Can't argue with fire.That depends. If it's on fire than it's probably the end. The fire causing it though — Prishon
I doubt it's impossible to do good science without peer review. Peer review might help reduce the odds of error, but it doesn't guarantee it.Science needs critical reasoning, data, and peer review — Wheatley
Are you saying we have a model of reality, and then theories about the model? And the model is constructed based on experience and interpretation, and experience is something internal and cannot be know-ably of external origin?Then the models can be tentatively presumed to correspond to what is now labelled reality. — magritte
Does anything ever repeat? I doubt it. However, I suspect core principles, and reality itself at its core, don't change.What do you mean by consistent? Because if you mean repeatable then I’m afraid there are myriad examples of phenomenon and things in the universe that can never be repeated more than once. That doesn’t make them false just exceedingly rare or “unique”. — Benj96
So there is nothing but models of models of models ad infinitum>?Reality is consistent with our model because the model is our reality. That's truth. — magritte
The biggest threat are un-governed people with great power. Who governs the government? If we are capable of governing the government, then shouldn't we be able to also govern ourselves?You think corporations are bad? Ha! You clearly haven't been around non-governed human nature. Watch Lord of the Flies for a minuscule taste. — Outlander
Serial killers treat people the way they want to be treated to make them trusting and vulnerable, so that they can eventually treat them as they(the serial killer) wants to treat them.Like a serial killer? :scream: — TheMadFool
No membership required. However, consider purchasing a good plated dime online to serve as a memento.:up: Great manifesto. Where do I sign up? :smile: — TheMadFool
No relative point of view can give a complete view of what reality is.Farther away in space and it doesn't even exist.
Farther away in time, back or forward, and it also doesn't even exist. — hope
Ok you win. Independent of any observer, the earth is round enough in my opinion. G'dayGoogle definition of earth: the planet on which we live; the world. — TheMadFool
The earth is both what we see and walk on, which is somewhat flat and bumpy etc, as well as the round object we view from outer space.The earth is flat at the human scale but the earth is defined at planetary scales not at atomic or cosmic scales and at that level of detail, earth is round (enough). — TheMadFool
Round or roundish?Distance is about the observer, not the Earth which is round. — TheMadFool
If we are super exact, it is neither flat nor round. Just look at it closely. It only appears flat or round from a distance. Distance blurs the fine details, giving the illusion of a simple shape.How so? The earth is the planet we're on. Is it flat or is it round? — TheMadFool
All definitions break down when we exercise rigorous precision. There is no meaning that is not vague.Interesting. Flat-earthers claim is earth is flat. Is it? What do we mean by earth? — TheMadFool
I agree with that. I'm supposing that the roundness of the cup is not itself conscious of anything. — Cuthbert
Even if the theory is based on the myth, which I doubt, I don't see how that makes it a myth nor reliant on the myth. I don't get you at all.Freud's theory is, as I've now repeated for the umpteenth time, based off of Oedipus — TheMadFool
The myth of Sisyphus is a metaphor.Camus' Sisyphus on the other hand is merely an analogy employed to illustrate the futile nature of human existence. — TheMadFool
Oedipus complex ≠ Myth of OedipusDo you see the difference now? — TheMadFool
Myths are illustrative, yeah. I don't agree Freud would think myths are more than that. But I'll let it go.Camus' myth of sisyphis is an illustration. Freud's Oedipus complex is an explantion — TheMadFool
Sorry to keep harping on this but how about Albert Camus and the myth of Sisyphus? Will you call out philosophy as being a mythology?Naming something from mythology is not the same as relying on it produce an explanatory hypothesis. — TheMadFool
Correlation with myth doesn't tell us anything about reality or viability. Myth can be based on reality and reality can be based on myth. Hence my science fiction - science reality comparison.Naming something from mythology is not the same as relying on it produce an explanatory hypothesis. — TheMadFool
Many inventions started out as science fiction. Eg, cordless phones, and video calls. If modern inventions sound like, look, and behave like science fiction, it's therefore science fiction?if it looks like a duck (mythology) and quacks like a duck (mythology), it must be a duck (mythology). — TheMadFool
I don't get why it has to be one or the other. By observing people's behavior and analysing it, and testing my analyses, I can arrive at insights, indirectly, about the psyche. There is no strict formula for arriving at a discovery. It requires both rigor as well as flexibility. It's an art and a science. I think this is true of any field of inquiry.The mind is not a physical object. Thus psyche is not amenable to scientific study; rather it requires insight. It is the absence of insight that makes this appear controversial obscure and difficult to make sense of. The education system teaches the ignoring and denying of insight as "unscientific" - which of course it is. — unenlightened
I think hierarchy of understanding vs truth. Truth is binary and can't be understood, while understanding can be more or less...understood, but isn't true.I can make sense of a hierarchy of believe, or of justification. Not so much a hierarchy of truth. Isn't something either true or false? — Banno
Of course as a materialist you believe that.They are the same thing. That was my point! — TheMadFool
You are equating existence and materiality. I only said dream objects are immaterial. I didn't say dream objects don't exist.In other words, if perceived then either exists (like a stone) or doesn't exist (like a dream/hallucination). — TheMadFool
To exist is to be perceived means if it's perceived, it exists. Where are you getting "or doesn't exist from"?There's nothing to disprove since the consequent is a tautology (exists or doesn't exist) — TheMadFool
For an idealist existence=perception. Therefore, if perceived, exists. If not perceived, non-existent.As I said, the idealist, through perception (percieved or not perceived) alone can't tell the difference between existent things, nonexistent things, and immaterial things. — TheMadFool
