Janus
7.2k
We aren't in disagreement. — Frank Apisa
Then why are you continuing to disagree?
2 minutes ago
Reply
Options — Janus
Janus
7.2k
↪Frank Apisa
Of course it is logically and epistemologically possible that there are sentient beings on other planets. But if the conditions for the advent of sentient beings were extremely stringent to the degree that only Earth out of the whole vast universe provided just those conditions, then it would not be physically possible that sentient beings could arise and exist on other planets.
Now that only Earth could provide such conditions seems very unlikely, but is itself not impossible, from a logical and epistemological perspective, although it too may be impossible from an ontological perspective. The point is, we just don't know.
You're testing my patience and I had decided to stop responding to your nonsensical unargued assertions, so stop being a fuckwit and asking me to concede a point when it has not been demonstrated to be incorrect. You don't even seem to have understood what I have been saying, much less to have refuted it. — Janus
Janus
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↪ernestm
Of course the notions of possibility exist only in discourse, and can be applied as they are relative to our knowledge within our models, but whether reality is such that what is ontologically possible and impossible is determined by natural laws that are completely independent of human knowledge, of their being known or not, is an entirely different question. What is possible or impossible could be determined by human consciousness if the universe were ideal, but we don't know whether that is so or not. — Janus
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
The OP was more than the title. Explicitly the mention of being labelled an “agnostic” and not having an opinion is not to be concerned about said item. In the mind of the the person posing the question of “agnostic?” they are mistaken.
I made the point, made by a number of other people over time, that an atheist doesn’t believe in a “deity” and/or “afterlife”. You don’t have to have an opinion NOT to belief in something other people know of. Clearly if I had no concept of a “cat” I wouldn’t believe in a cat. The scale of believability comes with comprehension.
“People,” myself at least, started talking response to the OP not merely the title. If you think to say “I don’t have an opinion about war,” our opinion is stated in that utterance. That is your opinion about ‘war’ is that you don’t care to address it NOT that you don’t understand what war is.
If the person says “I have no opinion about the existence of the soul” they are either questioning the point of addressing what ‘existence’ means or ‘soul’ - or perhaps ‘belief’?
Oh, shit. You do not know how to read with comprehension.
My bad. I thought you did.
Apparently not because I was being generous in my reading of this:
Unless you are saying the notion of "soul" is IMPOSSIBLE under any reasonable definition of "soul"...
...then it IS possible.
I’ll try again. Maybe you mean the “idea of the soul” is impossible? You’ll have to give an example of what is or isn’t a “reasonable definition” ... I am not saying ‘ideas’ are impossible, but I would argue that it is more than possible to believe you have a ‘reasonable definition’ when you don’t. We’ve all been there at some point in our lives where we realise a certain understanding of some given concept we’ve been carry around was actually rather facile.
Bear with me. Doing my best here! If the vitriol helps keep spitting it out too (genuinely no problem there) — I like sushi
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
Picking an argument? What are you asking me to refute? You don’t appear to have strung a single coherent thought together.
I asked repeatedly what the term “soul” means to you and you evaded, and will continue to do so no doubt?
Anyway, can you explain this:
Unless you are saying the notion of "soul" is IMPOSSIBLE under any reasonable definition of "soul"...
...then it IS possible.
Which basically says the possibility of the impossible is possible? I’m not quite sure what you term as “reasonable” given you don’t seem inclined to hold to, or express, any particular view on anything. — I like sushi
I can think of a great many things that are impossible. An example would be that it is impossible for something to be both possible and impossible at the sane time. Generally speaking it is illogical to live by the view that because something is possible we should adhere to it; especially if you say everything is possible, which would mean you’d somehow try to adhere to contradictory claims - which is ironically an impossibility.
See what I mean? I certainly have no idea what you’re trying to say. I am not being argumentative, I’m simply intrigued by the staunch evasion and what it is you think I’m missing? It is possible my view of what you’re saying is wrong - which is no big deal - or that what you’re saying makes no sense, which should concern you more than me I’d say.
What were you hoping from the thread? What is your point, or the point you were hoping for? Can you express it so we can start afresh here or elsewhere?
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
Maybe I’m missing SOMETHING or maybe you are.
I’m not into evasive wordplay. The bottomline is you don’t care to outline what you’re talking about, but insist it is “something”. Like I’ve already stated wwhsnsusuus is also POSSIBLE according to how you use language. I don’t use language in that way.
I get that you appear to treading water. Why? If you make a claim that something is possible fair enough. My question is whether or not “soul” is something anymore than ygghjyff is something? If both are “something” then both are “possible” according to your line of reasoning.
Where have I gone wrong?
It looks very much like you’re trying to entice me down an epistemic rabbit hole. Not interested. — I like sushi
Mww
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I do not know...is more than an opinion. — Frank Apisa
While this is certainly correct, the OP asked about nothing more than the absence of opinion. — Mww
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
I least I made an effort to define what I was talking about. To be an atheist is not to believe in, and/or consider the thought of, a deity and/or an afterlife as particularly noteworthy.
Deity means some omnipotent conscious being overarching all reality - ergo an incomprehensible concept (of no use other than negatively). An “afterlife” would be against what we commonly call “life” and would not be, as some frame it, “a life after life” (which is nothing more than wordplay). As for some continuation of consciousness once I’m dead? Seems like the most redundant question there is given that I’ll find out sooner or later (or not at all). I’m certainly not going to live my life according to some unfounded belief in some form of ‘ascension’ because it seems to me a way of saying ‘this isn’t good enough for me and/or I’m better than this life’ which I find delusional, deranged or possibly simply egotistical leading one to live their lives as a vacuous event.
As for “soul” ... I have nothing to say unless someone cares to define it beyond “y’know, a ‘soul’, like when you die your mind continues!” In which case, see above for “afterlife”.
Basically if you cannot define what you’re calling “possible” or “impossible” then what the hell does that mean? Nothing at all. This is because it is like me saying Holding up purple duck in the yerrerish of dubble, easterly of wicksin is POSSIBLE! It doesn’t mean anything.
This is always the problem. That is not to say some people haven’t thought through what they mean by the terms “soul” and “god” it just appears they take it for granted, quite often, that everyone should understand what they mean without any serious, in depth explication.
So, what do you mean when you say “soul” bring possible? Do you know? — I like sushi
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
You disregard the “Whatever it is?” — I like sushi
I like sushi
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↪Frank Apisa
I answered the OP’s question precisely.
If you want something else what is it? They said they weren’t “agnostic” because that is an opinion and that they have no opinion about the concept “god” or an “afterlife” - as for “soul” the crack in the door is saying “I cannot know” to which I would say “Cannot know what?”
If they simply don’t care for this then we’re in the field of atheism - as in not being interested in these kinds if questions.
If you have something you wish share about the term “soul” go ahead. I doubt the OP would be upset. — I like sushi
— Mww
Mww
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↪ernestm
I would agree. Granting the conception of soul doesn’t require an opinion concerning the possibility of its existence. That would be a separate, additional, cognition. — Mww
Janus
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You are intelligent enough to see this. Why are you refusing to see it? — Frank Apisa
I've tried to show you the differences between what is logically possible and impossible, what is possible and impossible as far as we know and what may or may not be possible, ontologically speaking.
In the case of the first we can say that we know something is impossible if it defies laws of the excluded middle or non-contradiction. These kinds of things are impossible by definition, and anything else is logically possible.
In the case of the second, is included pretty much everything else. We know that what we observe to be actual is possible, obviously. And on the other side, we may have very good reasons to believe that something is impossible, but we can never prove that so it remains open as to whether it really is impossible.
Speaking purely logically this openness means that it is possible, as you have been asserting and I have agreed with that. Something may indeed be known to be logically possible and hence it is possible that it is also ontologically possible, but we don't know that, and can't know that for sure until it is observed to be actual.
Now, if you think there is something wrong with my reasoning regarding all this, then address that and explain what you think is wrong. But don't just keep coming back with repetitions of capitalized insistence about the MEANING OF THE WORDS. I have already acknowledged that meaning of the words has determinative logical and epistemological provenance. But the meaning of the words has no determinative ontological provenance; in the ontological domain what is is what is, and what is impossible is impossible, regardless of whether or not we know, or even could know, it. — Janus
Janus
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Note that I am not saying that we know that such a planet is actually impossible; the point is that we don't know that such a planet is actually possible either. So, it is only so far as we know that such a thing might be possible. — Janus
It is not as far as we know, but regardless if we know.
Our knowledge as to the aforementioned example, neither gives or takes away from its possibility. — Shamshir
You're ignoring the fact that something might be, just on account of the way things are, impossible even though we could never know that with absolute certainty. Rebirth, to use the example of this thread, might be impossible due to the nature of the Cosmos. But take careful note, I am not saying that rebirth is logically impossible, it obviously is not since it involves no contradiction; I am saying that what is logically possible may have absolutely no bearing on what is actually possible. I am also not saying that rebirth is impossible just that it might be.
That something might be impossible does not imply that it must be possible, but rather that, just as it might be impossible, it also might be possible. The "might be" refers only epistemologically, not ontologically. Ontologically speaking something is either possible or it is not, just as is the case with logical possibility and impossibility. but the domains of logical possibility and impossibility and ontological possibility and impossibility do not necessarily coincide; they may or they may not, we simply cannot know. — Janus
Devans99
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BUT IT HAPPENS. — Frank Apisa
Yes but the question is why did it happen? Has a gigantic fluke come off? Or was it not a fluke at all? Its quite clear to me that the second is vastly more likely. — Devans99
Relativist
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What this thread needs is more psychobabble.
https://thegrayzone.com/2019/05/07/gabor-mate-russiagate-interview-transcript/ — unenlightened
FWIW: Anyone who "expected" Mueller to develop a prosecutable case for criminal conspiracy by Trump was misguided. On the other hand:
- anyone who suggests there was a "Russian Hoax" is ignoring the facts; there was a great deal of suspicious behavior that showed an investigation was warranted:
-- numerous interactions between members of the campaign and Russians
-- Trump's lying to the public about his (and his campaign's) interactions with Russia
-- Trump's instructing subordinates to mislead, lie and fabricate evidence
-- Trump's activities that (per Mueller) may have constituted obstruction
- Trump tried to impede the investigation and have MAY have actually succeeded in this (read about his dangling of a pardon to Manafort, who subsequently lied and may have continued to not be forthcoming).
- It is reasonable to consider whether or not Trump's behavior constitutes criminal obstruction of justice. This is not "moving the goalposts" (as Trump apologists assert) because there were no goals regarding "getting Trump on criminal conspiracy with Russia" (regardless of whether or not there were individuals who hoped for, or expected that). It is absurd to suggest that an investigator of possible criminality should ignore other criminal behavior that is uncovered during the course of the investigation. — Relativist
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
OK, I tried to open your mind to a more nuanced way of thinking about it, but you have proved to be the most locked-in interlocutor I have ever encountered, so much so that you feel the need to capitalize your words of insistence, so I'll leave you to it. — Janus
Devans99
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Consider a lottery on which a billion people have exactly one ticket. A ticket is drawn, and there is a winner. His chances of winning were 1 in a billion, and yet he won. Does his low probability of winning imply the lottery was rigged? — Relativist
We know lotteries tend not to be rigged. We do not know if universes are 'rigged'. It could be that universes are not rigged and we just got lucky, but thats very unlikely. — Devans99
TheGreatArcanum
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doesn’t it seem absurd to presuppose that an effect can exist without a cause considering the fact that all effects are conceptually contained (I..e. subsets) within their causes? to say that an effect exists without a cause is to say that, in essence, the effect is causeless and is therefore not contained within a higher set and is therefore identical to the set of all sets. — TheGreatArcanum
Relativist
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"I 'believe' aliens from other planets live among us" does not sound as good to my ear as, "It is my guess that aliens from other planets live among us"...or "it is my opinion (estimate) that..." — Frank Apisa
Fine- call them opinions. There are still 2 important considerations that need consideration; how strongly you hold this opinion (which is a psychological state), and how strongly supported is your opinion (ideally, this entails an attempt to be objective). It seems more reasonable to have strong opinions when the support is stronger.
What I'm trying to get at is that some opinions are "better" than others - i.e. it is more reasonable to hold them. Further, it is more reasonable and rational (and more productive) to strive to hold opinions that are well supported. — Relativist
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
Why do you keep repeating the same nonsense over and over instead of at least attempting to tender some reason for why I should believe you are right and I am wrong? — Janus
So, regarding the cartoon example I gave: are you saying that we can prove such a thing is impossible, or are you saying that it is actually, as opposed to merely logically, possible that such a planet exists? If the latter, then how could you know that? — Janus
Note that I am not saying that we know that such a planet is actually impossible; the point is that we don't know that such a planet is actually possible either. So, it is only so far as we know that such a thing might be possible.
Janus
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↪Shamshir
↪Frank Apisa
You are still failing to recognize the distinction between something being possible as far as we know, and something being actually possible.
For example as far as we know it is possible that there is a planet where all the cartoon characters ever created on Earth reside, and that they are psychic beings who projected images of themselves into the minds of their "creators' on Earth. But given the nature of nature such a thing might not be physically possible at all. — Janus
Relativist
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Like everyone else, I will continue to use unjustified guesswork in my everyday life. — Pattern-chaser
I'm referring to every day life. Despite there being guesswork to our choices, we still endeavor to to make the best possible guesses. Imagine if you were to refrain from making your everyday choices simply because you could neither prove it optimal, nor compute the probability of your preferred outcome. That is not tenable. — Relativist
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
No, something may well be impossible even thought we could never prove that. So, it doesn't necessarily follow that if we cannot prove it is impossible, then it must be possible. — Janus
Devans99
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↪Frank Apisa
Yes I do; there are about 20 constants in physics that all have to be about where they are now for life to exist. The chances of that happening by chance are astronomically small.
I not saying that the universe is definitely fine tuned for life; merely it is incredibly likely that the universe is fine tuned for life. — Devans99
Devans99
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That is the weak anthropic principle (WAP) you have given.
The problem with the WAP is that it says that the universe must support life, it does not say why the universe supports life:
[1] By random coincident we got lucky and a billion to 1 shot came off
[2] Universe was fine tuned to support life
[2] is much more likely than [1]. So IMO the WAP does not put a dent in the fine tuning argument. Neither does the strong anthropic principle (SAP). — Devans99
I like sushi
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↪Pattern-chaser
Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen?
This question is irrelevant. If there is an ‘effect’ that isn’t ‘caused’ then it isn’t an ‘effect’ - — I like sushi
Wayfarer
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As far as evidence is concerned - evidence concerning 'rebirth' or 'previous lives' is about the only kind of post-death evidence that is possible to obtain, because evidence of other realms of existence, even if they're real, is obviously not obtainable, save for that presented by first-person accounts of NDE's.
But in the case of rebirth, there is a source of evidence, namely, children who claim to remember their previous lives. This has been researched by interviews and cross-checking of such claims, which has produced fairly consistent body of data.
Typically these cases comprise apparent recollections by children who, soon after they learn to speak, begin to talk of their past-life identities and experiences. Often they manifest as the child rejecting the family they've been born into, i.e. 'you're not my family, my family name is [x] and I live in [y]' and so forth. These apparent memories gradually fade and are usually lost altogether by the age of 8. They are also much more likely (but not exclusively) to be found in cultural traditions that are accepting of previous lives (such as Indian and Chinese cultures).
The reason this presents the opportunity for empirical analysis is that such purported previous life memories can then be validated against documentary and other records, which is what the researchers of this field of study have done. The general kinds of trends are as follows:
* talk about alleged past-life memories begins at the age of 2-5 and ceases at the age of 5-8;
* alleged memories are narrated repeatedly and with strong emphasis;
* social roles and professional occupations of the alleged previous personality are acted out in play;
* mention of the cause of (often violent) death in previous life;
* exhibition of emotional conflict due to ambiguity of family or gender;
* display of unlearned skills (including foreign language skills) as well as propositional knowledge (of names, places, persons, etc.) not plausibly acquired in the present life;
* unusual behaviour and idiosyncratic traits corresponding to the previous personality such as phobias, aversions, obsessions, and penchants;
* birthmarks, differing in etiological features such as size, shape and colour from conventional birthmarks and other relevant birth anomalies, sometimes significantly corresponding to wounds involved in the death of the previous personality.
Caveat: the matter is subject to strong cultural taboos in Western society, for obvious reasons - such beliefs having been declared anathema in the early Christian church and also challenging current scientific understanding of the nature of mind.
As one of the best-known researchers in the field noted 'in the West, people ask me, "why do you study these stories? Everyone knows they must be made up." In the East, people ask me, "why do you study these stories? Everyone knows they happen all the time". — Wayfarer
Janus
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There is no such thing as a "presumed possibility."
Unless a thing is established as impossible...by definition, it is possible. — Frank Apisa
If something is not established as impossible (an establishment which would seem to itself be impossible except in the case of logical contradictions) it is, by definition, not possible, but possible merely logically and as far as we know. For something to be considered to be possible (on the basis that it is possible as far as we know) just is to presume that it is possible.
None of this means that we have any reason to be of the opinion that it really is possible, much less actual. — Janus
creativesoul
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↪Frank Apisa
Belief is far more broad than belief statements about God. However, in the context of belief in God, your position seems fine to me. — creativesoul
Maureen
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..I do not do "believing."
If that bothers you...deal with it.
You will never hear me say, "I 'believe' anything."
If you are asking me if I make guesses, estimates, suppositions, or the like...I do. But I always specify that I am guessing, estimating, supposing...
...I never hide what I am doing by saying, "I believe any of those things — Frank Apisa
^My problem with that statement is that ANYONE can make a "guess, estimate..." and use that as a safeguard to say they do not believe this or that, if they wish to do so. Nonetheless, having a guess is pretty much the same thing as a belief, as to say that "I'm making a guess that this happened or that so and so exists, because..." would in the grand scheme of things be the same as saying "I believe this happened because..." in that you are giving reasons in both cases. On the other hand, if you were to say "I'm making a guess that this happened," it would pretty much be a moot point unless you gave a reason why, since anyone can guess when given two binary options such as "this did or did not happen" or "this thing does or does not exist." Unless you give reasons for something, then it really does not matter if you say you guess, estimate, etc." something as opposed to saying you "believe" it, because the implication is the same regardless and varies only if you give reasons to support it. — Maureen
creativesoul
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↪Frank Apisa
Have fun with that! — creativesoul
creativesoul
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↪Frank Apisa
I'm not asking you if you 'do believing' whatever that's supposed to mean. I'm asking you simple questions with yes/no answers. Why not just answer?
Okay? — creativesoul
creativesoul
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↪Frank Apisa
When you make a statement about something, do you believe that what you say is true? — creativesoul
