Perhaps they'll turn out to be useful, sometime. — Ciceronianus
I think the majority contends that the Equal Protection Clause provides that all applicants must be treated the same. — Ciceronianus
Now, though, it's necessary that in order for the race of an applicant to be considered, the applicant must establish that they have those qualities due to their race. — Ciceronianus
Yes. Race is necessarily a factor, as those having the qualities the majority thinks merit consideration will have them because they're black. — Ciceronianus
Do you treat all people the same? Or do you acknowledge that some of them should be treated differently "based on their personal characteristics, many of which are directly derived from their racial/cultural experience of being black in a world of systemic racism?" — Ciceronianus
...they state that the Equal Protection Clause allows some of them to be treated differently due to "their racial/cultural experience of being black (for example) in a world of systemic racism." It would seem to me essential that one must be black to have the "racial/cultural experience of being black in a world of systemic racism." — Ciceronianus
Well, try to understand I've never before been asked to render a legal opinion on what a court didn't say in deciding a case, or about a holding it didn't make. It's not something that's come up in my practice. I assumed you were trying to address the actual decision in question. — Ciceronianus
According to the majority, those making the admission decision may consider the impacts of discrimination against the applicant because of race (e.g. because the applicant is black) in coming to a decision. — Ciceronianus
But, the admission decision cannot be made because the applicant is black, despite the fact that there would have been no discrimination, the impacts of which may be considered, had the applicant not been black. — Ciceronianus
Where does the black go? — Ciceronianus
Applicant X should be admitted because of characteristics and abilities arising from discrimination against the applicant because the applicant is black (characteristics and abilities which presumably would not have arisen but for the racial discrimination), but that doesn't mean the fact the applicant is black figured in the decision to admit? It doesn't work, I'm afraid. — Ciceronianus
I have no idea how such a determination may be made But the statement that a person must not be treated on the basis of race seems rather clear. — Ciceronianus
In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race. — Majority Opinion
Many universities have for too long done just the opposite. And in doing so, they have concluded, wrongly, that the touchstone of an individual’s identity is not challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned but the color of their skin. Our constitutional history does not tolerate that choice. — Majority Opinion
What Justice Gorsuch concludes regarding Title VI, in this case, is no more binding on a court (and of no more importance to me) than is the ass of a rattus rattus. — Ciceronianus
But you have confirmed you have no interesting point to make. — apokrisis
Ducking the issue again. — apokrisis
There was a rhetorical purpose to claiming nature was ruled by mathematical laws. — apokrisis
Mathematical law describes reality in mechanical and exceptionless fashion. That directly contrasted with the organic and Aristotelean conception of nature that prevailed until Newton’s scientific revolution.
I’m unclear what point you really want to make in disputing this. — apokrisis
You are ignoring the fact that talking in terms of either abstract laws or mentalistic purposes aren’t accidental choices. They are quite deliberate in their metaphysical commitments. — apokrisis
And even scientists might want to get down to the “truest” model even if it ain’t also the most pragmatic — apokrisis
pragmatic (in the everyday and unphilosophical sense of being the maximally simple, or most utilitarian, encoding of Nature. :razz: ) — apokrisis
But why are folk happy to call those same fundamental constraints of nature “laws”? — apokrisis
Yet still, it seems just as problematic to abstract away the causes of being - paint them as unplaced laws - — apokrisis
The reality of causation - at the general physical level of the Cosmos - needs a jargon that steers between both extremes. — apokrisis
Some might go as far as to say that a purpose of trees is oxygen production from carbon dioxide. — jorndoe
Is there a faint residue of sufficient reason in such thinking — jorndoe
Are you now agreeing with me that thermodynamics does not tell us what we ought do? — Banno
The thought seems to be that we can rid ourselves of ethical considerations, since these will reduce to thermodynamics. — Banno
From what has been said, a reply that is open to apokrisis is to agree that this is so, but to repeat that
'Ethics only comes into it as a backfill of decisions taken for other reasons - unfortunately perhaps.'
— apokrisis
...and hence while it might not tell us what we ought do, it will tell us what we in fact will do, and hence that ethics is rendered irrelevant. — Banno
All of this to say, it is not at all clear that we could replace ethical considerations with thermodynamic calculations. — Banno
What is the topic here? 'cause I'm lost. — Banno
The thought seems to be that we can rid ourselves of ethical considerations, since these will reduce to thermodynamics. — Banno
...and hence while it might not tell us what we ought do, it will tell us what we in fact will do, and hence that ethics is rendered irrelevant. — Banno
Even if every action is fully deterministic, that doesn't mean ethics no longer has meaning — Voyeur
So we would have the three steps of {teleomaty {teleonomy {teleology}}} to cover the physical, the biological, and themindful. Or in more everyday language, {propensity {function {purpose}}}. — apokrisis
Remember the supposition is that the calculation will tell us what we will indeed do, regardless of what we ought do. — Banno
All of this to say, it is not at all clear that we could replace ethical considerations with thermodynamic calculations. — Banno
Well, no; that's a question, not a statement. — Banno
Life and mind arose as systems with purpose. — apokrisis
The wise long run behaviour would be to price in the cost of the environmental sink needed to dispose of the resulting waste. Plus the issue of what replaces the coal and oil as the supply peaks. — apokrisis
And the point is that good and bad are social constructs used to encode thermodynamic outcomes. — apokrisis
I'm a pragmatist rather than an idealist so ethics becomes just another way of talking about an optimisation function. — apokrisis
Nature isn't about right and wrong. — apokrisis
It's about systems with the balances to achieve purposes. — apokrisis
The United States is no longer a leader among nations. — Banno
Is there something - anything - positive in this? — Banno
It's a practical political question for many nations when the US and China are demanding you pick a side and yet you depend on a healthy economic/security relation with both. — apokrisis
There are a handful of examples where armed US citizens clashed with the government (in the form of one armed agency or another) and always goes poorly with the former. It is a delusional fantasy to think that armed US citizens can stand against the US government. — Maw
I think Paul understood that teachings such as Christ's Sermon on the Mont gave rules that sounded outlandish at the time. Impossible goals, and he tried to show how these teaching were goals to be striven for, even if un-achievable. — Cavacava
The charioteer's choices are choice worthy if they correspond to reasons demands, they do not have a trace of Paul's existential dilemma, in my opinion, — Cavacava
These seem to be metaphysical questions, not questions of logic or language. — SophistiCat
Thompson's Lamp, on the other hand, as well as a number of other such paradoxes, including the Bernardete paradox that you brought up later, are just logical puzzles. The key to their solution is that their premises are either inconsistent (Bernardete) or incomplete (Thompson). — SophistiCat
A supertask is logically impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
A man walks a mile from a point α. But there is an infinity of gods each of whom, unknown to the others, intends to obstruct him. One of them will raise a barrier to stop his further advance if he reaches the half-mile point, a second if he reaches the quarter-mile point, a third if he goes one-eighth of a mile, and so on ad infinitum. So he cannot even get started, because however short a distance he travels he will already have been stopped by a barrier. But in that case no barrier will rise, so that there is nothing to stop him setting off. He has been forced to stay where he is by the mere unfulfilled intentions of the gods. — J. A. Bernardete
So I would set aside the two questions that you formulated - is motion a supertask? and are supertasks (metaphysically?) possible? - as open questions that, prima facie at least, are not incoherent or trivial. Other things that you mention, such as Thompson's lamp, might actually be less problematic than you think, being ultimately language problems rather than problems of metaphysics.
But anyway, if you want to talk about the point, a good way to start would be to give a crisp statement of the alleged paradox. — SophistiCat
Space and time must be thought of in a different way as not being divisible. An object doesn't travel half-way. It moves from here to there in one indivisible motion. There is no half in a continuously flowing and changing space. — Rich
The is no paradox if one a treats time and space as indivisible - which is clearly the case. Only those trapped in the works of numbers would agree otherwise. Of course, the is motion and duration always flows, but for some their experiences are not as real as numbers. — Rich