That's a good point. How do you think that the first premise could be more clearly stated? — Need Logic Help
“P1: X cares about objective logic, P2: X does not care about Y, C: Y is not included in objective logic” — Need Logic Help
Here's a very philosophical poem, by Wallace Stevens — Ciceronianus the White
I can sit here and explain hundreds of different reasons as to why life is better right now then it has been for thousands of years and how lucky i am to be here right now and yet still be depressed and look at the world and think of the future and be negative and knowing that the problem is just my perspective because i was raised wrong and knowing that i still can't change my perspective almost as if there's "me" the experiencer abd then there's "me" the giver of feelings and the 2 are separated yet held within the same mind abd can some how disagree with each other . It's so odd how the human being is multifaceted — MAYAEL
I refer to a process of study not philosophy itself, the "lack of respect" as you put it assumes I dont have any without any mention or proof. — Tiberiusmoon
I am a mentally lazy person myself — James Riley
the question will not be set up to prove something. It will be set up to understand. And people will often be amazed at what the process reveals. — James Riley
As a result you can find yourself living with people who are simple in thought who don't give the extra effort to think from a philosophers perspective. — Tiberiusmoon
Well “space” means “there is nothing there”. So I’d think what you want to imagine is just a world with all objects taken out of it, plenty of space, but not much else. I don’t see much difficulty in that. — khaled
But I don’t get the point of the second thought experiment at all. Ok, I’m isolated in a classroom and I must have drank way too much because I start saying things about describing the whole world using nothing but the contents of the room. — khaled
Hmmm. But if nothing exists, doesn't that include me (you) as well? — Manuel
W.S. Merwin tackles some phenomenology: — Valentinus
I completely understand
I think I have a genetic disposition for it or something because I love life and I have an amazing wife and kid but there are times where I'm not sure if I can make it 5 more years and everything makes me bittersweet sad and then there are times that I'm not effected by anything and im like Thor in life emotionally. Certain time phases in life seem to be correlated to these "dips" in life happiness/ satisfaction — MAYAEL
The rhetoric of the day demands that this is a single bio-machine that has gone wrong - an imbalance of chemicals in the brain. — unenlightened
But I think it is the sensitive among us that manifest the sicknesses of society, like canaries in the coal mine. — unenlightened
Isn't this the thought that comes to mind when someone tries to think about how it was before birth for each of us? — Manuel
Just imagine the clouds formed those shapes by fluke. Are you being talked to? — Bartricks
Sorry, I got past the point, yeah, human emotions are one of the most significant abilities we have. It's a must for survival : D and other stuffs... But emotions also create the barrier for us to actually understand the real event.. — n1tr0z3n
, if that's what you believe, then what would you call the thing that's out there? Something absolute? Something that is only interpreted without any points of view or difference, something that has to be absolutely true, which as a matter of fact, we change, because of our perception. Is it simplistic? Actually? — n1tr0z3n
If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not provide us with any true awareness of anything (including that). As we are aware of some things, we are not wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces. — Bartricks
If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
Here is my argument for the truth of the first premise. Imagine some clouds form into shapes that appear to spell out "there's a pie in your the oven". Are you being told something? No. If unguided - by which I mean, unguided by any agency - natural forces produced those shapes in the sky, then it was not imparting information to you. It was just pure fluke that, to you, the clouds appeared to be trying to tell you something. They were not 'trying' to tell you anything, for they are not agents and so are not in the 'trying' business. — Bartricks
Society instructs us that if we peer deep inside our hearts that we will eventually find what makes us happy. It almost seems that a magical inner voice informs us of our desires, hopes, and dreams. Our emotions dictate our lives. Also noted, throughout modern society, depression runs rampant. — Ladybug
The idea that my fingers begin moving and then I retroactively begin to experience the sensation of choosing seems backwards to me, and given the reaction to the paper, many other people as well. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I suppose it's not spooky if you don't go in assuming that you make a decision first, and then act. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Self awareness could be an accident of evolution, but my strong guess is that it serves a function for long term planning. Certainly it is hard to explain how humans make such long term and complex plans without self reflection and recursive feedback acting to steer things at some level. — Count Timothy von Icarus
He's an interesting writer. I bought Life's Solution in a rush of enthusiasm about 8 years ago, but it's a very technical biology text, requires a pretty high degree of bioscience to absorb. But, philosophically congenial to my way of thinking. — Wayfarer
Are you familiar with Simon Conway Morris? That's his speciality. — Wayfarer
If you drop the assumption that these two aspects are identical things, then the fact that the awareness follows the initiation isn't surprising at all; it would almost be surprising if it weren't true. — InPitzotl
Sir Hanover — Hanover
I hear you. I don't share the poem's sentiment particularly, it's just one of the more memorable poems about death. — Tom Storm
Or to summarize, the unconscious is doing a lot more, at a much higher level then we often give it credit for and key aspects of our minds that we generally think of as conscious functions (i.e. most higher level thought) also appear to be able to run in the background, without making it to the recursive system. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's a mistake to impose one's modern day values on the past. This game does that by relating fictional game mechanics to real world history: — counterpunch
But there should be no doubt about the existence of a fundamental form of the world around us. — n1tr0z3n
But we are indeed unable to perceive the simplicity, because of the complexity of our mind, of our brain. It’s not the world that’s complex and confusing, it’s our perception making things complex and confusing. — n1tr0z3n
But the useless complexity of emotions have made it so much difficult to understand. — n1tr0z3n
There’s no such thing as absolute true or false. It’s just the evolution of humanity and the knowledge and law poured down by generations. The birth of different cultures, religions and philosophical beliefs have effected us. Shaped our beliefs and our perception. We gave life a meaning. — n1tr0z3n
I have often wondered about this and have written here that temperament and aesthetics probably inform people's choices. — Tom Storm
If true, it raises follow up questions - can this be overcome or dealt with in some way? How is it identified? — Tom Storm
From my own perspective I am personally struck by this from Nietzsche's The Gay Science — Tom Storm
Coherentism: none of our beliefs are foundational, and the truth of a belief can only be confirmed by its coherence with other beliefs. Thus, knowledge arises from a network of interdependent and mutually reinforcing beliefs. Whether a belief is justified or not depends on whether it agrees with one's other beliefs. — Noisy Calf

So in conclusion, we form immediate, unreflective beliefs about reality based on foundational knowledge, and then, by reflecting on these beliefs, we work them into a coherent system that allows us to know them in a reflective and self-conscious way. So unreflective knowledge is justified according to foundationalism and reflective knowledge is justified according to coherentism. — Noisy Calf
Imagine an empty digital photo, say with resolution of 900x900 pixels and 900 colours. It potentially can hold a picture of every planet, star and galaxy that ever was and will ever be, at any arbitrary given time, from every possible angle, every possible altitude. — Zelebg
Are there moral philosophies which, in your opinion, provide an adequate method to determine the borders of the community? Are perhaps virtue ethics not just relevant, but unavoidable when it comes to this first step? — Echarmion
Foundationalism: some of our beliefs are foundational, that is, they are self-evidently true, and they do not require demonstration to be justified and known. According to strict foundationalism, everything we know is either a foundational belief or a conclusion derived from foundational beliefs.
Coherentism: none of our beliefs are foundational, and the truth of a belief can only be confirmed by its coherence with other beliefs. Thus, knowledge arises from a network of interdependent and mutually reinforcing beliefs. Whether a belief is justified or not depends on whether it agrees with one's other beliefs. — Noisy Calf
Fair. We can only really assess these results (and the success or failure of the initiative) when we have sufficient data. — CountVictorClimacusIII
That's an unpleasant comment. I hope I am better than this TC. — Tom Storm
I've always thought of dreams as a kind of mental bowel movement. — Tom Storm
It takes too much effort to blow up the local factory or store, wouldn't it be better if you could just stay at home on the sofa, eating your potato chips, and getting paid for it? — CountVictorClimacusIII
We wouldn't want to give too much away but actually, blowing things up doesn't take all that much effort. — Bitter Crank
