This is the problem typically with conspiracy theories. Everything that happens has to have been planned by someone, who basically is against the "ordinary" people. It has to be the Jews, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, the Globalists, the Communists, the Cultural Marxists, the liberals, whoever acting as the instigators and following their hideous sinister plans.
The idea that large changes can happen without someone having planned them is far too difficult to understand. — ssu
↪h060tu Not sure what you mean, but I said "blamed" because crazy conspiracy people think that everything that has happened to weaken the church and state since the 18th century is the fault of the Illuminati, despite them not having existed for anything but a tiny sliver of that time. But hey, their agenda continued anyway, Enlightenment spread across the world, so I guess in the eyes of paranoid religious freaks, the Illuminati must have secretly continued in the shadows pulling the strings on all the world leaders ever since their supposed "destruction", since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that. — Pfhorrest
Godel proved that first order logic was consistent and complete, you dummy. This discussion has nothing to do with Godel's theorems. — SophistiCat
OK, but it is more physical-evidence-based than philosophy, no? — bert1
scientific questions get actually decided fairly regularly in the light of evidence. — bert1
All you need to do is define "infinity" in such a way that you can produce them, and voila, you can produce infinities. It's a very simple trick which the mathemagicians do with their axioms. — Metaphysician Undercover
That´s a very esoteric view. We have no way to think that consiousness is at the basis of anything. — InfiniteMonkey
What is it that lovers of totalitarianism need? Order? — frank
Francis Yates’ scholarly work on him is pretty interesting if you’re interested in this area. — I like sushi
Thus begins somewhat of an inquiry as to what exactly is meant by nothingness, and the nature thereof. — CorneliusCoburn
Why did human language evolve? How was this process affected by natural and social selection pressures? What was the sequence and combination of mutations/cognitive features that produced its modern forms? — Enrique
What impact did language have on the character of human behavior as well as our rationality and irrationality? Along more philosophical lines, what is the relationship between language and logical thinking? — Enrique