If you oppose logic to "speculative" belief, it only demonstrates that you do not understand the axiomatic nature of the system of logic. Furthermore, there are no systems, i.e. theories, that do not ultimately rest on "speculative" beliefs. That is simply impossible. — alcontali
A central belief in Islam is that politicians, elected or not, have no authority to invent new laws because God has invented all the laws already. This makes such continuous freedom-encroachment process impossible. — alcontali
I am very wary and also suspicious of the refusal to commit to an immutable set of documentation. That practice allows people to claim a thing and tomorrow the very opposite of that thing. So, no, I am very opposed to that. — alcontali
What these false ideologies all have in common, is that they are not documented in a firmly established system of rules, i.e. a sound theory. That is why these things are mere bullshit. — alcontali
The term "common-sense morality" creates the impression of referring to something rather undocumented. — alcontali
Does the set of all sets that do not contain themselves, contain itself? The 1905 Russell's paradox has a long history, but I have rarely run into anybody who actually feels like learning from it. That represents 100+ years of progress in dealing with paradoxes thrown out of the window ... — alcontali
So, according to you a functioning system of rules is not needed because that would be "too restrictive"? What about systems of arithmetic, such as Dedekind-Peano, Robinson, Presburger, or Skolem's systems? Are their rules also "too restrictive"? These systems may be considered relatively "hard" but that is a feature, and not a bug. — alcontali
Systems tend to be indeed difficult to learn, but I learn them anyway. I have always handsomely benefited from that view. — alcontali
Maybe it's a language issue. — Terrapin Station
Some right-libertarians consider the non-aggression principle to be a core part of their beliefs. — alcontali
Still, choosing not to be, has consequences. — alcontali
However, I still recognize that libertarianism is not a complete moral system. It is not the complete answer. — alcontali
Again huh? That doesn't seem "simply put." It seems like pretty gobbledygooky with a bunch of assumptions (including re just what I'm claiming) that aren't justifiable. — Terrapin Station
I don't even buy that there can be energy "on its own," by the way. Energy obtains via the relative motion of physical objects.
(And as another "warning," most "information" talk strikes me as a bunch of gobbledygook.) — Terrapin Station
(And as another "warning," most "information" talk strikes me as a bunch of gobbledygook.) — Terrapin Station
Here's a recent post of mine explaining the standard academic philosophical definition of metaphysics, by the way: — Terrapin Station
So what does it mean to say that we can "transfer" something like the freedom issue to "the metaphysical level," and what would metaphysical causality be (in other words, what would a specific example of it be)? — Terrapin Station
The universe is only semi-deterministic as there is so much contingency everywhere. Ayer pointed out that an obstacle to free will is constraint, not "determinism". — Fine Doubter
I don't understand how you're using the terms "metaphysical" and "empirical." It doesn't seem to resemble how I use those terms or what I'd say conventional usage is in an academic context. — Terrapin Station
Wouldn't agree that chaos is smth 'before' smth else. Chaos is not passive as some kind of unformed material. God is not beyond it. God = Chaos, it produces reality. However not as vacuum, but rather as plenum. Religion and mythology misinterpret this realm and the process of creation. I believe that reality self-creates without an external creator.Dragon=chaos before creation, and presumably involved in any eschaton unravelling. — Anthony
It seems to me, though, that in order to build technology that might “transform [reality] into 100% of information through cognition, we’d have to already know 100% of reality. How could we know the process was complete if we didn’t already know where it ended? — NOS4A2
If, for example, you claim that the brain is conscious matter it does not follow that there are two kinds of matter. It may be, that the difference is the organization of matter, that when matter is organized in one way we get unconscious things like rocks and when organized in another way we get brains. — Fooloso4
You have missed the point. It is not a question of whether cognition is a function or an action or both. You claimed that reality has three main realms, mind, external matter and the process of their cognition. The process of cognition is a mental process, not something separate and distinct from mind. — Fooloso4
So to you there is no difference between good and ethical. If I read your sentence right. — god must be atheist
This is a difficult cookie. Ethics are not defined anywhere in its literature, or wherever the word pops up. — god must be atheist
Cognition does not connect mind and matter. Cognition is a function of the mind. — Fooloso4
This doesn't really make any sense to me. In my opinion, only a false morality could be shaken by knowledge. — Echarmion
This saying is based on some truth on a personal level, but there is no evidence our modern, technological societies are, as a whole, more perverted than past societies. — Echarmion
Not everyone agrees morality has, or needs, a divine source. — Echarmion
To me the relation is obvious, it depends what morality and ethics are founded on. It may be sentiment, reason, 'reality', ideology, society, some .org, brainwashing etc. The more we know, the more shaky these foundations are. Also, there is a psychological factor - power perverts character, and technology is power. Also, we have here the dichotomy faith vs knowledge. Morals has a divine source in its origins - first we have human gods, then heavenly gods, finally GOD. Knowledge promotes logical destruction of these, along with all other arguments. Then we have only left the self preservation instinct, which is erased by mass media in the contemporary society. The result is the dumbing down of an average consumer and arrogance of our masters.But how are the ethics of scientific research related to the amount of knowledge? It seems to me the ethics would be the same regardless of the level of technology, all else being equal. — Echarmion
Even given that, he asked what it would follow from. You just clarified a definition. You didn't at all address what it would follow from. — Terrapin Station
I think Lepechaun uses his definition as an axiomatic truth. — god must be atheist
If we can't fathom that, then we also can't fathom how little effect we make on the world and ourselves. Some measure should be available before making such a statement. — god must be atheist
@EcharmionWhat would this follow from?
@EcharmionAssuming there are no inevitable suicide pact technologies...
To me reality is more than just a word. As a word 'reality' is a channel to 'aletheia'. Words have two functions: a) to connect two different, communicating aletheias, b) to connect mind and things in a personal aletheia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aletheia'Reality'...? That is just another word used in social contexts to denote agreement about 'what is the case'.
I doubt if there are primitive 'thingers' in philosophy today, even in phenomenology, having a specific method of analysis. Therefore the concept of a thing needs a more precise definition. The thing as I see it is a phenomenon; the thing as I believe, theorize is some quantity of energy, God's creation or what comes to a theoretical/religious/mystical mind. 'Unthinging' of our reality doesn't do anything good to it.Things require thingers...