I am going to wait for the proof that time stands still before commenting on this. But even then I think I would need you to explain exactly what you mean by information. — Sir2u
Are holograms supposed to be 3D? — Sir2u
Maybe so, but the brain is chemicals and energy, exactly where is the information? If the information is the combination and arrangement(conflation) of these two it does not occupy any space of its own, therefore would be nothing more than a property of the brain. — Sir2u
True to form: you don't know what you are talking about, lil troll, and project your own failings on those who take issue with yours. — 180 Proof
It's the logic that says god is omniscient and yet benevolent; that he loves you and yet will send you to hell; that bread is flesh, wine is blood; that worships a zombie and encourages ritual cannibalism; that rejects abortion but will not help the needy; that ignores pedophilia in its institutions; that three are one; that rejects love if it is between a man and another man... — Banno
Invalid because your first premise is false.
2h — 180 Proof
But when people talk like God is a real being who actually does stuff that makes a difference i — Pfhorrest
But what is the relative position of the thinking, feeling subject in aesthetic judgement? — Possibility
A metaphysical connection comes from recognising that we are interacting with more than a body, which is not to say that this person is also a mind and a spirit, but that they are a complex metaphysical structure of relations, from which we arbitrarily conceive of body, mind, spirit or person for some presupposed purpose. So a brain disorder changes the nature of relations within that continually changing metaphysical structure, but it’s only when we isolate the concept of ‘mind’ and how we expect it to function that it becomes a challenge to relate in some way to this altered mind as an unexpected new aspect of that complex, indeterminate goal to whom we direct our actions and feelings of love. — Possibility
The idea that Kant’s noumena transcends the unity of categories, then, does not position phenomena in contrast or oppositional relation to it. — Possibility
Does anyone want to provide a fixed definition of space? — Sir2u
For example, what on earth is it that enables such a complex entity as a human to persist in such a diverse environment as the world we find ourselves in, with time and extension, presence and being ? — Punshhh
In this way materialism dismisses speculation of such condierations out of hand, while ignoring any attempts to reconcile the big existential questions with our experience of living and handing them over to science which will eventually explain everything for us. — Punshhh
Several problems. Start with the fallacy of four terms, just for a start. Sorry, not a valid syllogism. Also, #1 is altogether problematic. In one variation it simply assumes the conclusion. If there's a variation that doesn't, I don't see it. — tim wood
where's Jesus?" :)
Jesus is professed to be a prophet, so has had his blinkers lifted apparently, amongst other things. Prophets do appear to attain some wisdom, even esoteric knowledge about reality, but it is not easily amenable to intellectual, or philosophical consideration. This I consider is due to the knowledge attained being of a different kind to that provided by the intellect. — Punshhh
Idiocy does love company! — 180 Proof
Incoherent gibberish. 'Transcends existence' denotes (1) separate from existence, (2) non-existence or does not exist; if 'necessarily transcends existence', then necessarily separate from existence, that is, does not exist - cannot exist. — 180 Proof
p2. I have reason to suspect a god necessarily transcends existence. — 180 Proof
Is the quantum level physical, non-physical, or something else? — Harry Hindu
Then we'd be talkin'. (y) — jorndoe
p1. I suspect that whatever necessarily transcends existence is impossible to exist.
p2. I suspect a god necessarily transcends existence.
c. Therefore I have reason to suspect it is impossible for a god to exist. — 180 Proof
His heart seems to be in the right place...and he seems intelligent.
I hope he sees his errors. — Frank Apisa
When you are in a hole, Tim...don't ask for a sharper shovel.Ask for a rope or a ladder. — Frank Apisa
What 3017 doesn't know. You share ignorance. — tim wood
Amen, you do not know wtf you're talking about. No need to reply, because I won't. — tim wood
All materially existing things have existential predicates.
God has no existential predicates.
God is not a materially existing thing. — tim wood
Kant’s metaphysics attempts to describe the relational structure of mental processes through which we are able to understand noumena through phenomena. That’s not a denial or justification of the ‘aesthetical phenomena’, it’s a recognition that it’s not so much the appearance itself, but what we learn about the metaphysical aspects of the noumena through our limited perception, that matters. Aesthetics does not equal appearance, but rather perceives and then conceives of reality as more than it appears. — Possibility
In my view, Kant is not advocating judgement of the ‘object’, but rather reflection on our own capacity to delight in an aspect of experience from which neither purpose nor value, neither reason nor logic, can be determined. It is a reflective judgement of our capacity to love. Attending to aesthetical phenomena challenges our perception of the world, and proceeding through all four ‘moments’ without resorting to judgement of what is an indeterminate ‘object’ frees us to imagine an experience of reality unconstrained by our limited understanding of it, let alone our perception of it, and to delight in the possibilities of this indeterminacy in full awareness of our capacity (without necessity) to reason, to know and to judge. — Possibility
By using the ‘aesthetical object’ as a crutch - keeping it in focus as the goal to which we ultimately direct our feelings or actions - we corrupt any judgement of taste from the outset. If the object is predetermined and cannot be perceived as more than its aesthetical phenomenon, then there is no ‘free-play’: imagination remains constrained by understanding. The old adage ‘If you love something, set it free’ couldn’t be more apt. — Possibility
It’s a simple enough process to love and delight in a particular appearance of an object without reservation; more complex to continue to love and delight in your partner when they no longer appear to be the slender twenty-two year old anyone in their right mind would agree was beautiful, and more complex still to love and delight in the world as it is. It’s not that we are brains in a jar - it’s that there is more to the ‘object’ of our experience - and our delight - than the particular aesthetical phenomenon, and that we have the intellectual capacity to develop our understanding and imagination through these four moments, and ultimately through life, towards the capacity for ‘pure aesthetical judgement’ of reality - such is the indeterminacy of phenomena. Alternatively, we may simply find ourselves realising, “they’re not the same person I fell in love with”, having judged them narrowly as the ‘person’ they were and felt blindsided by the impermanence. — Possibility
question. And still pending are your answers to quite a few questions almost all asking for you to explain some of your word salads. You need not reply; I'm out of the 3017amen business. That's because you're incoherent. — tim wood
Make what case? Waiting for you to make yours. But — jorndoe
Do you have any reasons to suspect gods CANNOT exist?
Share them. We can discuss the reasons. — Frank Apisa
What wasn't particularly interesting was noted in the comment, which isn't the same as this thread. — jorndoe
s'well, now you just have to justify why you've got it right and others ought believe so as well, that's what might be interesting here (we'll see) — jorndoe
I'm understanding you right, the agnosticism you're on about isn't theism. Whatever 3017amen is on about apparently is. — jorndoe
Not really. There really isn't much to it. If you'd read it as-is, that is. — jorndoe
anything, it's perhaps more interesting that you see it as another opportunity to launch presumptuous questions and slightly misrepresentative commentary, while still not even attempting to justify your faith sufficiently) — jorndoe
don't share your belief — jorndoe
don't think atheism is in a business of coming up with ad hoc answers to anything, it's just open-ended anything-but theism. — jorndoe
Quite, also we might be intimately involved in a myriad of process beyond our comprehension, or preview. — Punshhh
This argument is problematic because the other side of the debate will just dismiss it as sentimentality, or a natural bonding emotion. It eludes to a greater problem for the atheist position. Which is the problem of distinguishing a universe which is purely a happenstance of dust, from a universe which is entirely created by a God. How would they differ? This question is impossible to answer in the absence of a control, a universe confirmed one way, or the other to compare with. — Punshhh
No. And you never will until you settle on some meaning of your own. What is a "sense" of understanding? What does that even mean? What is "subjective" as you use it here? And is that an "or" or an "of"? — tim wood
Meaning, then, that it - whatever it is - is true? Or that the criteria of truth in this case is simply that the individual holds it so?
— tim wood
Both, no? — 3017amen
Both not. Or do you mean that saying it's so makes it so? — tim wood
The question is, do you hold your sense of understanding and truth more important than someone else's? And your answer is... ? — 3017amen
And here I close. Because I can get no sense from you, and you ignore my requests for clarity. Well, two can play - and one necessarily. If you have a point, you have been careful to avoid making it. Bye. — tim wood