Your thoughts are just post hoc scripts that magnify and feed-back on the affects of your depression. — Nils Loc
But why should I get beyond this rut? — JacobPhilosophy
Surely that could not be objectively true! — 3017amen
In what context are you referring? In other words, are you suggesting there is an objective standard that precludes mystery, arbitrariness, subjectivity, and/or the unknown? Examples that are too numerous to mention include but are not limited to: paradox of time and self-reference, conscious existence, cosmological existence, Love, metaphysical will, ad nauseum. — 3017amen
But if it is subjectively true that one person does not like ice cream in general, how do you reconcile or preclude the arbitrariness behind the subjective truth with the objective truth of the statement? — 3017amen
And even if one did like ice cream, how could you objectively account for the feelings that person has about his love for ice cream? — 3017amen
demonstrating quite clearly that you still do not appreciate the difference between subjective and objective. it is literally impossible for any statement I make about my preference to be "objectively false". — Kaarlo Tuomi
I don't actually have a favourite flavour of ice cream. I don't understand what folk mean when they say, "my favourite [insert appropriate noun]." the expression is essentially gibberish to me, and when I say those words it is as though I were reading a story written in a foreign language, I suspect my audience might understand but I do not personally have a clue what it means. — Kaarlo Tuomi
everything really is conditional on some prior assumption or other, and usually on a whole pile of them that, for the most part, folk don't even realise they are making. — Kaarlo Tuomi
What I'm asking is why you distinguish moral rights for this treatment. It's clearly not the way you handle philosophical rights (the right answer to a philosophical question). — Isaac
it's just a means of saying "why not" in different words — JacobPhilosophy
if I told you that my favourite flavour of ice cream was strawberry, would you have any means by which you could determine, independently of me, whether or not the statement is true? — Kaarlo Tuomi
Individual observations do not speak to the efficacy of a belief in an objective reality. — Kenosha Kid
That someone else thinks something 'ought' to be the case is, to you, a fact about the external world. — Isaac
Not all matters that people think ought not to be the case are related to immediate hedonic sensations, even of themselves, certainly not of others. — Isaac
I want to take it a step further, if it hasn't been done already, by showing that this "thinking thing" can't be a material/physical entity with the aid of the fact that everything physical/material is dubitable i.e. the physical/material could be an illusion. — TheMadFool
Given that we can cast doubt on the reality of the physical — TheMadFool
Ok, I agree, but the fact that he rejects answering unanswerable questions raises another question for me. How does he define whether a question is unanswerable? — Have some tea
my favourite flavour of ice cream is strawberry, and that is my subjective opinion, and it can only ever be subjectively true. it is neither right nor wrong, — Kaarlo Tuomi
The existence of the doubter is certainly beyond doubt. — TheMadFool
so how do you discriminate between an opinion and a preference? — Kaarlo Tuomi
if I understand you correctly, you are just using "preference" to mean the answer to a question that does not have an objectively true answer. — Kaarlo Tuomi
that would seem to require that you first consider whether or not the question has an objectively true answer. those questions that have objectively true answers go in one box where your philosophy deals with them, and answers that do not have objectively true answers go in the discard pile. correct me if I'm wrong. — Kaarlo Tuomi
however, what happens if I disagree with you on that single point, that the question has an objectively true answer. is my answer an opinion or a preference? — Kaarlo Tuomi
suppose, for example, I do not believe there is such a thing as objective reality. in that case EVERYTHING would be conditional and subjective. in this case it would not be objectively true that Paris is the capital of France because it isn't even objectively true that France exists. — Kaarlo Tuomi
this claims that there is ALWAYS a right answer. and that cannot be true if some answers are only preferences. — Kaarlo Tuomi
But the big bang must be contingent. — EnPassant
You have to go back further, into eternity, the get to the source. — EnPassant
To start with, the definition of God as the source of all contingent things is sufficient for 'belief in God' and sufficient for a simple definition of God. — EnPassant
I disagree with this. why does either one of them necessarily have to be "right" ? — Kaarlo Tuomi
believe that it should be entirely possible to notice that there is a difference between two things without having to make a judgement about that difference. and I apply this in all aspects of my life, not just philosophy. there is, for example, a difference between the novels of Stephen King and Charles Dickens, but I don't feel compelled to say that one is "better" than the other, they are just different, that's all.
but you seem to think that any difference needs to be resolved in some way. which means that every single person who does not subscribe to your philosophy is wrong in your eyes, and I'm afraid I just could not go through life thinking that everybody else was wrong just because they are different from me.
is a man wrong if he has a different job from you, or drives a different car from you, or goes on holiday to France instead of Mexico? what about the people who choose to live in a house that's not yours, are they wrong because their opinion is different to yours? is a man wrong if you don't think his wife is attractive, where exactly does this all end? — Kaarlo Tuomi
But this is describing individuals. It does not describe objective "oughts" and "ought nots" but rather those arising from the experience of each person separately/ — Kenosha Kid
Then you're making no differentiation between an empirical fact and a belief. It is an empirical fact that something is banging on the door. Objective morality is not an empirical quantity: it cannot be detected, or verified. It is only a belief, like that there is a monster at the door. — Kenosha Kid
What I can measure are my moral feelings: how I feel when I see a child in distress, or a person being attacked, etc. I have no access to any objective moral truths, but I do have access to scientific evidence that those feelings are explicable in terms of physiological drives. I have a window to see what it is that is banging on the door, and whether, knowing this, the belief is justified. — Kenosha Kid
in which case we must ask what would be required in order to convince you that you were pissing? — Ciceronianus the White
my Indian — ArguingWAristotleTiff
but having read considerably more of Bill's philosophy than the excerpt given in this thread I think that he has probably not thought very long or hard about why anyone might disagree with him. — Kaarlo Tuomi
I tend to the view that we are each entitled to our own opinion but that opinions are not either right or wrong, they are just opinions — Kaarlo Tuomi
so I persevere in the hope that I might learn something. — Kaarlo Tuomi
I think Bill is what is known as a skeptic, philosophically. — Have some tea
This is essentially the conversation we're having. — Kenosha Kid
The correct answer to that question is, if you must be as conservative as possible, something but it's precisely this something that thinks we understand as mind. — TheMadFool
the complete elimination of all suffering is an 'is' we measure suffering - we might do so by questionnaire (taking people's word for it), we might do so by fMRI scan, empathy...whatever. These are only the means by which we do the measuring, what we end up with, after that measurement is taken, is a fact, an 'is'. — Isaac
All things moral directly involve that which counts as acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour. — creativesoul
You're not secretly testing us are you, as if we ought to know. Egocentric bias? Hypocrisy? — Nils Loc
But Descartes proved his own existence, and by extension, the existence of anyone else capable of making the cogito ergo sum argument. — TheMadFool
Descartes famously attempted to systematically doubt everything he could, including the reliability of experiences of the world, and consequently of the existence of any physical things in particular; which he then took, I think a step too far, as doubting whether anything at all physical existed, but I will return to that in a moment. He found that the only thing he could not possibly doubt was the occurrence of his own doubting, and consequently, his own existence as some kind of thinking thing that is capable of doubting.
But other philosophers such as Pierre Gassendi and Georg Lichtenberg have in the years since argued, as I agree, that the existence of oneself is not strictly warranted by the kind of systemic doubt Descartes engaged in; instead, all that is truly indubitable is that thinking occurs, or at least, that some kind of cognitive or mental activity occurs. I prefer to use the word "thought" in a more narrow sense than merely any mental activity, so what I would say is all that survives such a Cartesian attempt at universal doubt is experience: one cannot doubt that an experience of doubt is being had, and so that some kind of experience is being had.
But I then say that the concept of an experience is inherently a relational one: someone has an experience of something. An experience being had by nobody is an experience not being had at all, and an experience being had of nothing is again an experience not being had at all.This indubitable experience thus immediately gives justification to the notion of both a self, which is whoever the someone having the experience is, and also a world, which is whatever the something being experienced is.
One may yet have no idea what the nature of oneself or the world is, in any detail at all, but one can no more doubt that oneself exists to have an experience than that experience is happening, and more still than that, one cannot doubt that something is being experienced, and whatever that something is, in its entirety, that is what one calls the world.
So from the moment we are aware of any experience at all, we can conclude that there is some world or another being experienced, and we can then attend to the particulars of those experiences to suss out the particular nature of that world. The particular occasions of experience are thus the most fundamentally concrete parts of the world, and everything else that we postulate the existence of, including things as elementary as matter, is some abstraction that's only real inasmuch as postulating its existence helps explain the particular occasions of experience that we have. — Pfhorrest
I ran a small poll in which I asked participants wether social media profiles represent fake selves, in which the overwhelming answer was yes. The following question was whether they represented their true selve on their profiles, to which many positive answers came from the same people that had previously voted that social media profiles portray fake personalities. — Alejandro
The action of the reason is to see harm which was not previously detected; it does not redefine my notion of 'good', rather it refines the way my brain detects external harm. Does that sound similar to you? — Kenosha Kid
Moral objectivism to my understanding is the claim that what is right or wrong doesn't depend on what people think is right or wrong. — Kenosha Kid
