There are plenty of cases of shared agreement about things "seeming good or bad" as in sharing the same hedonic experience of the same phenomenon. Many of the same kinds of thing cause pain, hunger, etc, all kinds of hedonic experiences, in most people. — Pfhorrest
an analogous kind of investigation, appealing to experiences of things seeming good or bad — Pfhorrest
analogous methods for answering normative or prescriptive questions. — Pfhorrest
In defending why you should do science instead of something else, you're doing philosophy. — Pfhorrest
They can’t simply be in the mind, as they’re efficacious and predictive with respect to objective phenomena. — Wayfarer
Sure.
The OP is based on a misapprehension of how physics deals with causation, and hence the argument fails.
But that will make no difference to its defenders, since the real point of this thread is to engage in mutual preening. — Banno
I disagree. — christian2017
Even if one supposes that there is no such thing as objectively good or evil, it does not follow that there is no such thing as good or evil, per se. — Banno
I'm not saying that philosophical questions should be settled by appeal to people's intuition from their life experiences, I'm saying that a core philosophical answer (that I'm not presenting an argument for here, just stating that it's the answer I settled on), an answer to a question about how to answer questions, is "answer them by appealing to phenomenal experiences". — Pfhorrest
My core principles are...
That such a contest of opinion is settled by comparing and measuring the candidates against a common scale, namely that of the experiential phenomena accessible in common by everyone, and opinions that cannot be thus tested are thereby disqualified. (A position I call "phenomenalism", and its negation "transcendentalism"). — Pfhorrest
Thats why I'm here - to get your thoughts on these ideas. — Devans99
Isaac, have you noticed this? Meta suffers a blindness not dissimilar to Devans99, in that both seem unable to grasp the mathematics of Limits. — Banno
's merely a mechanical process. I can't remember all the details, modus ponens and so on. — Devans99
If the axiom has a high probability of being true, I adopt it. If not, I reject it. — Devans99
How can you possibly quantify your level of belief in an axiom if it is not with a percentage? — Devans99
stuff I did not understand, I assigned a 50%/50% probability to - unknown. — Devans99
I believe I have a proficient grasp of these areas. — Devans99
Belief cannot stem from what others say, only from strong conviction in a small set of axioms, and the act of deducing the required results, can we actually say we believe something. Other people make mistakes or may even try to deliberately mislead you (eg organised religion) - you have to think it through for yourself to have knowledge. — Devans99
Sometimes there are logical errors in the actual deduction — Devans99
mostly it is bad axioms that undermine arguments — Devans99
We have to accurately express our faith in our axioms. — Devans99
I have a degree in maths. — Devans99
In general, if I don't understand, I ask — Devans99
... or find out some other way. — Devans99
I use deduction and induction — Devans99
- I argue for things I think are greater than 50% likely to be true.
- I argue against things I think are less than 50% likely to be true. — Devans99
I carefully consider everyone's counter arguments and adjust my probability estimates accordingly. — Devans99
If people show I'm wrong, I admit it and change my position
- If no-one shows I'm wrong, I continue to press my argument
Give me a link to where I was proved wrong about the math and I'll demonstrate to you that I was not. — Devans99
That's your, biased, version of events. My recollection is that no-one had any valid counter arguments. — Devans99
No-one rebutted that maths! Its fine! Tell me where the error is please. — Devans99
1. Start at 50%/50% for the unknown boolean question ‘is the universe a creation?’
2. Time has a start. 50% probability of a creator due to this gives: 50% + 50% * 25% = 75%
3. Universe is not in equilibrium 25% probability of a creator giving: 75% + 25% * 25% = 81%
4. Causality based arguments. 25% probability of a creator giving: 81% + 19% * 25% = 85%
5. Fine tuning 50% probability of a creator giving: 85% + 15% * 50% = 92%
6. Big Bang 25% probability of a creator giving: 92% + 8% * 25% = 94%
7. Aquinas 3rd argument, etc... — Devans99
Presumably, since you'd blame yourself if you destroyed and looted a local business then we can draw the conclusion that the rioters are also at fault. — BitconnectCarlos
Please state your counter arguments if you have any. — Devans99
Can you not even summon up one counter argument? — Devans99
you started it - you called my OP shite without any justification whatsoever. — Devans99
... but I guess [your OP is shite]
... seems to be [that your OP is shite] ..
My suspicion [is that your OP is shite] ...
... they just appear that way. — Devans99
Great. Let's see. Flight. Travel to outer space. To the ocean. Communicating with one another on the other side of the land. It's getting rather hard to think of an item taken for granted now that doesn't fall under this area quite frankly. — Outlander
I think Marcus Aurelius’ reputation nowadays is probably better than Freud’s. Many of Freud’s theories have been subsequently deprecated, if not dismissed, as being pseudo-scientific. — Wayfarer
They may have thought that they were in a discourse about mathematics, but they were in a discourse about Meta's certainty. — Banno
I suggested elsewhere that the motive might have been a search for recognition — Banno
It's late guys come on. There's a box that says "live cat" on it. You got 2 people who say they did research and concluded there is no cat. Last they checked. And you got 2 who say there is a cat because they witnessed it's "power" I guess. Maybe they heard a meow.
Yet no group can show not just me but themselves even without relying on the hearsay they so selectively despise if there is or there is not a cat.
To me, that's 50/50. — Outlander
How do you do that? — SophistiCat
If you are unable to do so, I'd assert the odds remain 50/50. — Outlander
I mentioned before - I don't know if you noticed it - that this thread is not about mathematics so much as about the psychology of crackpots, of which Meta is certainly one. — Banno
However, to claim that there is no racist belief necessary in order to have systemic racism is like saying apples are not currently necessary to have apple pie. — creativesoul
An entire community so furious - so even the rich white kids who decide to go into a mall in an urban area and vandalize it during the riots are just....the fault of the government. — BitconnectCarlos
People apparently don't have agency, they're just little wind-up toys to be wound up and released and whatever damage they cause is clearly on whoever wound them up. I swear you could come across a man beating a pregnant woman and you'd be thinking "god, how could the evil forces of systemic racism/classism/capitalism/etc be doing this to her!" — BitconnectCarlos
Do you apply these standards/this account to yourself. If you were to destroy a local business, would you blame yourself or something else? — BitconnectCarlos
Plenty of these rioters are not from the community being vandalized, they're from outside. — BitconnectCarlos
I’m not, and so far as I can see here nobody else is either. They’re just asking for sympathy for the innocents wrongly caught up in that angry reaction, in addition to sympathy for the righteously angry people. — Pfhorrest
