the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure.
— god must be atheist
Well, if they actually lost the ability to prefer or even notice any difference in experience. IOW they got no feedback at all about pain and unpleasance, then they would be handicapped and perhaps to death. But in real life they are not ignoring pleasure and pain, just not reacting to it emotionally as much as they can. — Coben
1. This can be verified by research, or debunked. I demand you do the research, since you suggested this. (I am being an asshole like so many who demand me to do research on every fucking word I write.)I don't think most stoics and others argue that it is happiness, even happiness is something they want to be equanimous about also. — Coben
Later on in life I discovered that this was true: Really alienated and/or depressed people don't write books. — Bitter Crank
Later on in life I discovered that this was true: Really alienated and/or depressed people don't write books. — Bitter Crank
I think the main advantage of a single cell organism over a multi cell organism may be obvious, it cannot develop a tumor? — Hrvoje
and at the extreme, the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure.
Mind you, he may be happy in his life that leads up to dying, and he may be happy during dying. — god must be atheist
Inside you are waging a war against facets of yourself you cannot acce — Coben
The reasons we get 'disturbed' by experience is because this has worked for us. — Coben
True equanimity would not look equanimous, because you would also accept your own passions, reactions, and expressive self. Buddhists and stoics tend to only accept the outside, not their insides.
Now if you tell this to a Buddhist they will often say, no, I observe my emotions and reactions and accept them.
This is like saying I accept that my baby is angry, but I do not let him move or make a sound related to that anger. — Coben
happiness occurs when a chance event turns out to be more rewarding than expected. — god must be atheist
Any choice, always and in every situation?
— Possibility
The idea is just that some choices are possible, contra the idea that none are. — Terrapin Station
Perhaps war is a state of chaos, or, one might argue, a state of injustice.
But it's certainly not lawless, is it? Humans came up with a huge amount of "martial law", from warriors' codes of honour to the Geneva Conventions... — WerMaat
The UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice) would like a word with you. — Terrapin Station
"Generally he has to obey.
He may but need not obey if the order has obviously no legitimate aim (e. g. "clean my boots" in usual situations), violates the soldier's own human dignity (e. g. "run into the city and shout that you are a fool"), or is unconscionable (e. g. obliges the soldier to spend amounts of his own money above limits mentioned in directives).
He must not obey if the order violates others' human dignity, international law or consists of a crime (including a misdemeanor). Otherwise, subordinates are guilty of their deeds if their criminal character was obvious to them." — WerMaat
So, what do we need them for, huh? — alcontali
If you consider that graph to show an immoral situation, then yes, we are all indeed poorer both morally and financially. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Yes, especially if you add in the huge and immoral profit taking on the right of the graph. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Do you see the graph as showing a moral demographic shape? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I think common sense does see that vaccines help stave off illness. It may not have been common sense opinion in the nineteenth century, but it was in the second half of the twentieth century. The new trend, the Vaxxers, is too weak to call their opinion common sense.Common sense is that we should not inject harmful substances into the body, but that does not tell us whether the substances in vaccines are harmful or whether the benefits outweigh the risks. — Fooloso4
The strength of your reasoning is directly tied to the evidence on which it is based. Or, if your claim is that in any particular case or in all cases there is no need for evidence then you must be able to explain why evidence is not needed. — Fooloso4
I cannot speak for everyone but there are some of us here who do not think that is is being demanding but rather is just standard practice in philosophical discussion that makes reference to philosophers or deals with matters of fact. — Fooloso4
Some, many, most? discussions on the forum are built from poorly presented facts, undefined or poorly defined terms, and unsubstantiated claims. I don't mean this as a reference to you. Expecting people to clearly state their positions and the basis for them is not unreasonable. It's at the heart of what philosophy is. As for common sense - it's just one of those phrases like "a priori" or "self-evident" that are most accurately translated as "seems to me." — T Clark
Some people are badgers, and that's just what they do. I've seen this kind of repeated response quite a few times over the years in various threads--"you didn't explain anything", "you still haven't answered my question", "you haven't shown anything", etc. The badgers quite often have no more insight into the issue at hand than they accuse their targets of having.
Sometimes you just have to move on, and ignore some people. — Bitter Crank
Well, it's my "reasoned opinion" that you are completely wrong about Wittgenstein. — Luke
I would say there is, but this is not a thread to discuss that notion in detail. If you like, I can open a thread with the post "is common sense some insight or thought or opinion commonly accepted?"What you determine to be ‘common sense’ arguments are still based on your own subjective experiences - which you cannot assume to be commonly agreed upon, unfortunately. There is no such thing as ‘common sense’. — Possibility
Thanks, Possibility. This is what I had always thought, until a demand came to two separate posts of mine, to name where the author stated what was my opinion. So if you and I agree on this, many others are not on the same page; therefore I take your encouragement to say that the text of a post of mine was written as my own opinion.When you write in reference to other authors, unless you offer a direct quote, you are interpreting what they say based on your subjective opinions about what their words mean to you. — Possibility
I don't suppose you have any specific references, other than his entire body of work? — Luke
I'm having trouble understanding how 'changing your mind' is reconcilable with 'determinism'. — Wayfarer
You are having trouble understanding how things change.
— god must be atheist
I think it's more the case that you're having trouble saying anything coherent. — Wayfarer
Yet there is the measure of absolute povetry, — ssu
Extreme poverty is typically defined as a state in which a person lacks access to all, or several, of the goods needed for meeting basic needs. — ssu
In NKBJ’s defense, she might be arguing that people ought to take a stake (and often do) in the community regardless of how the system treats them personally. — Noah Te Stroete
I'm having trouble understanding how 'changing your mind' is reconcilable with 'determinism'. If you are able to change your mind, then how is that not a free choice? I suppose you could say 'I have no choice but to accept....' but even so, 'acceptance' seems to me a willing act. — Wayfarer
Arbitrary is different than relative, something can be relative but still make sense. — DingoJones
Arbitrary implies no thought put in, — DingoJones