Making this about reading only academic papers from other people, would take any personal creative element out of the mix. — schopenhauer1
All it takes is for a few people to dedicate their effort and time. There have been lots of suggestions for reading groups over the past few months, mainly by Wallows, but nothing has come of them. — jamalrob
There's been a good Philosophical Investigations reading group within the last while. We never finished the book, though. — fdrake
Check the section called "Learning Centre". — Metaphysician Undercover
It is then clear to see who the culprits are and they’ll eventually be ignored, smarten up, and/or weed out other such people so we can readily ignore them too. — I like sushi
if you, Isaac, or anyone wants to help increase quality, please flag discussions you feel are unworthy of the place. — Baden
(1) users can selectively respond and read, like the under used "following" posters option in profiles — fdrake
(2) people's interest in philosophy usually starts long before researching much of it, and it's a valuable space for learning for that user type — fdrake
(3) less restricted posting stimulates discussion — fdrake
(4) increasing content standard to make the place more attractive to seasoned academics would simultaneously reduce our attractiveness for having a large and relatively high standard (for the internet) of discussion. — fdrake
We are the bodies that struggle to live, and struggle to live from conception. Consent is inherent in the striving to live and thrive. There is no fetus that has not consented to life. — Coben
I define ownership as things that you worked for, and "worked" excludes any action that infringes on the rights of others. — Harry Hindu
And then, yes, there can be no evidence that this Value X is the most important, or even more extreme, outweighs any other value. — Coben
... by picking out elements that you disagree with and seeing what it is that you would disagree about that and then seeing if at the end you really disagree with it, or you disagree with some of its consequences. If you do disagree with it, then it can be shown that what you disagree with has implications that you may also not like and maybe reconsider the original. — schopenhauer1
The first principles to do no harm and to not force others would be respecting the individual as an autonomous being that might have choices (like not wanting to be forced or harmed). — schopenhauer1
it is individuals where ethics is ultimately realized — schopenhauer1
It's axiomatic in his system.
For good or for ill. — Coben
It would be my position not to use people in present generations (cause conditions of harm for them) for future generations to be better off. — schopenhauer1
The equivalence is ironically still true because both are false; the duck is not wearing a black-band and nor is the rabbit. — fdrake
The rabbit wears a black band on its neck if and only if the duck wears a black band on its neck. — fdrake
Another way of saying this is that propositional content occurs in the same way as perceptual features; they are of the same ontological order/stratum/regional ontology. They're all events under some representation that tracks some generating conditions, so long as the conditions which generate the propositional content are tracking (strongly informationally constrain or are accurately modelled by) the conditions which generate the perceptual features; differences in one track differences in another, content in one track content in another, changes in hidden states in one track changes in hidden states in another, we're in a relative accord whereby we can state truths of what is modelled by counting it as a model output. — fdrake
Why would it need to be impossible? What's the reasoning behind (N1)? — fdrake
we can find defeater contexts for every model, we can clearly revise our knowledge. — fdrake
It isn't necessary that I believe the cat is on the mat if and only if the cat is on the mat in order for the cat to be on the mat (the cat could be on the mat and I could be out of the house and believing the cat is outside) — fdrake
That which my perceptual features aggregate into "my cat" counts as the cat, but the represented entity also counts as my cat. This "counting as" works both ways - it's relational. — fdrake
What I'd replace the notion of necessity with is (fallible) accord of (fallible) perceptual features; then treat the perceptual features as real objects with regularities that (fallibly, contextually) ensure the (fallible) accord. — fdrake
Does this seem about right? — fdrake
What about adopting the view that what counts as a simple depends on what one is doing? That something can be simple in one way, complex in others? — Banno
Ownership requires upkeep, just as we’re to blame, to some degree (depending on control), if we put on weight, drink too much or smoke. — I like sushi
I cannot cut my arm off and lend it to you for a week then get it back again — I like sushi
Legal ownership is relative to where you live, or even nonexistent, but human behaviour is pretty ubiquitous regardless of its various manifestations of dealing with the appropriation of material resources. — I like sushi
If outputs of whatever system of belief formation we have actually were probability statements, rather than being realisations of probability models, we'd have an easier time eliciting our own priors. This is a distinction between sampling from what is most probable in realising an active perception from a model and those samples being probability statements. — fdrake
The model says look left (disposition) and then we look left (event). — fdrake
Upon what basis do you believe that necessity is relevant at all for vouchsafing a representative connection between external stimuli and output states of active perception models? — fdrake
how can it necessarily be the case that "Saturn" is a model of something when we cannot imbue necessity into any model output? — fdrake
Does a stimulus constrain perceptual features associated with it? If it did not constrain perceptual features associated with it, where does all this accord come from? — fdrake
Prior to all written law there was still some concept of ‘ownership — I like sushi
in day-to-day speech, what it means to ‘own your thoughts/actions’. — I like sushi
Prior to socially decreed laws people still have a sense of ‘having’ and ‘not having’. — I like sushi
I only ‘own’ you in such a sense as you’re willing/able to play along dependent upon your own sense of ‘control’ under the influence of some law. — I like sushi
The ‘laws’/‘rules’ merely fit around our sense of limited control, which are effectively where a sense of ownership lays in part. I’m not suggesting this is all there is to it, but it seems hard to deny it is a significant point right? — I like sushi
Prior to the existence of written law. That is why I mentioned ‘origin of inequality’ - a long running anthropological question. — I like sushi
In this, as in so much else, the Law rules. What is the difference between "I have" and "I own"? Merely the difference between having something and having the legal right to something. — Ciceronianus the White
Which makes the all referents of such perception-talk and model-dependent realism socially mediated... doesn't it? — creativesoul
Or, put another way, the cat being on the mat causes (or strongly probabilistically promotes) my belief that the cat is on the mat. — fdrake
Statements are still true or false simpliciter. "The cat is on the mat" is either true or false. Nevertheless, belief must come in degrees of probability. — fdrake
A logic of belief in Ramsey's would look like Bayesian computation. — fdrake
It looks to me that the best bet would be "There are more than 3 bodies currently in orbit around Saturn", but I don't have an explicit probability assigned to the statement. — fdrake
why would my predisposition towards any of the statements in the list be necessary for there to be a given number of bodies in orbit around Saturn? — fdrake
Arguing over what some given law dictates doesn’t seem to do a great deal if we’re to get to the heart of what ‘ownership’ means. — I like sushi
The state would only decide to not defend my ownership of something if I acquired it by infringing on the rights of others. — Harry Hindu
When we say that some statement is true, we do not mean the same thing as when we say that it is believed. — Banno
there are things that are not believed and yet true. — Banno
I don't think so. Rather, it acknowledges that some are not. Whereas, you seem to be taking a hard line stance that we have no direct access to any referents at all; Have I misunderstood? — creativesoul
Why should people be used like this? What you are saying is that we must be pressured to violate negative ethics in order fix some X situation. Two wrongs don't make a right. — schopenhauer1
"if you believe all of my ethical positions you will also believe my conclusions as to what range of actions they lead to". — Isaac
Because there ARE people that do not fit the mold. People are not cookie-cutters. — schopenhauer1
If you are breaking negative ethics (non-aggression/non-harm) in order to fulfill some positive ethics (I think this is better for you, this is better for society), then something has been violated. — schopenhauer1
Forcing someone to be born because society MUST benefit from children of certain parents (which is just odd to me anyways in your argument), would be wrong. — schopenhauer1
there will always be people that don't fit — schopenhauer1
I am not saying that ethics does not apply to many individuals at once. Rather, what I am saying is ethics does not apply to some third-party entity or concept (e.g. humanity, the species, society, the greater good principle, life for life's sake, the pursuit of happiness, etc.). — schopenhauer1
I don't know where you get that last part about generations. All generations would be constrained by the negative ethical principles of non-aggression and non-harm. — schopenhauer1
Again, it is hubris to think we know with surety such outcomes. We simply don't. Even if there is a tendency, and even if we can define and agree upon what "positive outcomes" are, there will certainly be those who don't fit the mold. Thus, there will always be collateral damage. The experimentation aspect is still there. — schopenhauer1
This attempt to turn "some procreation is bad" into "all procreation is bad" just falls flat in every regard. — Tzeentch
disagree that ethics is at a social level. The ACTUAL entity affected by any decision isn't a social entity, but the individual within that society. So any decision "socially" made is affecting the individual. If you want to talk about politics or social policy that is one thing, but in terms of ethics, anything that overlooks the individual for an amorphous collective would be missing the target. — schopenhauer1
It is using of people for the greater good. — schopenhauer1
