The steele dossier. It was bought and paid for by the Clinton campaign. It worked exactly as they intended. — NOS4A2
Typical Trumpist propoganda, which I've previously disabused you of. — Relativist
That’s the only thing you can say and it’s taken place of your arguments. Keep telling yourself that, if it helps. But you have nothing to dispute it. — NOS4A2
Typical Trumpist propoganda, which I've previously disabused you of.The steele dossier. It was bought and paid for by the Clinton campaign. It worked exactly as they intended. — NOS4A2
That's laughable. Are all investigations unjust when hindsight shows the person was innocent? In this case, there's not even a rational basis to claim Trump was proven innocent - because Trump's obstruction was successful: who knows what Manafort may have revealed had he not been promised a pardon? And no, I'm not insisting Trump conspired with Russia, but it would be false to claim he was proven innocent. His obstruction undermined the investigation and thus tainted the conclusion. If there weren't so many bigger crimes by Trump, it would be a worthwhile campaign issue for Dems.If he did obstruct the investigation, it was because it was an unjust investigation. Obstruction of justice is wrong, Obstruction of injustice is laudable. — NOS4A2
The fact is that primaries elect delegates, not candidates. No nomination rules were broken and the system is working as designed.
I had neither heard nor read Biden's statement. I stated something I believe to be factual based on m own analysis: the process was followed, no rules were broken. You didn't dispute that.as usual you’re spouting DNC and big donor propaganda. — NOS4A2
Here is something that might interest folks here.
There's No Free Will. What Now? - Robert Sapolsky: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgvDrFwyW4k&t=2804s — I like sushi
Durham makes no allegation of a "two-tiered" system. What he said was this:Further, [Durham] writes of the two-tiered system. He writes: “Unlike the FBI’s opening of a full investigation of unknown members of the Trump campaign based on raw, uncorroborated information, in this separate matter involving a purported Clinton campaign plan, the FBI never opened any type of inquiry — NOS4A2
Genetic fallacy. The Times article merely fills in a bit of context about the Russian disinformation memos:Read about it in this New York Times article! Let me guess, unnamed sources, current and former officials, — NOS4A2
As usual, you're repeating Trump-campaign propoganda.It’s unfair to replace a candidate from a race because you’re losing, especially against the will of the voters, and it’s dishonest and fraudulent to say you’ve done so for any other reason as Joe Biden and his surrogates did. — NOS4A2
The whole charade was the fruit of a poisoned tree, none of which should have went past a preliminary investigation, but all of which had been used against just one political campaign. — NOS4A2
I alluded to this in my prior post: the "intelligence" was from Russian intelligence! It was part of their misinformation to convince people they weren't involved. There was no evidence this occurred other than this Russian fabrication! No one took it seriously for that reason.Durham and Barr flew around the world to try and get more evidence of it, but failed - because there was nothing. Read about it in this NY Times ArticlePerhaps you don’t know, or at least won’t mention, that “On 07 September 2016, U.S. intelligence officials forwarded an investigative referral to FBI Director James Comey and Deputy Assistant Director of Counterintelligence Peter Strzok regarding ‘U.S. Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's approval of a plan concerning U.S. Presidential candidate Donald Trump and Russian hackers hampering U.S. elections as a means of distracting the public from her use of a private mail server. — NOS4A2
You're referring specifically to Peter Strzok, and repeating Trump's slur. Strzok didn't like Trump. So what? The IG assessed Strzok's work and found no evidence of inappropriate actions. He was removed from the Mueller investigation because of the appearance of impropriety that resulted from the release of his private text messages (Strzok recently settled a lawsuit about his unjust treatment). Durham judged that there was "confirmation bias" in the investigation, but that is debatable (investigators often follow their instincts). Durham's own confirmation bias is obvious. His judgement that a "preliminary investigation" should have been opened was made at the time the IGs report was issued, not after his investigation was concluded.So independent was it that the incompetent and biased investigators on the failed Crossfire Hurricane investigation were simply moved to the office of the Special Counsel. — NOS4A2
On the contrary, I read the Mueller report, the IG's report, the Senate Acitve Measures Report, and the Durham Report. You seem base your view entirely on the Durham report, and don't even seem to understand what he was examining and saying.You’re just repeating media falsehoods. — NOS4A2
Complete nonsense. The IG found some mistakes made during the Crossfire investigation (not the Mueller investigation), specifically with the FISA warrants on Carter Page. Durham found no other mistakes. He disagreed with some specific judgements (e.g. Durham felt that some misinformation from Russian Intelligence about Clinton's involvement should have been more fully investigated, which is ludicrous given that it's abundantly clear Russia was truly helping Trump).It’s based on special counsel findings. — NOS4A2
As for evidence, most of those convicted in the Mueller investigation, for example, were for process crimes. Now that we know that there was no underlying crime to begin with, that the entire investigation was a failure and had no reason to start in the first place, it makes their indictments all the more unjust. — NOS4A2
So it's just paranoia toward the FBI (hmm. I wonder where that came from ;-)) that induces you to assume the worst about them....
When has the DOJ ever gone after Trump for a "process crime"?
Never. But my point was that they are going to, not that they have. — NOS4A2
...but the paranoia of people who've worked for Trump and fear for what he might do (based on what they've heard him say and things he tried to do) is the only thing that's unreasonable.Applying the law equitably entails "moral panic"?!
No, believing Trump is an existential threat entails a moral panic, and many of his disgruntled former employees have stated as much — NOS4A2
When has the DOJ ever gone after Trump for a "process crime"?Trump agrees to be interviewed by the one agency that will use it to indict him with some sort of specious process crime. — NOS4A2
Applying the law equitably entails "moral panic"?!Many of Trump's employees descend into the moral panic, as do many seemingly qualified and rational people — NOS4A2
How do you square your admiration with his immoral character? In particular, the numerous instances of fraud. I can (kind of) get overlooking his sex crimes since they are against individuals, but fraud is a way of life with this guy - and he's applied it during his Presidency - manipulating his supporters with lies. His "drain the swamp" proclamation was a fraud - he had the most corrupt set of appointees in history. He tried to weaponize the DOJ, and then complains (without evidence) the Democrats have done that, while promising to prosecute people in retaliation for the fiction they've gone after him.Trump is someone I really admire — Shawn
I read your argument, but it does not support your conclusion that consciousness survives death. You call your argument "inductive"; I think it would be better labeled "abductive" - because you are proposing a explanatory hypothesis that fits the facts associated with NDEs. Analyzed this way, we could consider whether or not your hypothesis is the best explanation for the available facts. You sidestep this, by simply claiming your conclusion is a reasonable inductive inference. I don't think it is reasonable, but this is shown most easily by comparing it to alternative hypotheses that better explain the available facts.First, I've given the criteria of a good inductive argument, and based on those criteria the inductive conclusion is overwhelmingly reasonable. (https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/912262) — Sam26
Turley is definitely not a "liberal". The article you linked doesn't actually analyze the decision, it just asserts that it is correct, and then procedes to chastize liberals who disagree with the decision.For what it's worth ... liberal legal scholar Jonathan Turley — fishfry
You make too much of the definition. People who have had NDEs have not experienced brain decomposition (clearly a point of no return), and the absence of measurable brain activity does not imply there is NO brain activity.When I speak of death, I mean clinical death, i.e., no measurable brain activity, no heartbeat, and no breathing. — Sam26
Can properties (e.g. position, momentum, spin, charge, mass...) exist independently of objects that have them (i.e. is a property a particular, or is a property necessarily an attribute of a particular?)If an electron is 'composed' of position, momentum, spin, charge and mass; aren't these properties more fundamental than the electron? — Treatid
See: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/historical-highlights-of-the-irs#:~:text=From%201868%20until%201913%2C%2090,of%20Internal%20Revenue%20was%20created.So what did the US do before the 16th amendment? — NOS4A2
Fair summary. You believe agency and physicalism are mutually exclusive. I don't agree.R: "We are the product of physical interactions, which are determined entirety by the laws of physics, and none of our choices could ever have been, or ever will be, other than exactly what they were, or will be. But we have agency."
P: "Something that is entirely governed by physical determinism cannot have agency. They are mutually exclusive. How could that be possible?"
R: "It is possible. We are governed by physical determinism, but we are autonomous."
P: "You have given different wording for 'agency,' but you have not explained how it is possible for something ruled by physical determinism to have it."
R: "But if it is true, then we can be ruled by determinism, yet make independent choices."
P: "But what reason do we have to think it is possible?" — Patterner
But the mind's operation is functionally identical- it is no less autonomous. It's grounded in physics - but the decision process is the same.In this scenario, there is nothing other than the laws of physics at work. — Patterner
There ARE options. See my above reply to Gnomon (the bold part).How is an act intentional if there is no option but to act, and in that exact way? — Patterner
We are frequently surprised because we aren't omniscient, not because there are indeteministic things occurring in the world. Intent does not entail a certainty of action, it entails an intent (at a point of time) to act a certain way.If a single path suddenly & surprisingly branches into two paths, with completely different end-points, is that not a true philosophical dilemma? One end-point may be my original intended destination, and the other a different unintended destination : as in Robert Frost's Path Not Taken. But if I didn't know that alternative when I set out, my choice to change destinations would be a change of personal intention (goal selection). Was that new information also eternally destined to make the choice for me? — Gnomon
We aren't directly mechanical in the way mindless objects are, but that's because our minds mediate our activities. That occurs even if minds are purely a consequence of physical brain activity.In Physics, the well-traveled road might be the path of least resistance ; in which case, Nature would always "choose" that option. But humans are not so mechanical, and sometimes "choose" to take the more resistant path. — Gnomon
The only true indeterminism (and true randomness) in the world is quantum uncertainty. Einstein never accepted that, but most modern physicists do.But what about the statistical uncertainties in natural processes? Are our intentional choices certain, or probabilistic? — Gnomon
No. I'm saying the opposite: we actually make choices. We consider the options before us.you seem to be saying that the meaning -- in this case the new destination -- was never a real option. — Gnomon
Compatibilists believe in a sort of free will that is consistent with determinism, therefore there is always only one possible way a decision process can come out (IOW, the principle of alternative possibilities is not met).I'm not seeing the Compatibilism in your outlook, since by your own description there are no viable alternatives to the final outcome. — LuckyR
You did have a choice. And you made one. I'm saying that the choice you made could not have differed. That's because something precipitated the choice. Even impulses must have some cause - unless you think they are truly random, or magic. I don't believe in magic, and the only true randomness in the world is quantum indeterminacy- and this doesn't seem to entail quantum mechanics.As I was going back and forth between the two doors of Ben & Jerry's in the freezer section at the store today, picking up several and reading the description, considering if I was in the mood for something with peanut butter, or caramel, considering the marshmallow ice cream, etc., it certainly felt like I had a choice then, not merely in hindsight. — Patterner
Essentially right, but it glosses over our agency. Hurricanes and avalanches don't involve agency. We have thoughts (series of brain states), and these thoughts can ultimately affect the world.Is that an accurate statement about your position? — Patterner
I googled the definition, and that's what appeared. My intent was to get you to explain what you meant, not to argue semantics.At least I didn't pull a strawman definition out of thin air without citing any source at all. :lol: — Leontiskos
I told you the article attacked a strawman legal argument. This would be clear if you understood the technicalities of the actual legal argument. You told me you weren't interested in those technicalities. Seems like you've come full circle.Listen man, these dick measuring contests are fun and all, but if you have a complaint with the sources I've provided you can go ahead and provide that critique. — Leontiskos
You've merely quoted a definition and implied this somehow fits what occurred without explaining how.: a court characterized by irresponsible, unauthorized, or irregular status or procedures — Leontiskos
That's very different from claiming the procedure was "irresponsible, unauthorized, or irregular". Laws were actually broken, and it was within the lawful discretion of the DA to prosecute it. Furthermore, by trial's conclusion, I had come around to thinking that it actually was a useful exercise.I was not in favor of prosecuting it [...] because it was trivial, and technically nuanced.
— Relativist
Which is much my point. — Leontiskos
The trial was conducted in accordance with reasonable interpretations of the law. Appellate courts may interpret the law differently, or decide there's something unconstitutional in the law. Overturning on some technicality will not mean he didn't do the deeds.We can just wait and see if the appeals result in a reversal. At this point it looks like everything was for show, prosecution and defense alike. — Leontiskos
You don't understand the legal technicalities, so you have no rational basis to judge this a "kangaroo court". So your judgement seems to be based on a mischaracterization of the case (from the article you linked, it seems). Your disinterest in delving into the technicalities -while nevertheless embracing that irrational judgement, implies you choose to cling to that judgement. That's your choice, but then there's nothing to discuss.I don't have any interest in delving into all of the legal details. I will do that with some Supreme Court cases, but I have no intrinsic interest in the details of a kangaroo court. — Leontiskos
Sure, but every choice was preceded by some sequence of one or more thoughts. Given that sequence, the resulting choice will follow.Sometimes, when we make choices, we weigh the options, thinking of benefits and costs and so forth. But I don't agree that we always go through any particular mental process when we do so. — Ludwig V
The choice is not an illusion: we are actually making the choice - we have to actually go through the mental process to reach that choice.When you come to a fork in the road, do you stop and imagine taking the road less traveled, or do you start walking in the desired direction? In what sense is an actual choice an illusion? — Gnomon
Do you believe there is an element of randomness (or unpredictability) to the decision making process? Or does antecedent state A always lead to resultant state X, never Y. — LuckyR
That's not what I said. I said there "is an illusion of freedom".What material evidence to you have to support your belief that personal choice is illusory? — Gnomon
Here's my opinion.When I choose my sushi from what's on offer or a book from the shelf, is that a physical action, a mental action or a metaphysical action? (What's a metaphysical action?) — Ludwig V
Are you assuming reductive materialism is false? Otherwise, I don't see how you get any freedom from physical laws. There is only an illusion of freedom.Physical actions are indeed constrained by the limiting laws of physics. But meta-physical (mental) choices are not subject to physical laws --- perhaps only the laws of Logic. — Gnomon
That's true only because of quantum indeterminacy. So, instead of strict determinism from big bang to present, there's numerous instance of probabilistic determinism along the way. It remains to be seen if quantum indeterminacy plays a role in mental processes (some think it does), but if so- it would only seem to add a random element to the otherwise fully deterministic processes, which doesn't make it more free (in a libertarian free will sense).The traditional arguments against human Freewill were typically based on the assumption that the whole world, from Big Bang onward, is a linear deterministic physical system. — Gnomon
My guess is that you're not familiar with the technical details of the law that Trump was convicted of breaking, and are substituting some distorted view of what you think the law is (or should be). That would explain why you listed the red herrings.The conviction seems to be a flagrant disrespect of the rule of law, — Leontiskos
Red herrings. You're listing activities that aren't inherently illegal, but are merely immoral.Was Trump charged with paying Daniels?
Were the actions he was charged with performed before or after the election?
Was a payment to Daniels illegal?
Is withholding information election interference? — Leontiskos