I mean to call you out. Your snide little piece of rhetoric would shame a third-grader to use on a playground. It is disgusting here on this site. But apparently is the measure of the man you are, in sum a know-it-all who knows nothing and is proud of his ignorance.
But behind the infantile remark - for we know you are not an infant - is the lie. You are a liar and thus an enemy here, and having passed the bounds of civil discourse, are neither entitled to it, nor should receive it. — tim wood
Which is it, God or belief in God? Or like me do you hold those to be exactly the same thing? — tim wood
I was not critiquing anything, mind you. — Olivier5
Imagine an empty digital photo, say with resolution of 900x900 pixels and 900 colours. It potentially can hold a picture of every planet, star and galaxy that ever was and will ever be, at any arbitrary given time, from every possible angle, every possible altitude. It can hold every photo and movie frame that was ever taken and will be taken, every scene that was ever seen and will be seen, dreamt or imagined by every human or alien that ever was and will ever be. It can also contain every page of every book that existed, exists, and will ever exist... it potentially contains a picture of anything that was and can ever be, a picture of everything that can possibly be, both in reality or imagination, and yet the number of those pictures is not infinite.
Therefore, the universe, along with the number of things, actions, or concepts, is not, and cannot be infinite, not even potentially. Right? — Zelebg
Complementarity of skills is a good thing in a couple. But there need to be some common ground on values I believe. — Olivier5
Indeed. The best you can do is ally yourself politically, maritally or otherwise with some who do share enough of your values, in the hope of promoting them. — Olivier5
That has advantages though: it makes ethics more fluid and evolutionary. — Olivier5
The conflict between believers and atheists causes so much harm. — Gregory
Atheists should speak that they believe in God and renew the world. The conflict between believers and atheists causes so much harm. — Gregory
You're right. And neither does morality.But by your own reconning, the rule of law is not doing so well in America... — Olivier5
1) you need a conscience to be good
2) God is your conscience
3) you need God to good
There are good people in the world. — Gregory
(Morality is needed) For instance, to justify the need for the rule of law, its importance and value. — Olivier5
My point is rather that, now that "God is dead", we need a secular form (or several) of ethics. — Olivier5
Meine Ehre heißt Treue
You might as well have a thread 'belief in God as necessary for eating cheese'. — Bartricks
But surely critiquing isn't the same as criticizing. The former is directed at the subject matter while the latter is directed at a person. Ad hominem's aren't usually a part of good critiquing and for good reasons are considered fallacious. — skyblack
Only the believer himself can know, with any certainty, whether he is truly religious since he is the only person with direct access to his own belief. — Merkwurdichliebe
It's hard to judge people. — Gregory
"Right-wing" has become a pejorative term. Oh! What great times do we live in... — Gus Lamarch
Also see Graham Priest on Nagarjuna (Aeon Magazine). — Wayfarer
The way I understand his approach is that we can itemize our limitations but not what being bound by them permits to exist. So the "actualization" regards being able to be an agent more than making whatever that "self" may be come into existence ex nihilo. — Valentinus
Ethics seems to have a very deep connection with epistemology. — TheMadFool
Like telling a kid santa clause does not exist. :) — Tiberiusmoon
Truth table for p v ~p
p v ~p
T T FT
F T TF — TheMadFool
It's impossible to see how any proof of an afterlife could be either. — Janus
True it must be fun in the sense of interesting, but don't you acknowledge a dimension of philosophy that may inform the living of life? — Janus
Many know, manier don't, that to believe is stronger than to know. — god must be atheist
my epistemological manifesto
— god must be atheist
To know just is to believe, unless it is direct. I see it is raining, therefore I know it is raining. — Janus
Nothing was implied that meant you believed your own moral code was correct. — Benj96
The logic of this spectrum would suggest that only the ends, the extreme poles of morality see the true distinction between good and bad. A perfect liar and a perfect truth teller. In order to be the worst most corrupted person possible one would have to understand their antithesis (the good) and reject it- so as to never accidentally do something beneficial for someone else. And vice versa.
Everyone in the centre cannot identify who is who. How could they? everyone in the middle is a mixture - both good and bad traits. Their moral compass isn’t perfectly calibrated — Benj96
I disagree. Photons are massless. Nothing at the speed of light can possess mass. And they are most definitely energy. Wavelengths don’t carry the energy they are a measure of the intensity of the energy and it’s ability to penetrate matter. For example the light you can see from the sun can’t generally harm you but the shorter wavelength UV (higher frequency) light can give you a sunburn as it is of higher energy. — Benj96
5. What other physical processes besides switching operations can produce consciousness? — RogueAI