They killed Socrates because he was acting like an ass. — YuZhonglu
Make your case! — tim wood
Are some laws worth breaking, immorality aside? — tim wood
No, I disagree because the processes aren't optional. You do need to worry about including everything. Philosophy doesn't work well half-assed. We need to be precise, complete (at least sufficiently), etc. — Terrapin Station
In addition, as I said, causes can't be identical to what they cause unless you want to say that something can cause itself. Normally we say that there are causes and effects, and the two aren't identical, as that wouldn't make much sense re making a between between causes and effects — Terrapin Station
It has to be if we're trying to say that since A causes or is a cause of B, then A is the source of B. "The source of" is another way of saying "Where it comes from" or "Where it originates", "Where it arises from" or "What is B properties of." If A causes/is a cause of B, but A isn't identical to B, then we don't actually have B yet when we have A, so naming A doesn't tell us where/what/how B happens to be. This is actually because something else has to be necessary for B--some other substance, and/or process and/or context, etc. If that weren't the case, then A would be identical to B. — Terrapin Station
If A causes B, it doesn't imply that A is identical to B, does it?
And if A is not identical to B, then A or, whatever makes A obtain, isn't literally the source of B, because we only have B elsewhere. How does it make sense to say that A is the source of B when A isn't itself B? — Terrapin Station
be given values from something outside of yourself. Values/valuing anything is a mental phenomenon. — Terrapin Station
You are being pedantic. — Devans99
I have to assume I have not articulated my arguments clearly enough I guess. — Devans99
Well as no-one can articulate exactly what is the problem with my probability calculations, I can hardly be expected to answer that question. — Devans99
