If it means physically bringing another human into existence, it would violate non-aggression principle — schopenhauer1
It assumes people pursuing happiness is more important than not bringing about conditions of negative experiences upon another person — schopenhauer1
I see no good ones on the other side — schopenhauer1
there is something to be said as to what should be important for all humans, being that we are all born for "some" reason (positive ethics). — schopenhauer1
To humans, and I'm asking for what end. — schopenhauer1
You've just changed the words. What would constitue my having 'justified' it? — Isaac
That is precisely what I'm asking everyone. — schopenhauer1
A person only has to label it such and explain why more important than other ethical theories (in this case negative ethics) — schopenhauer1
The one that's true. — Marchesk
Sure, but which one? You may favour one and I may favour another for our different purposes. I'll see you down the pub when the rotation of the Earth reaches the point where this locality is such that the sun lies on a tangent to it, and we can discuss it. — unenlightened
Matters to whom and by what measure? — Isaac
Humans. Ethical first principles. — schopenhauer1
One where you would justify prevention of harm being less important than X positive ethic. — schopenhauer1
I am proposing that it is only negative ethics that matters — schopenhauer1
I do not see why this assumption must be true that negative ethics must give way to positive or that the positive necessarily needs to override the negative. Why would the prevention of suffering take a back seat to the promotion of "well-being"? — schopenhauer1
What it's about is that 'the sun is setting' can be translated into Earth rotation talk perfectly well, and in fact you yourself have to make that translation in order to claim that it does not set, and so is just as truth-apt as the scientific language you erroneously claim is the only legitimate truth. You are trying to privilege a certain way of talking; don't! — unenlightened
if your scheme is not intended to be true but merely predictive, then it's not a conceptual scheme of the sort being discussed here, and is irrelevant. — Banno
if your scheme divides the world into stuff and what we do with it then it is based on a false premise. — Banno
the initial state ("what was said at the start of the game of whispers") don't matter, what matters for the equilibrium state is the action (the whisper mechanism) that iterates the random variables (the words) associated with each node (the people) and the architecture of the connection of the graphs (who speaks to who). — fdrake
I guess fundamentally the point of relevance is that humans are not just recipients of hidden states, we are creators of them. — fdrake
So there might not just be "one blanket", and it becomes activity and history dependent. — fdrake
(B) All environmental states relevant to the organism's functioning are arguments of f or g (radiation stops this). — fdrake
You are talking about models of perception, yes? The notion that an organism builds an internal image of what is around it, in order to better choose pathways and so on? — Banno
Mystical, hidden stuff... how do we talk about that? — Banno
Libertarianism would be the way to go - to limit centralized power. — Harry Hindu
What in this statement implies that a Libertarian would be for NO, as opposed to LIMITED, centralized power? — Harry Hindu
A six year old could understand this. — I like sushi
Garden variety indirect realist, then. — frank
if there are different schemes, the very idea of different schemes implies translatability. — frank
if there are differing conceptual schemes, would translatability be necessary? — frank
So you're saying our perceptual apparatus is directed at hidden states? Maybe. If I'm looking at the duck rabbit, I may be aware of the lines that make it up, but my senses lock into the rabbit as soon as I see it. — frank
Doesn't a conceptual scheme dictate what we call "real"? — frank
Yes; this is what those who take conceptual schemes to be incommensurable must be asserting. — Banno
how can we possible start talking about how light comes into the eye when we don’t actually experience sight as ‘light coming into my eye and sending signals to my occipital lobe’. — I like sushi
Also, in terms of language, if I talk about the sunrise do you experience the sunrise. Of course you don’t, yet language almost convinces you that you’ve just experienced this said ‘sunrise’. Talking about something is the experience of talking about something not the experience of said ‘thing’. — I like sushi
you’ll find yourself equally as stumped when it comes to articulating what it is to be a human assuming the question is redundant because you are one. — I like sushi
Anybody who dares to contemplate engaging in that kind of behaviour, is at risk of getting unceremoniously terminated by their own relatives. You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs. — alcontali
Typically, properties are considered to be examples of universals, not particulars. — Pantagruel
What I'm saying is really simple (at least it seems so to me), but your response suggests that you can't even grasp it. — Terrapin Station
Attitudes are already interconnected – causally, semantically and epistemically – with objects and events in the world — ZzzoneiroCosm
It is strange that conceptual schemes which are posited as incommensurable nevertheless can be contrasted in the forms they give to experience. — fdrake
It is furthermore not a mere revision of belief (X believes that P mapping to X believes that not P), because truth or falsity of a proposition given an interpretation thereof is fully within the scope of the first conceptual scheme. It is a transformation of meaning rather than a revision of belief. — fdrake
You could say the same thing about discussions elsewhere on the forum, with the same justification. — SophistiCat
Or in other words, classes/kinds/types are simply a matter of how we want to conceptualize things, how we want to divide them up. — Terrapin Station
No — Banno
