I've had both. TB when I was about 9, and DB since about 45. But on a second take, I think they are both poor man's diseases. The difference lies in TB in poor countries, DB in rich countries, but you are poor if you got either in their respective countries.Low income vs. High Income = TB vs. Diabetes! — Agent Smith
That last phrase was so poetic It compelled me to organize it. — john27
Self suggested happiness's margin is infinite! Poof? — john27
I am my own reward, hence I am in a perpetual state of bliss — john27
(or so I tell myself.) — john27
No I can't see that. — jancanc
I read your argument. To me you are saying that Atwell agrees that our actions are known to us, as long as they are not mediated by subject-object. But when they ARE mediated, then you bring in effect. The very act of considering the object of our action, nullifies the premise, and changes it. Can't you see that?Atwell is saying that, for Schopenhauer, the knowledge we have our our actions is unconditional insofar as it is not mediated by the subject-object relation. We have immediate access to our willing which is not conditioned by the PSR. Atwell is stating nothing regarding the effects of our actions, but only speaking of the knowledge we have of them. — jancanc
Self-reproduction at some point was the standard. — Hermeticus
Wood is created by trees, therefore trees cannot be made of wood, because they cannot give birth to themselves. Is there a flaw in this logic? — pfirefry
I mean I'm low income, but I don't think i'm screwed. I wonder why. — john27
but where do you see Atwell doing that? — jancanc
What is the name of logical error committed in the second premise? — jancanc
Human behavior, if you'll take the time to notice, breaks this easiest route rule - we do things in very inefficient ways, most of the times failing to take the shortest route between beginning (of a project) and its end. In essence we violate the Principle of Least Action.
Since deterministic systems have to adhere to the Principle of Least Action and humans consistently violate this principle, is this free will? — Agent Smith
If only I could learn to do the same... All in due time I guess. Or hope so, anyway. — john27
If only I could learn to do the same... All in due time I guess. Or hope so, anyway. — john27
:grin: Skeptic mode, eh? — Agent Smith
Maybe Socrates wanted to send a message - exercise caution - and if it meant resorting to hyperbole, so be it! — Agent Smith
"I know that I know nothing" is a saying derived from Plato's account of the Greek philosopher Socrates. Socrates himself was never recorded as having said this phrase, and scholars generally agree that Socrates only ever asserted that he believed that he knew nothing, having never claimed that he knew that he knew nothing. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_know_that_I_know_nothing
Did he say "I believe I know nothing"? Did he? DID HE??? He said "I KNOW nothing". There is no mention of belief there.That he believed he knew nothing is not a contradiction, — javra
I think Socrates was just bitter he couldn't know everything, so he chose the next best thing. — john27
Prometheus gave man fire to watch the world burn — john27
Is it implying that assuming dualism is a possibility that all science must be false in order for that to be the case? — TiredThinker
I believe it was Oscar Wilde's favourite novel. — Tom Storm
Not necessarily, because in that respect I could not differentiate myself from others, morally. I'd be treating everyone how I would treat myself. — john27
And when you get to the pearly gates and Peter himself asks your warrant for presenting yourself, are you going to say that you're there because Joe the whackdoodle sent you? — tim wood
Those people most plausibly Christian express their beliefs as beliefs. And among the things they believe in are the divinity and resurrection of Jesus. Believe being the key word, failure of which to understand is fatal to understanding Christianity. — tim wood
You either are, or you are not. And to forestall objection, the alternative is that no criteria apply, and that a Christian (or pretty much anything else) is whatever anyone says it is, all contradictories included. — tim wood
and well documented. — Tobias
As far as I know, as regards an undergraduate's philosophy essay, a well-written essay about philosophically interesting ideas will be marked down, whilst a well-written essay about the debate within philosophy about interesting philosophical ideas will be marked up. — RussellA