So I did predict that answers were going to focus on the idea that animals too have some sort of deliberation, and that may be true, but can you think of how this is different than human deliberation? I am specifically thinking of reasons as motivations, not just intention in general. An animal might desire food, and they might even plan to some extent. But there is still something altogether different regarding this and what a language-bearing being such as a human does. It is this implication of this unique ability that I want to explore. — schopenhauer1
No it's not enough, this is why workplaces have so much drama and gossip. (I'm a part of the problem!)
We love to feel things even if it's sad and I find that so interesting how in the passed I've looked for sad scenes in movies just to cry for the hell of it! — MojaveMan
Shadenfreude is one aspect — jgill
But I don't see it either balancing or unbalancing the universe: I don't see that mutual destruction causing an equal quantity of creation. — Vera Mont
Hit your thumb with a hammer. There, now, aren't you happy that sometime next century, a baby turtle won't be eaten by a seagull?
I believe specific, individual, personal pain when I experience or witness it. I don't believe in karma. — Vera Mont
Gods don't have duties — Vera Mont
That, plus the suffering of all the experimental animals, and the collateral damage of the toxic waste I'm responsible for. Selfish enough to accept the good; not quite hypocritical enough to ignore the bad. (At least I didn't hedge my bets by paying anyone to pray for me.) — Vera Mont
Well, in fact, all organized religious arguments are circular, since they want it both ways: a big enough god to have created everything, but only takes credit for the good half, while shoving blame for the bad half onto its creatures. — Vera Mont
That's a "nice" if not very convincing argument for a god who created suffering in the first place. — Vera Mont
What do you think the self is? How would you define it? — Andrew4Handel
What burden? Who invented it? Whose concepts are blame and merit? Gods, if they existed, would not be answerable; would not even deign to contemplate such a question. "I Am That I Am. I Do As I Do." In this, gods are as innocent and sacrosanct as black holes and earthworms. — Vera Mont
They were good enough at it to cure me of cancer, which prayers notoriously fail to do. — Vera Mont
than post-civilized ones, which are more about power, obedience and hierarchy, and that is why civilizations wiped out all the indigenous cultures they could reach. — Vera Mont
. Even more so, the story of humanity needs to keep flowing or it stagnates, ceases to serve its original purpose, becomes absurd as all orthodoxies do. — Vera Mont
I don't really see how supernatural concepts that can't be evaluated for their truth value can contribute anything to our Wisdom or our Epistemology. — Nickolasgaspar
I am not sure how questions about the supernatural can ever by part of Philosophy — Nickolasgaspar
Does wisdom help to reach happinness? I think yes — javi2541997
I don't understand why the brain is so god damn important. When a person goes into shock, as due to blood loss, the first organ to be shut off is the brain (we feel faint and eventually pass out), — Agent Smith
What we "know about" (which?) "God" is that it is "the greatest mystery" – the (ultimate) inexplicable "answer" to every question that begs them all. Recognizing that "God" does not explain anything (re: mythos) is what motivated the Presocratic proto-scientists (physiologoi) in Ionia & Elea to speculate on rational explanations (logos) of nature (phusis) and our minds (nous). IMO, to seek explicable wisdom is incompatible with seeking inexplicable "God". — 180 Proof
Instead, the pursuit of God is a deeply personal and meaningful journey that is often based on faith and intuition rather than logic. — gevgala
If civilization progresses in similar ways, aliens, no doubt, will also conceive of god(s). The point is we have different conceptions of god and that speaks volumes as to how we've been so faithful and yet remain unacknowledged for it — Agent Smith
Yeah, we're congenital magical thinkers. Up to about a third of us are quite susceptible to the placebo / nocebo effect. — 180 Proof
Any god bigger than that will juts make a colossal ass of itself. — Vera Mont
Dogma is a very poor way to present a deity. He needs to be personal, plausible, adaptable and available. — Vera Mont
Which is more blameworthy, the one who made it all, or the one who peeked behind the curtain? — Vera Mont
star-stuff.... it's exactly as meaningful as you make it. Star stuff is just atoms. We glorious humans are made of it and so is our excrement once it leaves our glorious god-image bodies. WTF is an image of the universe and is that made of something more special — Vera Mont
he's just too remote to relate to. He becomes ineffable, unreachable, unthinkable -- and useless. — Vera Mont
I understand your point, but why do you get frustrated? Don’t you think is better to always have debates and questions? The nature of universe looks endless and it is one of the most beautiful and sublime acts inside philosophy. — javi2541997
Every possible combination has been tried and none have unlocked the room where God resides ... peacefully. — Agent Smith
Everyone" can't "get behind" the fact that the Earth is round — 180 Proof
good to consider how Akhenaton consider the sun as the cult of one god rather than humanized characters. I guess Egyptian culture is the closer to always had more plausible god to understand universe and nature. — javi2541997
Take some practical examples of fractals - snow flakes, or the center of some flowers. They are not infinite. — PhilosophyRunner
I don't think there is a universal law that require the universe to be composed of fractals. Rather I would put forward some parts of the universe are fractals as a consequence of other laws (current laws of physics, or some kind of unified law we don't know of yet, or something else). — PhilosophyRunner
It seems to me that Earth’s person Gods are childish creations of human imagination. On the other hand, the absolute, ultimate ground of existence God seems credible to me. — Art48