You are doing a remarkably bad job at it. If you want people to engage with you, you would do well to be more forthcoming about what you think in support of your main idea and why. Mostly what you are doing is sparring. — Bitter Crank
Get along better with TimeLine — T Clark
You have some ambitious items on your list, of which blood sugar, self-awareness, and cheap shots are the least — Bitter Crank
The first step is for you to acknowledge, as anyone would, two points:
1. The majority can be wrong; and
2. Just because an idea is endorsed by the majority does not mean it is always correct or incorrect. — RepThatMerch22
From a philosophical standpoint, I agree with you. — TimeLine
FIRST: Regardless of whether the majority agrees with a particular idea, in this debate we should not stop our discussion simply because of what the majority thinks. — RepThatMerch22
SECOND: In looking at whether polygamy is a good idea, the fact that the majority may oppose it does not mean automatically that it is a bad idea. — RepThatMerch22
THIRD: Pointing out that the majority opposes polygamy is not sufficient to undermine any merits of such a proposal, and that such an issue deserves a greater depth of analysis. — RepThatMerch22
I am arguing that the majority can be wrong, and that we should not accept ideas as correct simply because they are endorsed by the majority. — RepThatMerch22
1. The majority can be wrong.
2. For example, suppose there are 10 people in a room.
3. 6 of them think that 2+2=5.
4. 4 of them think that 2+2=4.
5. The majority in that example is wrong. — RepThatMerch22
Bringing that example back to the topic of this thread:
1. The majority of people in Australia have voted in favour of gay marriage.
2. Polygamy is not legal in Australia, in the sense that three or more people who live in Australia cannot get married in Australia.
3. The fact that the majority of people in Australia have not yet voted for polygamy to be legalised.
4. The fact that the majority of people in Australia have not yet voted for polygamy to be legalised does not mean that:
(a) we should shy away from debating the idea; and/or
(b) we should assume that polygamy is a bad idea just because it has not been endorsed by the majority. — RepThatMerch22
Wrong. I am not arguing that polygamy is wrong because 2+2 does not equal 5. — RepThatMerch22
What I want to say is that we have no way of knowing the consequences of our actions. The May be story brings that out very clearly. And Consequentialism is based on knowledge of the effects of our actions. So, doesn't the story undermine Consequentialism? — TheMadFool
Your comment represents the height of anti-philosophy and intellectual dishonesty. — RepThatMerch22
I pointed out that the majority can be wrong. If you disagree with that statement, and you also think that the majority is always right, that is an instantly refutable position. — RepThatMerch22
Simply stopping the analysis and saying that the majority thinks it is true is unscientific, profoundly mistaken and intellectually dishonest. — RepThatMerch22
The fact that a majority of people is wrong has utterly nothing to do with voting, law or politics in my example. — RepThatMerch22
The story seems to be a damning report on consequnetialism as a moral theory. — TheMadFool
Those are general broad-brush topics you should bring elsewhere. The fact that a majority of people can be wrong is not a concept that you seem to grasp easily. Whether democracy is a desirable political system or not is another topic. — RepThatMerch22
it is an example of when the majority is incorrect. — RepThatMerch22
Generally, laws should always be evaluated to see if they are good or not. We should not just accept that all laws are perfect, and shy away from any critical analysis of them, simply because of the fact that they were passed through Parliament in a democratic fashion. — RepThatMerch22
You said that the fact that the majority of people think something is true means that their views have merit. I gave you a simple example to refute this. If there are 10 people in a room, an 6 people think that 2+2=5 and 4 people think that 2+2=4, that does not mean the majority is correct. — RepThatMerch22
This is not relevant. You said that the fact that the majority of people think something is true means that their views have merit. I gave you a simple example to refute this. If there are 10 people in a room, an 6 people think that 2+2=5 and 4 people think that 2+2=4, that does not mean the majority is correct. That is similar to when the majority of people (hypothetically) thinking that gay marriage ought to be legal, but polygamous marriage ought not be legal. The very topic of my thread has to do with whether that (hypothetical) majority view has any merit, not whether there is in fact a majority. — RepThatMerch22
No. The point is that that just because the majority thinks something is correct (that gay marriage should be allowed, but polygamy not) does not mean that they are correct. That was in response to your statement that: "If gay marriage is put to a vote, and more people support it than reject it -- for whatever reasons -- then that is sufficient. It is sufficient because that is the way up or down voting works". You should admit you are simply wrong here. — RepThatMerch22
The word "plurality" means multiple in this context, in case you did not know. If you think it means "two people", then you are creating an arbitrary definition (much like people who oppose gay marriage, who arbitrarily define it as a union for life between a man and a woman). — RepThatMerch22
This is obvious. But it is not sufficient in the sense that it does not provide a cogent and logical justification. If there are 10 people in a room, and 6 people think that 2+2=4, and the other 4 think that 2+2=5, the 6 people are not right because they are the majority. — RepThatMerch22
I want to know the environmental impact of a specific enterprise: science. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I am simply talking about the everyday conduct of science. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
So if three women want to get married to each other in a three-way relationship, it is right to deny them that freedom even though they don't affect anyone else's freedoms? — RepThatMerch22
If you use personal values to deny them that opportunity, but then support gay marriage because it accords with your own personal values, you are hypocritical.
Religious people may object to gay marriage because it infringes their personal values. — RepThatMerch22
They do not violate the rights of women. Those terms are gender-neutral, so I do not see why you have brought women into this. — RepThatMerch22
In Australia, you cannot be married to two Australian residents at once. — RepThatMerch22
First of all, if people oppose it because it infringes their values, the same objection could be raised to gay marriage. Are we using personal values to justify law, or are we saying that gay marriage (like bigamy or polygamy) can be justified on the ground that it promotes freedom whilst minimally (if at all) infringing the rights of others? For the record, I do support gay marriage, but I also support polygamy and bigamy. — RepThatMerch22
You have actually not addressed the merits of what I have said. — RepThatMerch22
Are we using personal values to justify law, or are we saying that gay marriage (like bigamy or polygamy) can be justified on the ground that it promotes freedom whilst minimally (if at all) infringing the rights of others? For the record, I do support gay marriage, but I also support polygamy and bigamy. — RepThatMerch22
Clucky is attractive on you. (L) — ArguingWAristotleTiff
1. If people support gay marriage in Australia on the ground that it promotes freedom, why don't they support polygamous marriage? — RepThatMerch22
Some people in Australia oppose s 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act. This section prohibits people from using offensive or insulting language. People oppose it because it restricts free speech. Why do they not oppose sections in the Summary Offences Act which prohibit offensive language or offensive language? What about the Criminal Code in Queensland, which sets out leaving offensive material with someone as an example of stalking? — RepThatMerch22
If someone dies in Queensland and does not leave adequate provision for their children in their will, those children have a legal right to sue beneficiaries to claim the estate (even though nothing or very little was given to them in the will). If Australians support gay marriage, why will they not support removing family provision legislation? — RepThatMerch22
Should there be a right to suicide? Most people would say "no", because life is a gift. But how does this make sense, given that nobody makes a choice to be born? What if you are born in a poor family and you do not like your parents? Why should there not be a right to suicide? My view is that the State should provide facilities for people to undergo voluntary euthanasia, in a painless and quick manner, provided they are of sound mind. This only makes sense. You as an individual only exist because of a decision made by others (i.e. your parents). Why should you be forced to live a life you don't want to? The human instinct is to survive, and suicide is often expensive, impracticable or scary. Thus, the State should implement means by which to end one's life. — RepThatMerch22
Is psychology a real science? I do believe in the existence of certain disorders like Asperger's and antisocial personality disorder. But the discipline is very poorly defined and it allows unscrupulous individuals (such as practising psychologists) to say almost anything about anybody, and as long as it is plausible not many people will question it. For example, if you are a clinical psychologist, you could get away with telling your client to "exercise more" or "don't overthink it". I do not feel as though it is a serious or rigorous scientific discipline. I do not feel like you need a degree to practise psychology. There is also little evidence that clinical psychology is at all effective compared to talking with friends, or talking to someone who is pretending to be a psychologist (but does not have a degree). — RepThatMerch22
There is some astrogeology going on that we know about. What are you going to learn/say/write about astrobiology, of which there is zero evidence, so far. (Or does growing asparagus on a space ship count as astrobiology?) — Bitter Crank
My general view is that the Earth IS our spaceship, the only one we have. We're never going to physically 'go where no man has gone before', i.e. to another life-bearing planet, because it's physically impossible. Interstellar distances are simply too vast. I see space travel as a sublimated wish to go to Heaven, now that 'the cosmos' has more or less replaced God in the popular imagination. — Wayfarer
I'm confused as the OP did not mention panspermia let along tardigrades and octopuses. — apokrisis
Cool. But again the OP seems utterly unproblematic in that light. It sets out a chain of reasoning in full. It asks a question that is worth answering - on moral grounds, if we are going to cart our bugs to Mars, if nothing else.
It contained a "scientific error" at the last step, in my opinion. The OP assumed that our immune system has to be evolved to recognise invasive biological threats. But we now know our immune system instead can learn because it generates a variety of antibodies on a "just in case" basis. It doesn't know what might be coming down the pipe, so it produces a range of receptors and uses these to discover what might be "alien" in terms of what it knows to be not "the usual biology out which 'I' am constructed". — apokrisis
Davies is one of my favourite scientists. He is more prepared than most to speculate wildly because that speculation could bring great rewards.
And unlike Crick, his speculation is careful. It always has a good metaphysical grounding. — apokrisis
However as a general issue of policing debates here, this site ought to be enforcing standards of critical thinking, not trying to enforce some mainstream belief system. It is how folk handle what seem to be extraordinary claims that matters. And going and checking the facts - is panspermia a mainstream research topic? - would be an example of critical thinking in action. — apokrisis
I worry that if you are considering drawing a line at a point I consider pretty mainstream — T Clark
But it remains the case that science treats it as a possibility even if an unlikely one. That seemed to be what you were asking for opinions on. — apokrisis