I'm not saying he's plugging his ears. I'm saying maybe he doesn't understand the concept because he has no qualia. — The Great Whatever
Self-esteem, executive agency, praise, positive interactions, etc. -- all these things are pleasurable. — Bitter Crank
But why do people want to feel worthy or significant? — csalisbury
But philosophers claim precisely not to be able to understand it, or that it's fundamentally confused, mistaken, or unintelligible. Aren't you just helping my case? — The Great Whatever
Trump is either lying or doesn't know what he is talking about. — Bitter Crank
Sanders probably won't be nominated unless Hillary is indicted before the Democratic Convention. Hillary's indictment after the convention will look a lot like a conspiracy, but it will probably sink her candidacy. — Bitter Crank
Right, so since this view is obviously false, one hypothesis is that Dennett thinks this because he has no qualitative experiences, so they're incomprehensible to him. — The Great Whatever
You can't really get that from a TV show, which only has time for the middle of the middle of the main plot, and so ends up feeling like more of an obvious contrivance, like a soap opera, where characters behave the way they do because the writers need them to, and not because they might be seen as part of a larger functioning world. — The Great Whatever
I'm worried that if time looping is introduced to the book series this way, that will all go out the window. Time travel is prime a shark-jumping tool, and once it's in there, all bets are off, because anything can or could have happened.
I'm not too fond of the show and thought the latest episode was really bad character death porn. — The Great Whatever
the laws are an objectification of it. — The Great Whatever
It is outside those laws and all physical laws, because those laws are just objectifications of it. It isn't a metaphor because it's more real and concretely known than any physical or represented thing. — The Great Whatever
A disturbing quote to this effect from Schop.: "...the will must live on itself, for there exists nothing beside it, and it is a hungry will." Schop's favored image of how the world works is one animal eating another. Since we are all objectifications of the same will, it is literally eating itself (and people in harming each other are aware in a vague and traumatic sense that they are harming themselves). — The Great Whatever
It is not that it is trying to cause as much suffering as possible, but that it's constantly striving for nothing in particular and this causes constant action and force in lower gradations, and suffering in conscious and self-conscious gradations. — schopenhauer1
This is a good point. It is more of a tepid Will than a ferocious Will. But maybe, even if we can think of a worst possible world, this is actually how bad it can get? — schopenhauer1
but why is it this kind of world with this hefty PSR/Time/Space/Causality? Why would that be how it manifests itself? — schopenhauer1
Torture should be kept for those cases which are crystal clear only. — Agustino
I would simply state that I feel very sorry and concerned for the family, but I really am not the criminal. — Agustino
What makes you think everyone can be redeemed based only on external forces? — Agustino
The "original intent" of the eye-for-an-eye rule was to keep vengeance proportionate. If, for instance, somebody stepped on your sore toe, you didn't get to gouge out their eyeball as punishment. If somebody accidentally shot your cow during deer hunting season, you don't get to slaughter their family. "Proportionate vengeance" said Hammurabi. — Bitter Crank
Again - if they admit to the crime, and laugh at the justice, and mock the family... how can we possibly be wrong? — Agustino
In some cases - in other cases, not fighting for justice is seen as weakly and cowardly, or even worse, immoral. — Agustino
Simple. If they show remorse during the torture, then they will be put in prison and will undergo the usual punishment. If they don't, then they will be killed. — Agustino
Do you think he somehow doesn't deserve that kind of punishment? — Agustino
If somebody mocks your family by raping and brutally murdering someone from your family after having subjected them to the worst kinds of suffering imaginable, and then feeling proud of it, then you sure as hell kill them, even if the law were absurdly to refuse to punish them. — Agustino
Why do you think that many people, when done grave injustices, resort to taking matters into their own hands, and some of them are even willing to go to the end of the earth and to sacrifice their own lives to ensure that justice is done? There is something in the human spirit which pushes them to do this - it's apparent in much of our literature, where such cases are best exemplified. — Agustino
This is false. I think many people would enjoy torturing such a person. I for one would. Do you think I'm a psychopath? I think there is ample evidence that human beings have a sense of justice, which they are willing to go to their own death to ensure that it is not violated. I wouldn't enjoy harming or torturing or anything even close to that a normal, regular criminal. In fact, punishment for such criminals should not really be or be called punishment, it should be rehabilitation. But when it is one of those extreme and hideous crimes, that's an entirely different story. — Agustino
So if the guy mocks the family and laughs about his actions we can be wrong? -_- — Agustino
Exactly! This is exactly why we must step down on it in the harshest way imaginable. — Agustino
These people are beasts, they are worse than beasts. — Agustino
I have no idea what controversy you're talking about, though. To be honest, I've only heard this kind of moral haranguing from conservative politicians wanting to beat out their opponent on the conserv-o-meter and show their constituents they bleed red-white-blue and believe in traditional values.
But, I accept that my experiences are conditioned by what is a rather conservative state. — Moliere
A practical solution I've seen implemented is to have three restrooms -- male, female, neutral. So those who wish to adhere to traditional roles can do so, and those who do not can also do so. — Moliere
For one, I think many of us would feel good to see such a person subjected to the worst kinds of suffering until he begs for mercy. Would you disagree? — Agustino
not being for gay pride events in gay-friendly areas. — csalisbury
I don't think theyre a prime rape spot tbh. — csalisbury
I always get a little concerned when people talk about the world's 'dreamlike quality" For 'dreamlike' to be in any way meaningful, it must be possible to distinguish between dreamlike and non-dreamlike. Dreams are dreamlike in opposition to what? Not the world, certainly, if the world itself is 'dreamlike.' — csalisbury
Schopenhauer should be recognized as among those philosophers who utilize the 'strange loop' structure at the very basis of their thought. In Schopenhauer, to recall, this involves the peculiarity of saying that although my mind is in my head, my head is in my mind, and although my head is in my mind, my mind is in my head. This mind-bending thought gives one extended pause.