Since there is an infinity of possibilities, to the amount of time between that beginning point and the ending point, that amount of time is indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
When we say that A is B, aren't we either just calling it a different name or focusing on a different set of facts about it, a la morning and evening star? — Terrapin Station
I don't understand this. — AppLeo
If statistics and other external facts go against someone having a good quality of life yet they believe they have then that raises questions about their judgement. — Andrew4Handel
Something subjective can still be wrong. For example illusions such as where one line seems longer than another or when a bush looks like a cow in the night. — Andrew4Handel
I think the likelihood of people enjoying a situation is fairly objective. — Andrew4Handel
One clock measures 499, the other measures 500. Therefore the amount of time between those two points is indefinite. — Metaphysician Undercover
I never said anything about "psychological time". I'm talking about time itself. From the human perspective, time is indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
In that definition it says to be measured against other things of a similar kind.
So it would probably involve comparing states of being. So If you live in poverty you know there is a better state of being you are not in and compare badly to. — Andrew4Handel
Here is one of the first definitions of "Quality" that I found: "the standard of something as measured against other things of a similar kind" So this to me implies an objective standard something being a measured against as opposed an opinion. — Andrew4Handel
I know, but the human perspective gives us the potential for infinite frames of reference. Therefore from the human perspective, time is indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not convinced quality of life is based on how someone feels. People can be happy whilst suffering. They don't believe they have a great quality of life but they have found some things to be happy about. So I don't think feeling happy means you have a good quality of life or that you believe that you have a good quality of life. — Andrew4Handel
It is hard to find a framework to judge quality of life and value of life — Andrew4Handel
Facts about a disease they have, or level of injury, facts about societal inequality. — Andrew4Handel
Sometimes people feelings are based on inaccurate beliefs.
What I think is nihilism is the idea that someone who feels that something like child abuse is acceptable cannot be challenged by external facts.
From the human perspective, there is a variable amount of time between any two moments in time depending on the frame of reference. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's indeterminate because from every different frame of reference there is a different amount of time between the two points. Therefore there is no fixed value for that time period. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ethically (and this is where it answers this threads questions: the objective meaning to life). Life's purpose is to live, to flourish, and to be happy. Everything has its own nature and it must do what is good for its nature. — AppLeo
Can I make the further, more generalized conclusion, that the amount of time between any two points in time, is indeterminate? — Metaphysician Undercover
The alternative where someone is always right about the quality of life means you cannot differentiate between quality of life and is a subjective nihilism, where the individual is always right about their interpretation of the external world. — Andrew4Handel
I'm willing to talk in PM if you want. — csalisbury
As with most philosophical problematics, its the conceptual nitty-gritty of fleshing out how these things work that presents the problems. — csalisbury
So, how is it that we can speak about stuff like Plato having a beard or Santa Claus existing on the North Pole? — Wallows
I don't really know what you mean. — AppLeo
I think you are saying that there is only an Explanatory Gap if the Intentional Reality is found to be in the Neurons. — SteveKlinko
"What if you had been aborted?" — Andrew4Handel
I'm done answering these vague questions. — Christoffer
Has to know what? — Christoffer
Whether A is different from B is a logical judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
You see a blue pen. Someone says it's green. There's a definition of blue by measuring the spectrum of light bouncing from that blue pen. The spectrum shows its green. You are wrong, it is green — Christoffer
