The Chinese changed it to 3. They are stupid. One was better. — Dijkgraf
On the other hand, asking about a noumenal world in general presupposes it, in which case the ask becomes....can the physical forms of noumena be understood. Now the answer is incomprehensible, insofar as only real physical objects which affect the senses can be intuited, and these, being phenomena, as arrangement or synthesis of object matter into a logical form, are for that reason, not noumena but actual objects of knowledge. It is quite absurd, and mutually destructive, to attempt the cognition, and thereby the experience of two entirely different kinds of worlds at the same time under the same conditions. — Mww
But in Buddhism that is elaborated through meditation which is a discipline of getting direct insight into the way the mind constructs the world. — Wayfarer
You should focus on arguments, not arguers. — Bartricks
bringing people into our situation would be a very evil thing to do. — Bartricks
evilly self-absorbed inconsiderate person — Bartricks
It's evil to have children! — Agent Smith
I'm a chicken!
The modern world is not suited for new chickens. I think all chickens should take that into consideration. One egg to breed max! Until people are re-educated. — Dijkgraf
The female species loves me. I'm a good-looking guy. Talkative body. Burning brains. The mere thought of putting children in this world is a frightening one. Poor children! No normal future ahead of them. Prone to depression and nuclear destruction. Forced to play the materialistic capitalistic game. I have all it takes to procreate beautiful children (some girls told me they never saw a more good looking bloke, "le mec plus beau du monde"...), provided with the brains to turn all they touch into gold. But I refuse... — Dijkgraf
But I refuse... — Dijkgraf
Misfits? If to care about people suffering, horribly some times, makes one a misfit, I'd gladly be one! Who wants to be a part of a group that turns a blind eye to the real and abject misery that, perforce, must be mentioned in the defintion of the world as we know it. — Agent Smith
I don't think that all of these individuals are misanthropic. They could indeed be driven by a strong sense of compassion for others. I would merely say that empathy and understanding can also extend to the positive aspects of life. People on our side might also rationalise without thinking about these issues in a thorough manner, which is something I hope will change for the better, since I do believe that existence can most certainly be justified. I am still grateful to everybody I've interacted for providing me with thought-provoking ideas to ponder over. I obviously have much to learn. — DA671
It could, but once again, looking at an incomplete picture is dangerous. There is a potent joy hidden beneath that sacrifice, and I don't think it's trivial. Nor is such a great sacrifice always necessary, of course. Things can also be a win-win scenario, wherein people contribute towards each other's well-being. — DA671
Personally, I don't think that it has any positive/negative value (aside from the process). — DA671
Now, once more Clarky boy, try and answer the question: do you think we have reason to avoid death under most circumstances? — Bartricks
you are claiming that, in general, we do not have reason to avoid death? — Bartricks
My question was whether we generally have reason to avoid death — Bartricks
Our reason tells us to do virtually anything to avoid it. — Bartricks
A neat piece of research, — Banno
My claim is that we have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances. Are you challenging that claim? — Bartricks
Our reason tells us to do virtually anything to avoid it. — Bartricks
The Forever War — Pantagruel
What then is the point? — Cornwell1
There is only one speed of light. In the vacuum. The smaller speed comes in handy in using glass fibres, but the concept of speed of light in glass is weird. — Cornwell1
To OP is extremely confused, and responding in the same terms would only add more confusion. — Olivier5
Shot in the dark but anyone hear or read anything from the Kyoto School of philosophy? — Dermot Griffin
I think T Clark's question is also a valid philosophical question, — Cuthbert
But only one is right. Photon absorption and re-emission. — Cornwell1
Say you have a conceptual model of a site that uses different concepts as mine, but insofar pragmatics is concerned there is no difference. Your model is as accurate as mine. Does the pragmatic value equalize them? — Cornwell1
C'mon TC. This is a philosophy forum, and it's a perfectly valid philosophical question. It's a lot better thought-out than many of the one-liner OP's that are posted. Not seeing the point of an OP is not a constructive criticism. — Wayfarer
Also these are mutually exclusive. — Cornwell1
there would still be atoms without people. — Ignoredreddituser
Yeah you’re basically saying there’s things are grounded, whereas he just says they don’t exist only the grounding stuff exists, if that. — Ignoredreddituser
General relativity and Newtonian gravity are conceptually different. General relativity doesn't consider gravity a force and space and time are relative. — Cornwell1
If two different models are equally accurate then they are both true? — Cornwell1
There are domains in the world where two or more mutually excluding conceptual models lead to succesful interaction. — Cornwell1
this isn't to deny the concept of truth or to identify truth with utility. — sime
But surely some knowledge must be true or false. — Cornwell1
When assessing a site, and another pragmatic epistemogist comes up with different knowledge as you do, are you both telling the truth? — Cornwell1
If engineers develop a model on the basis of past experience, their words and actions assent to some notion of truth. — sime
TLDR: 1. An object is an object non-deriviatively whereas a mereological sum is an object only derivatively. Objects are constituted out of mereological sums.
2. The primary difference between mere sums and objectslie is in persistence conditions.
3. The arguments against eliminativism assumes an object and begs the question against eliminativism
4. The difference in persistence conditions only points to a set of particles dispersed and those aggregated objectwise and subjected to the principles of physics like the Pauli Exclusion principle.
5. Because all the work is being done by those physical principles and constraints then it follows there is no difference between mere sums and an object. — Ignoredreddituser
You forgot "reject". I don't reject this function, as pragmatic epistemology does. — Cornwell1
I see you are Collingwood's faithful acolyte. — Cornwell1
The presuppositions, while not true or false, correspond to true or false actions, so important in pragmatism. The actions might even be absolutely true or false. — Cornwell1
and rejects the idea that the function of thought is to describe, represent, or mirror reality.
— T Clark
Here you are wrong. That is not the function of thought. The function of thought is to give an analogue image of the world, so we can walk in it with confidence. Which has a pragmatic aspect, obviously. But walking at night beneath the winter moon and stars in a sleeping city, shows the function of thought goes beyond its pragmatic function. — Cornwell1
Well, that's not very diplomatic or friendly. — universeness
The moderators are the arbiters. Why don't you request a directive from them? Let them be the class monitor. — universeness
it seems clear to me that responders to an OP have a responsibility to address the issue as the OP sets it up and not to go off on a tangent of their own
— T Clark
Yes.
Reciprocally, I have always understood that the person who starts the discussion has the authority to enforce the OP
— T Clark
Not directly. But we can enforce it for you. — Baden
