This can be seen from the fact that a ten dollar note is a valueless piece of paper unless those involved in the transaction have trust in it's value. — Banno
I do love that Cartesian geometry though. We engineers couldn't do anything without. So, all is forgiven. — T Clark
I can't preclude the possibility Mary Kane is internally pressurized to relinquish custody of Charlie due to a greedy desire for great wealth. — ucarr
In the ancient world there was considerably more social stratification, and the hoi polloi were held in low regard. (I wonder if you see echoes of that in Heidegger's conception of 'das man'? Is that the element in Heidegger that is said to be proto-fascist?) — Wayfarer
In particular how does one meet local people to talk to about big topics about morality and existence? — TiredThinker
Consider Citizen Kane. Charles Foster Kane, a happy boy playing outside in the snow with Rosebud, his sled, learns that his completely insane mother, trading him in for money, has packed him off to New York under proprietorship of Walter Parks Thatcher, a banker.
This is "parenting" without self-sacrifice. — ucarr
Do philosophy people have a reputation? — TiredThinker
I find it difficult to engage people in large topics that may not yield rewarding conclusions. — TiredThinker
No women have founded a religion — Agent Smith
it appears to me the only rational justification for killing in self defense should be that one is too physically or mentally handicapped to use non-lethal self defense. — ernest
For those who are into it, there’s quite a resurgence of enacting the Ancient Roman dictum of “bread (like fast food for those who can’t afford better) and circus (like the both literal and figurative bloodsports that surround)” … this in our oh so civilized society, so as to keep the vast majority of us appeased in times of ever-increasing want. — javra
I think there’s a difference between physically exerting your strength over another person and learning a skill like playing an instrument. It may not be PC to say, but I think a lot of men particularly have a need to exert their strength; whether it’s through violence, physical labor, or exercise. — Pinprick
Gladiators were slaves. Period. — god must be atheist
It's rather strange that as a lawyer, you don't see life as a struggle for survival/the upper hand. — baker
If the gladiatorial games were governed by rules and regs, that would reflect the costs incurred in putting the games on. — Bitter Crank
The nonsense that justifies body contact sport disguises the action in which a lot of people find pleasure. I don't know whether bloody sports are good or bad, but a lot of people clearly get a charge out of them. — Bitter Crank
What about the aristocrats who participated? Did they do so entirely by choice or did it have something to do with status or wealth? — praxis
I think Hemingway and Mailer felt this. — Tom Storm
I personally think this is largely nonsense - playing the flute would probably accomplish the same end, but it isn't as cool and there's no blood unless you do it wrong. And it is probably true that any activity that helps people take their minds of drug use and hanging out looking for trouble is helpful in some way. Even golf... — Tom Storm
In my opinion, the hard problem of consciousness simply doesn't exist. — Hermeticus
I'm not interested in the Trinity. Thanks anyway. — Agent Smith
The Holy Spirit/Ghost is a person. What is a person? — Agent Smith
Just when he was about to crack the problem - the way to a man's heart is through his stomach! :lol: — Agent Smith
Ain't the belief in one god a doctrine? — Raymond
What's the difference between a unitarian and a catholic? — Raymond
It's pointless to argue when no argument was made to begin with. — Agent Smith
These days it is quite safe to be a unitarian, and eminently sensible. — Bitter Crank
Much of the debate around Jesus (the Son) and God (the father) revolves around existence (did Jesus really exist and does God exist?). No such quarrel in re the Holy Spirit! — Agent Smith