example how anything can logically exist without a first cause. — Devans99
I consider it something discovered, not invented. — noAxioms
Are you happy to know you will die? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
does that fact that prison populations are predominantly male mean or imply that females are socially superior to males? — Wallows
I think to use the term “theory” in an academic context give the content of the paper is both disingenuous and likely purposefully deceitful. — I like sushi
What do you guys think? — simmerdown
world exists objectively, independently of the ways we think about it or describe it
our thoughts and claims are about that world — Pattern-chaser
I have seen what addiction or habitual use of pot does to families and children and it is not a pleasant reality. [...] The moral is addictive substances can lead to a lot of avoidable human pain and suffering for generations and we need to stop denying that. — Athena
However, pot is likely one of the best medicines nature has given us and hemp has many good purposes. We need to be more rational about growing and using marijuana. — Athena
Drugs are harmful to oneself and its effects spread out from there like a wave into everything else. — TheMadFool
do away with the drugs. They're a dead end. — Wallows
can we investigate rigorously and reproducibly matters of the spirit? — Louco
[My reformatting.]1. World exists objectively, independently of the ways we think about it or describe it.
2. Our thoughts and claims are about that world. — Harry Hindu