it is very easy to show how even natural rights are not self evident. — ernestm That proves natural rights are NOT self evident. — ernestm Any chance at all of finding out what your understanding of "self-evident" is? — tim wood
There follows discussion of 6 criteria:
1. Trust
2. Accessibility
3. Arguments
4. Not for profit
5. Plagiarism
6. Noblesse oblige
https://crookedtimber.org/2013/07/15/what-makes-a-popular-philosophy-book-a-good-book/
Your thoughts ? — Amity
It is not impossible!! I just factored 10**1000 as 10**500 x 10**500 in my head. — A Seagull
I say numbers, and you give me one number. At least put in the effort and provide numbers. — boethius
Yeah, but shame it doesn't include some info on how to throw a boomerang. — A Seagull
You just chuck it sideways, right? — frank
something completely impossible such as factoring thousand digit numbers in your head — boethius
One of my favorite poems, by Lewis Carroll — Frank Apisa
You are repeating yourself. Presumably you can do this endlessly — A Seagull — Pantagruel
The barter system. — A Seagull
So how did the seller get the item they're bartering? — Isaac
It isn't hard to understand the idea of the hedonistic infinity. Consider anything you like or find pleasurable but do keep to higher pleasures - things that engage the intellect, aesthetic sense, etc.; then ask yourself why you find that thing plesaurable. You will have an answer. Ask the same question of that answer and so on. — TheMadFool
I explain why I think good, bad, beauty, horror, tragedy, etc. can only be emotions — TranscendedRealms
Wonder is too young to understand. Wasted words. — neonspectraltoast
communism, like it's foundational father socialism, is grounded in covetousness and theft. — Contra Mundum
And there's an economic system that isn't? — Isaac
Well is there ANYTHING that cannot be made into an infinity in this way? Give me an example. — A Seagull
That I don't have to do so long as you accept hedonism leads to an infinity of causes for happiness. — TheMadFool
↪A Seagull
One of the things I find happiness in is learning about the universe. — I-wonder
↪A Seagull
I think you are all right.
I'll try, I hope I'll accept it finally, maybe with more of Spinoza and Epicurus.
BTW, what do you think about Spinoza views on god as nature? — I-wonder
And why does posting that post make you happy? — A Seagull
That's exactly the type of question that kickstarts the hedonistic infinity. — TheMadFool
Um, that's exactly my problem, and my question is how can I face the loss of this amazing gift called life. — I-wonder
Yes. that would end the regress but you don't know WHY? X makes you happy. — TheMadFool
Not to speak for Fool, but I would conclude that there simply is no essence of pleasure. IOW’s it can’t be reduced at all. It is what it is. — Pinprick
If I say that something, say x, gives me pleasure, it is perfectly ok for someone to ask me "what about x gives me pleasure?" Pfhorrest asked me that exact question. From this it's a small step to the next question "what about that about x, that gives me pleasure, gives me pleasure?" The third question is wating in the wings and so is a fourth and a fifth...ad infinitum. — TheMadFool
Women are good, good enough to start a war. — TheMadFool
↪A Seagull Or maybe because you're traumatized and broken inside and fundamentally incapable of enjoying things that should be intrinsically enjoyable. — Pfhorrest
in various Facebook boards, almost all of the 100 replies I got within 3 days were criticisms, were certain, in NO UNCERTAIN terms, that all four gospels are entirely made up, from beginning to end. — ernestm
Interesting point. So how do you particularly think the lying promotes alienation? — schopenhauer1
"Man's feeling of homelessness, of alienation has been intensified in the midst of a bureaucratized, impersonal mass society. He has come to feel himself an outsider even within his own human society. He is terribly alienated: a stranger to God, to nature, and to the gigantic social apparatus that supplies his material wants.But the worst and final form of alienation, toward which indeed the others tend, is man's alienation from his own self. In a society that requires of man only that he perform competently his own particular social function, man becomes identified with this function, and the rest of his being is allowed to subsist as best it can - usually to be dropped below the surface of consciousness and forgotten." — Zeus
Good quote, Zeus. The only addendum here I have to add is this quote implies that there is some solution or salvation to be had. "If only we designed society like X, we can get out of this". — schopenhauer1
There is nothing that can be understood, known or experienced outside of consciousness. Therefore, consciousness is all that exists. — h060tu
I think it´s pretty obvious. It´s a sideeffect of neurons firing information. — InfiniteMonkey
↪Banno ↪A Seagull
Since he apparently is directing his question to himself...
...I wonder why he does not have an answer? — Frank Apisa