Buddhism appeals to the rational aspect — TheMadFool
That said, what if we were to purge scripture of miraculous material and instead emphasize the reasonable parts? — TheMadFool
Would there be anything left to instil or maintain faith? — TheMadFool
Now that I brought it up, what about "faith"? Isn't that belief despite lack of evidence? — TheMadFool
I'm afraid the "unknown mental faculty" is NOT rationality. — TheMadFool
Do logical limits point to the limits of what is possible or to limits of our thinking? — Fooloso4
We should also clarify that you weren't saying that politicians can't invent laws period, but that there are particular laws they'd have a problem either getting approved, recognized or at least that they'd maybe not bother to enforce. — Terrapin Station
Even if that were the case, it wouldn't be a matter of not being allowed to make a law. You could argue that it's not being allowed to enforce a law that was made. — Terrapin Station
That's not very specific, unfortunately, and it looks like it's saying that politicians are creating laws that politicians aren't caring about, which isn't the same as them not being allowed to make laws. — Terrapin Station
So I take it there are no examples of this? — Terrapin Station
So you're basically talking about practical nullification? What would be an example of this--a law is put on the books, but not only the citizenry, but the law enforcement arms of the government in question ignore the law so that it's the same as if it didn't exist? — Terrapin Station
Politicians are obviously physically able to create new laws. They do this all the time. — Terrapin Station
Nothing happens to them in response to creating new laws that would amount to, say, "If you do x, you'll be arrested/imprisoned/etc." — Terrapin Station
So we'd need to clarify what "allowing" amounts to there. — Terrapin Station
You don't believe that politicians are allowed to invent laws? — Terrapin Station
This is one thing I don't believe. Speak for yourself. 1/2 of the world's entire population don't believe this. — god must be atheist
Taxes, at their most basic, much like laws, are necessary to alleviate the fatal fractures that would be caused and created by social forces. Why, do you think that law courts should be abolished, and let criminals run free? Or that schools be closed to the common people's children? Or that roads ought not to be built? You are a fool if you think taxes are wasted money. — god must be atheist
The hitherto unknown mental faculty that miracles in ancient texts seem to appeal I call "gullibility to the max". — god must be atheist
You mean to say anyone can be a prophet? — TheMadFool
If we remove miracles from the metric what's the difference between a prophet and a very imaginative, resourceful and eloquent story teller? — TheMadFool
Do you mean to say miracles aren't the pillars that hold up religion? — TheMadFool
If Jesus hadn't done his set of miracles and Moses his would people have believed? — TheMadFool
If Jesus hadn't done his set of miracles and Moses his would people have believed? If you watch TV it won't be long before there's a report on how a statue was weeping blood or a cancer patient is cured by faith alone. Are these small snippets of human thought not evidence for miracles --> God? — TheMadFool
These achievements do not equal those the Great Designer but incomparably more intelligent in terms of use of material resources and time. So, where is Intelligence in the Design? — Jacob-B
However, the religious don't follow these, what I assume are, rational principles. They simply infer God/supernatural from so-called miracles. From a scientific standpoint that's jumping to conclusions. — TheMadFool
You can't answer a question with a question. — Bartricks
I still don't know what your answer is to the question. Can an omnipotent being make a square circle or not? — Bartricks
I am not entirely sure what you're saying - are you saying that even if an omnipotent being were bound by logic, this would not be much of a bind, or are you saying that an omnipotent being is not bound by logic, or are you saying that logic, as it is, shows evidence of being the creation of an omnipotent being? — Bartricks
So, on this view an omnipotent being cannot, for example, create a stone heavier than he (an omnipotent being, that is) can lift, for that involves a contradiction and omnipotence does not involve being able to do the impossible. — Bartricks
The point I made is that 2+2 is not the same as 4. So if set theory treats them as the same, it is in violation of the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
What's interesting about Banach-Tarski is that it's a purely syntactic paradox. The free group on two letters has a paradoxical decomposition, and this is purely a matter of meaningless syntax. One then lifts the paradox to Euclidean 3-space since the isometry group of 3-space (that is, the group of rigid transformations) contains a copy of the free group on two letters by virtue of the existence of a pair of independent, non-commuting rotations. — fishfry
a view which atomized individual actors — rlclauer
The rich and higher up in the economic hierarchy are obviously in a better position to "do something about the problem." — rlclauer
I am asking, do you think the people in question could and would afford crippling sentience enough, in order to abolish gender? — Shamshir
The abolition of gender would involve the abolition of psyche.
Do you think these neophiles could pull it off? — Shamshir
I see now you deleted your paragraph on how transpeople are somehow a "problem" because they can't "decide what gender they want to be". Good choice, since many trans and LGBTQ youth are at the forefront of some of the most powerful social movements of this century so far-these minority and oppressed groups have been the backbone for some of the very rights we say we "take for granted". — Grre
↪Grre
Just a tip: pay attention to who you are responding to, especially if you’re going to get angry and abusive. You seem to be confusing the OP with a response by alcontali. — Possibility
Well, we have been livestock for the rich and powerful since economic hierarchy came into being. — rlclauer
It's not arbitrary then, it just looks arbitrary, in appearance, but it really is not. That it is arbitrary is an illusion. Would you see mathematical axioms in the same way? They look arbitrary, but they really are not. What is required to get beyond the illusion of arbitrariness is to get inside of the head of the artist. This does not mean to literally get inside, but to learn how to think in the same way as the artist. Then you will no longer be an outsider who sees mathematical axioms as arbitrary. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, the issue of the truth of these scriptures is never open for reasonable discussion. No need is seen by its followers for it to justify its "truth" in a reasonable way. Its truth has to be accepted "blindly" - an act of faith is required. My question is why I have to accept scriptures written by fallible human beings as being true? — Daniel C
Well, that would depend on how you define "arbitrary". Use of mental faculties in one's decisions negates randomness. If such decisions are arbitrary, then how do you understand "arbitrary"? — Metaphysician Undercover
s it true that life has "a" meaning and that our task is only to discover / find that meaning to have the experience of living meaningfully? — Daniel C
I'ts okay. Philosophers use no categorical language; they say, "That's post-modernist regressivism" or something of the like, and they leave it at that. It's us, dilettante, who spell everything out for each other. — god must be atheist
idiotic people who think nothing of world issues or even issues in our own government. Is this wrong? — Lucielle Randall
Many people in the past fought for rights and liberties — Lucielle Randall
We are becoming livestock for the rich and powerful to prey upon and we are allowing it! Aren't we awake? — Lucielle Randall
Is there any possible way to help those in need, and revive us, the younger generation, to become the leaders our world needs? — Lucielle Randall
Functional languages are the big thing now and they have monads — fishfry
Well, I really don't agree, and I think you misunderstand creativity. Art is not a product of arbitrariness, there are reasons for what the artist does, purpose, so arbitrariness is not the hallmark of creativity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Banach-Tarski paradox — fishfry
As a definition? It sure seems so. But definitions in themselves can satisfy themselves insofar as they can consistently reach. It appears you're looking to test the "granularity" of this one to see if it holds "all the way down." And again, as expressed, it seems it must. You need a counterexample, and in terms of the definition, it would have to be something that at the same time both does and does not exist - or so it seems. — tim wood
In another thread, a claim was made that we are entitled to have children. Are we? This is a commonly believed idea, whether stated in these terms or not. But is it well-justified? — petrichor
I am concerned with the principles of the system, not any installed base, or legacy, these are irrelevant to the acceptability of the principles. I know that you believe axioms are completely arbitrary, making such things very relevant, so join the mob, if you like the "mob rules" philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
No! In very simple terms either your child will hurt or get hurt. You don't want your child to hurt someone. You don't want your child to suffer. Ergo it's unethical to have children. — TheMadFool
