Thanks. I don't agree that "we" have advanced a long way, on average, over the last few hundreds of years. But could be that we are measuring society by different metrics. I would say that technology has advanced. Not people. I am open to the possibility I am wrong.I more or less agree. Although we have come a long way over the last few hundreds of years. I agree that we are far from knowing about everything about the world around us. — dclements
I think this is appeal to ridicule?There's as much evidence for goblins and zombies as there is for ghosts. — Xtrix
Just don't assume either is true. Instead, clarify what you mean by the word 'I'?Returning to the contradiction of anatta & cogito ergo sum, how do you propose we resolve it? — Agent Smith
[/In Buddhism, the term anattā or anātman refers to the doctrine of "non-self" – that no unchanging, permanent self or essence can be found in any phenomenon. While often interpreted as a doctrine denying the existence of a self, anatman is more accurately described as a strategy to attain non-attachment by recognizing everything as impermanent, while staying silent on the ultimate existence of an unchanging essence.
Bold added. Why is this also in quotes when I do not have the quote commands typed around this sentence?
When Vacchagotta the wanderer asked him point-blank whether or not there is a self, the Buddha remained silent, which means that the question has no helpful answer. As he later explained to Ananda, to respond either yes or no to this question would be to side with opposite extremes of wrong view. Some have argued that the Buddha didn’t answer with “no” because Vacchagotta wouldn’t have understood the answer. But there’s another passage where the Buddha advises all the monks to avoid getting involved in questions such as “What am I?” “Do I exist?” “Do I not exist?” because they lead to answers like “I have a self” and “I have no self,” both of which are a “thicket of views, a writhing of views, a contortion of views” that get in the way of awakening. — https://tricycle.org/magazine/there-no-self/
Anatta (no self/Buddhism). How would you resolve the contradiction therein between anatta (Siddhartha Gautama) & cogito ergo sum (René Descartes)? — Agent Smith
The meaning of ANATTA is a basic Buddhist doctrine affirming the nonexistence of a soul, essence, or any other enduring substantial entity.
Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself, I am large, I contain multitudes. — Walk Whitman
The 'I' casts off the illusion of 'I' and yet remains as 'I'. Such is the paradox of Self-Realisation. The realised do not see any contradiction in it. — Venkataraman Iyer, also known is Bhagavan Sri Ramana Maharshi
Marriage ceremonies, graduation ceremonies, inauguration ceremonies, award ceremonies, funeral traditions, birthday and holiday rituals. Pledging allegiance to the flag. Customs? "Blood brother" blood sharing and pinky swears. Hand shaking and high fives.True. But I don't know any example of them. — javi2541997
I think many share this view approximately.In my opinion a person is not likely to be a philosopher unless they are doing some original thinking steeped in a deep understanding of key philosophical texts or matters. — Tom Storm
As if a man had had his legs bitten off by a shark, and we all earnestly inquire what is the most important problem; that he is drowning, that he is bleeding to death, that he is losing consciousness, that his cries are not heard, or that the shark is coming back for more? — unenlightened
Causal Reductionism:
Assuming a single cause or reason when there were actually multiple causes or reasons.
Logical Form:
complex cause, fallacy of the single cause, causal oversimplification, reduction fallacy — logicallyfallacious.com
~reliabilityweb.comIf you were to ask four people--“What’s the most important part of a car?”--you might get four different answers: the key, the engine, the driver, the battery. Each person thinks he or she is “right.” The person who says the battery is the most important part thinks that, without the battery, all the other parts wouldn’t function. It makes sense, but this same argument could be used for the key, the engine and the driver. The bottom line: There is no one right answer. There is no part of the system that is “most important”; without any element, the car won’t run. In this instance, four people provided different answers; all of them told the truth; not one is wrong.
This seemingly paradoxical statement reveals a misconception behind root cause—the thinking that one thing caused the problem. People use the logic that if that someone didn’t follow the procedure, not following it caused the problem; if the procedure were followed, the problem would not have happened. Yet like a car needs all its parts to function properly, a problem requires multiple causes to happen. And those multiple causes make up the root cause. Put another way, a root cause isn’t one cause but a system of causes working together.
"But I don't expect we will get anywhere debating the topic." :smile: Don't mind at all.Interesting! Quite obviously you're using a different definition for nothing. We're allowed to do that. Create worlds of our own, with unique rules & objects, and whatnot. I wish I had the time to explore Yohan's universe, but looks like I'll have to do it on another day. Hope you don't mind. — Agent Smith
What do you think of Apex Predator- Malus Deus, for a band / album name?Malus Deus. :chin: — Agent Smith
I have looked it up, and I'm not seeing any climate denial here.Are you unfamiliar with the term "climate denial" or is this just disingenuous nonsense? If the latter, I'm not interested.
If the former, you can look it up. — Xtrix
Which 'climate' exactly are you suggesting is being denied?Isn’t it sad how far one has to go as a climate denier? Literally to the point of arguing that because we don’t understand everything, and can’t be 100% certain, we can’t make statements about global warming.
Funny how this stupidity doesn’t get invoked unless the subject matter has been politicized — or, in the case of creationists, goes against religious belief.
Suddenly they become “skeptics” or, sadder still, argue that they know more than the thousands of people who have studied the issue their entire lives — all because they’ve spent a few minutes reading Bjorn Lomborg.
Nothing else quite exposes one’s ignorance and irrationality like this. In politics and economics there’s always some wiggle room — in science, it’s obvious. — Xtrix
True. But then the KEY to wisdom cannot be the same key to foolishness, can it?Don't blame the tool, si? — Agent Smith
So nature as AI?I'm trying to see if there's a pattern by phasing out a being from the equation. God → →\to AI → →\to the laws of nature. Automation. — Agent Smith
Are you implying that God could be an AI?Is God an accountant?
Are there AI accountants? — Agent Smith
Can you explain what it means to explain?Step 1: Find patterns (what?)
Step 2: Explain the patterns found (why?) — Agent Smith