I don't see Kenneth Binmore as one of the bad guys, — Srap Tasmaner
In neoclassical economics, when you talk about someone’s rational interest or the maximization of their utility function, it’s their own utility function. But what counts as utility for you might be the well-being of other people. Take St. Francis of Assisi: Utility for him would be feeding the hungry or mending the broken legs of pigeons. — Binmore
But suppose the original Mother Theresa wishes to feed the children of Calcutta while Mother Juanita wishes to feed the children of Bogota. And suppose that the international aid agency will maximize its donation if the two saints nominate the same city, will give the second-highest amount if they nominate each others’ cities, and the lowest amount if they each nominate their own city. Our saints are in a PD here, though hardly selfish or unconcerned with the social good. — SEP
They take agents that pursue their interests as givens — SophistiCat
Yes, he was one the guys I took exception to, I think.Binmore — Srap Tasmaner
What unenlightened wants to deny is that the state of nature is a war of all against all. — Srap Tasmaner
Being rational here simply means being smart about maximizing personal gain, — SophistiCat
your view is not any less fallacious than the one you are attacking. — SophistiCat
And ... therefore we are one? I cannot bring the argument here into focus. — Srap Tasmaner
You are familiar with the term "rational self- interest"?It's just math. — Srap Tasmaner
1.04 — ProbablyTrue
I thought the point was that an horizon looks like a boundary but isn't — Srap Tasmaner
Instead you're saying there's a sort of functional boundary — Srap Tasmaner
I don't have your memories and you don't feel my aches, I suggest that even if we are parts of a whole, we are very separate parts, and that separation is no illusion at all — Srap Tasmaner
I get a feeling that you are working within a rationalist framework where you believe that you can't take even such an elementary action as feeding without first rationally justifying it from first principles. — SophistiCat
Since I don't have your memories and you don't feel my aches, I suggest that even if we are parts of a whole, we are very separate parts, and that separation is no illusion at all, perspectival or otherwise. — Srap Tasmaner
It reminds me of a recent thread on cyncism, nihilism, and buddhism. — TheMadFool
The ten thousand things rise and fall without cease, Creating, yet not possessing, Working, yet not taking credit. Work is done, then forgotten. Therefore it lasts forever. Not exalting the gifted prevents quarrelling. — Lao Tzu
Are you trying to say we are defined not apart from reality, but by our limits in relation to it? I don't think anyone would have a problem with that. — Philosophim
As the world surges in, we surge out into it. The consequence being that in addition to what is always already there, we add ourselves to it, it to us, and we a unity that ceases when we no longer are. Or another way: being in the world, we also find ourselves there. And we bring wants and desires, shoulds and oughts, and they are parts of our lived world. I find in this a ground; what we do with who we are and what we find, a different topic. — tim wood
The transcendent metaphysic and their priests have a far longer history than just Christanity. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In fact, all the sensitivities, understandings and memories are all the world's. But it compartmentalizes them -- because I don't have your memories, and you don't have my aches.
Is that an illusion too, or does the world really keep them separate? — Srap Tasmaner
why do you believe that perception is separate from reality? If I see the color red, is the sight itself not real? When I taste an apple and find it delicious and another tastes an apple and finds it repulsive, is that not real too? What about my perception that though I wish to fly by my mind alone, I find that I cannot? — Philosophim
This distinction doesn't counter the naturalistic fallacy though: you are still attempting to derive normative from non-normative. — SophistiCat
What? This is false. It is the projection of the ideal that poisons life and suffocates the creature. Man lived on this earth for thousands of years without Nihilism. It was the creation of a false dichotomy of super-worlds and super-beings that destroyed man's mind against existence. — JerseyFlight
a successful life. — fdrake
There is a kind of materialistic presupposition here (for lack of a better word) that draws a hard boundary between impersonal physical facts like skin and light and neurons on the one side, and on the other - psychological and social facts that are sort of pretend, unreal. But are they, really? — SophistiCat
but governments need to step up and level with the public. — xraymike79
I find myself saying, "How many different ways can I say humanity is fucked?" — xraymike79
one can still say that the self is a psycho-social construct. It is as real as such constructs are - which I think are plenty real. — SophistiCat
So I'm having a hard time following the conclusion that we can't get a "you" out of that. — Philosophim
Because religion is based on the denial of reality. Let me repeat: religion is based on the denial of reality. One cannot rightly discuss the potential end of the world with people who believe there is a magical world they will be carried to after. One cannot discuss the death of a planet whose vitality they believe lies in the hands of God. These are not adult conversations, these are confusions. — JerseyFlight
And it should be noted that the religious cannot even enter into this conversation, they do not live in the real world). — JerseyFlight
In trust you preserved your right to good single-malt Scotch. — tim wood
... even the worst is something which can be thought and, because it falls within reflection, does not confront me as something absolutely alien and different. I imagine that such a thought is probably more comforting than any solace, whereas solace itself is desolate, since it is always attended by its own untruth. — Adorno
It seems not. I heard a DUP MP interviewed last night and his view was effectively that anything that strengthens the links between NI and the UK is a good thing. — Tim3003
If Boris learned one thing — Tim3003
The want of good understanding between the (different classes of) men in Phi, and its indication as unfavourable to the firm and correct course of the superior man; with the intimation that the great are gone and the little come:'—all this springs from the fact that in it heaven and earth are not in communication with each other, and all things in consequence do not have free course; and that the high and the low (superiors and inferiors) are not in communication with one another, and there are no (well-regulated) states under the sky. The inner (trigram) is made up of the weak and divided lines, and the outer of the strong and undivided: the inner is (the symbol of) weakness, and the outer of strength; the inner (represents) the small man, and the outer the superior man. Thus the way of the small man appears increasing, and that of the superior man decreasing. — 12 distress, obstruction
That's life (that's life), that's what all the people say
You're ridin' high in April, shot down in May
But I know I'm gonna change that tune
When I'm back on top, back on top in June — Frank Sinatra
You've been very defensive on this thread. — Gregory
Mang (hexagram4) (indicates that in the case which it presupposes) there will be progress and success. I do not (go and) seek the youthful and inexperienced, but he comes and seeks me. When he shows (the sincerity that marks) the first recourse to divination, I instruct him. If he apply a second and third time, that is troublesome; and I do not instruct the troublesome. There will be advantage in being firm and correct. — I Ching
if I am part of the material world and dreams (and the mental world) are a part of me then dreams (and the mental world) are part of the material world. — Daniel
I've already put the theory out there that the I Ching is inherently a religious book — Gregory
The thing about religious people — Gregory
it has become clear that things themselves are unknowable. — David Mo
No, that is not true, if I Ching can HELP a party to a victory. — god must be atheist
