"Stoicism can not contain itself. Stoics misinterpret feelings and human nature and set unnatural limits to other people. They prioritize their -ism over being interested in the well-being of themselves and others." (Nietzsche?) — mortenwittgenstein
recommends accepting things that "outside of your control" and being "indifferent" to the external world asserting the falsehood that there's no difference between being rich or poor but it's all to do with a mindset. Second stoicism leads to passivity instead of forward thinking revolution such as women's rights and freedom from colonialism or slavery. A stoic would just have "accepted fate" and tried not to fight against it but focused on what they "can control" like being a good slave or being a good secretary, this comes after reading many chapters of bullshit in a book titled "the little book of stoicism" I wish I could link the screenshot pages to make my argument more clear but I don't know how to do so. — Gitonga
With our current level of technology it would be extremely difficult to assemble very large stones of different shapes with extreme precision. Also cutting perfect square holes into hard stone is virtually impossible without modern tools and indeed would be even difficult today. — Marco Colombini
he point is that if it did happen, he would have said something true. — Snakes Alive
Your first and last paragraph are in direct conflict with one another. — creativesoul
Each and every time one is mistaken - and those situations are innumerable - there are most certainly at least a few true statements about the scenario, that that particular individual cannot say about themselves without sounding absurd, despite the fact that others can say without issue. That is the scenario put forth by Moore. — creativesoul
Not sure if a sorta-Stoic like you gets as much of a kick outta Žižek as sorta-Epicureans like me usually do. "The first duty", perhaps; certainly not the only one or the last ... — 180 Proof
Others can say it about us, when we're mistaken about the weather, but we cannot say it about ourselves in the same scenario, when we're mistaken about the weather, without sounding absurd.
"I do not believe that it's raining outside, but I'm wrong" describes the very same scenario as "It's raining but I do not believe it". — creativesoul
We cannot say the same of ourselves, while it's happening to us, because it's happening to us; which means that we are the one lacking true belief about the weather. — creativesoul
I don't think the law justifies property. — Andrew4Handel
It’s the other way about. Without property there would be no laws protecting it. — NOS4A2
For example can you own something once you are dead? In this sense owning something does not attach you to the thing in an compelling way. — Andrew4Handel
They are virtually innumerable such true statements(if that's what you mean by "truths") about one that they cannot assert about themselves without sounding 'absurd'. — creativesoul
Like all paradoxes the solution was found in a re-wording of the issue. Resolving this paradox resulted fairly directly in the logic of speech acts, which was not a bad thing. — Banno
Absolutely everyone agrees to all of this. — Srap Tasmaner
Then you agree the Moore sentence is not a contradiction. So what's wrong with it? Why is it something no one would ever say? — Srap Tasmaner
The sentence isn't "I say it's raining, but I don't believe it's raining", it's just "It's raining, but I don't believe it's raining." — Pfhorrest
y girlfriend similarly asked why anyone would say anything like the statement in question, and I said in response that they wouldn’t, because it would be such an odd thing to say, but the interesting question, what makes for the paradox, is WHY is it such a weird thing to say about oneself that nobody would ever say it, but it’s not at all weird to say about others? — Pfhorrest
Yours is a text and its meaning and significance - and what you want to make of it. The man is incidental and peripheral to that. — tim wood
the risk of inducing apoplexy in banno et al, — Isaac
where does the conscious awareness of a newly conceived baby come from? — Benj96
Hence, if Mac asserts both that it is raining and also that he does not believe that it is raining, we can conclude that he is being insincere. — Banno
If it's raining and he/she says it's raining, there is no lie. No false statement is made.If it's raining then the assertion "it's raining" is true even if the person saying it is lying. — Michael
Of course nobody would say it. The question is, why not? — Srap Tasmaner
You are making the assumption that the "sentences" (assertions?) "I know it's raining" and "It's raining" are equivalent. — Pierre-Normand
Their purpose is to tease out hitherto unnoticed consequences of our assumptions. This peculiar tough experiment was especially fruitful since it heralded in some measure the movement away from metaphysical or purely descriptive accounts of knowledge and belief and towards more contextual and pragmatist accounts of belief and knowledge avowals and ascriptions. — Pierre-Normand
