Using a cubit instead of visual verification highlights the issue in a physical way. The cubit system is based on the measure of one's own arm. As long as everyone measured with their arm they are technically right as I understand it.No, some of us would be obviously right relative to the cubit system, some of us obviously wrong, and some of us neither. — bongo fury
You don't add or subtract length to your arm to meet a standard, so this is incoherent.And then the puzzle is to specify the smallest (or largest) number of microns that is no longer a cubit. — bongo fury
Industry term for a small margin of error. The narrower the tolerance, the higher degree of measuring precision.Narrow tolerances or precise tolerances? — bongo fury
It's the length of your forearm to middle finger. If your working with multiple people then I imagine the "foreman's cubit" is fabricated and used as a local standard.Unbounded precisely, i.e. not graph 4; or unbounded ever i.e. graph 2? Or unbounded how? — bongo fury
It's philosophy; if wasn't for the dopamine that results from light intellectual narcissism none the universes mysteries would be solved. In theory...What bothers me is this atmosphere of self congratulation as if you idiots really think you're better than religious people some how. You're not. You're exactly like them except you have advantages they didn't have. — frank
Looking it over it seems like you would have to ascribe a "will" or at least disposition to a collective mind in order to claim Panpsychism is a type of God. It seems like the closest thing rational conjecture can get towards i.e. the only thing one might reasonably pray to without the need for a storybook. It seems distinct enough not to be called God, but significant enough to destabilize an entrenched atheist with a soft spot for western notions of karma.↪Cheshire Panpsychism is a position on the separate question of what God is (or would be, if he existed). One can take any of the aforementioned positions on any notion of what God is, and take a different position on each different notion of God. — Pfhorrest
Regarding Panpsychism↪Cheshire What do you think? — Banno
Well, if that was the case they wouldn't be found working together. Maybe they aren't interchangeable but some type of exchange ought be taking place.The distinct and separate substance of substance dualism are not able to exchange energy, for neither one cannot walk the walk and talk the talk of the other. — PoeticUniverse
I'm not a fan of simulation theory because it has a built in infinite regression. But, suppose you wanted to build it; you would have to have some way of informing matter how it is to be arranged. Supposedly we could vaporize an object and the information about what it was remains.Information _about_ stuff? Because all information about any system is in the system. Any copies of the system's information are, at best, just that -- copies -- at worst, erroneous, and typically incomplete. This is why simulation theory fails for me: the most efficient way to simulate a universe is to build it. — Kenosha Kid
So what to do? I think I'd prefer to have been not been embodied in the first place. — Inyenzi
Actually Popper's only hard thesis was that humans and as a result their knowledge is subject to error. So, if you prove him wrong you are proving him right.No. It's not. And that's why Popper is wrong. — counterpunch
Is this really an accurate generalization? I've read some of the material provided but this makes some sense. So, the argument is whether the "what stuff does" has a separate existence from stuff itself and not just a function of the arrangement of stuff?Why instead we differentiate between stuff and what stuff does is beyond me. — Kenosha Kid
You mean you are ok with it. "He" agree with everything you think?God is ok with that that’s all I can say. Odd though ? Probably — Deus
Treating a belief in God as a bit of sport seems odd to me.Not at all my faith is firm here I just enjoy a bit of written jousting. — Deus
Apologies … — Deus
So, what is the point of leaning on this need to inject one's religion into a secular science?Not at all! My faith goes beyond that through first hand experience or religious experience which was refreshing to say the least. — Deus
Really, if this was shown to be false you would stop believing?We sure as hell did not pop into existence by accident some God had a hand in all of this can assure you of that. — Deus
The word in the this case was to highlight undue emphasis not confuse the matter.Well, an inquiry into "facts" is ideal if anyone wants to borrow that word. Because often non-facts are confused or masked as facts. — skyblack
I agree. And if God happens to be an emergent feature of the universe it would also be false.To say 'God did it' has no explanatory power. It's using a mystery to explain a mystery. Might as well say the Magic Man did it. Or aliens... — Tom Storm
But you stated it as fact and said it's the reason for atheist.Just making an assumption I do not think the almighty would reveal himself to everyone all at once. Perhaps to the occasional individual. — Deus
You suppose to know the outcome of God undeniably presenting itself to the world? Seems bold, like you imagine God thinks just like you. I think the atheists are being honest.He’s a funny guy got a wicked sense of humour I tell you. If he told us he existed all scientific progress would come to a halt and we would be to dependable on him…this is the reason why there are so many atheists it’s all a bit hush hush. — Deus
That's not the case. A large majority are explicitly atheist. — Banno
Is agnosticism a better position than atheism? — Deus
As a little check and balance I'm trying to use answers that would hold for heap making or hole(non-specified dimensions) digging at the same time.I kind of agree. Does it matter who asserts and who negates? Are you equating 'heap' with 'allegedly a heap' or with 'unanimously a heap'? (Or both or neither, or something else.) — bongo fury
Mine are called dreams.If we assume that reality exist, we are forced to assume the existence of something opposed to reality: — Angelo
Number 4 doesn't follow and is arguably being demonstrated as false by it's utterance.This means that the assumption of the existence of reality leads us to the necessary conclusion that we have no way to think about it — Angelo
Well we do have a way so it does by your logic.If we have no way to think about reality, than it doesn’t exist — Angelo
I didn't read past this word. The world is judgmental.realiability — Angelo
We do not live in a simulation. Or if we do none of the stated reasons compel us to believe it. Demonstrating the use of a brain is not evidence in support of your argument. Because, it begs the question and is marginally absurd.Chances are not 50-50, they are 100-0. It’s a matter of consistency: we have no way to deny that we live in a simulation, because it is the result of assuming the existence of reality. — Angelo
You couldn't pass a Turing test.I don't know what you're talking about. Purposes. For your life here to have a purpose, either you or the environment in which you find yourself needed to have been created.....for a purpose. And that purpose will be the purpose of your life. Simple. — Bartricks
My God has enormous feet. It is the definition of a "super person". It's derived from imagination.I believe in the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent person. And that's the standard definition of God. By contrast, what you're using the word 'God' to denote is a potato. — Bartricks
The term is called making a "wild guess".If God exists, then the purpose of our lives is easily discernible by some rational reflection. — Bartricks
You said rational reflection created this masterpiece? Are you the type that assembles a jig saw puzzle with a hammer? What was the worse idea that this replaced?determined by what motivated your parents to create you. — Bartricks
Even if I assumed your previous statements were correct this wouldn't follow in any definitive sense.Them main point, however, is that you - we - don't get to determine the purpose of our lives. — Bartricks
Closer to a potato than modified santa claus, but I also don't think you believe in God, because it's not what I believe in.No, I think you don't believe in God. You believe in a potato. — Bartricks
My concept of God is better suited to the purpose I mentioned. It's something closer to integrated information theory than perhaps children's stories.If God exists, what possible reason is there to think that this life's purpose is to, well, look at stuff or any of that other guff you mentioned? It's just silly and self-indulgent and unreflective. — Bartricks
I don't think this definition is even relevant. It's a description of what a person would be as God or imagining themselves as God. It's a version for children's stories put forward.You think an all knowing, all good, all powerful person would make you languish here in ignorance if they loved you? — Bartricks
It's another example as "person god"; I don't think it is the way things are so I don't have to consider the conflict you seem to be concerned about.You think a good person would subject you to a lifetime in a world like that if they were fond of you? If you were a good, innocent person that they loved??? Blimey!! How deluded are you? — Bartricks