[1] you concede it is infinite in "what caused there to be an infinite set of all causes?" — Bob Ross
[2] you are asking presupposing that a cause could exist which is not a member of a set of all causes — Bob Ross
I think it is best we agree to disagree at this point — Bob Ross
The toe is not a 'life' but composed of several cellular lives. Same with the foot. The consciousness of the brain is the combination of cellular lives that creates something more than just a mere coexistence of life, but a mind.
I was referring to a person by ‘life’, not something that is merely alive. — Bob Ross
I fully accept that there is a desire to say its immoral
It is not a desire, it is an intellectual seeming. — Bob Ross
It would be helpful if you could explain why its immoral either within the theory, or somehow contradicts the theory.
As external coherence goes, even within moral realist circles, it goes against common intuitions—and I mean that in the sense of an intellectual seeming, not a desire or gut-feeling. Most moral realists will completely disagree with you that it is morally good to, all else being equal, sacrifice the one for the many (even though it would increase the actual and potential concrete entities). — Bob Ross
Since we have no objective means of morality to measure, any outside subjective opinion of its immorality can be considered, but ultimately boils down to an opinion.
That is irrelevant to my external critique: I am saying that it is objectively wrong to sacrifice one for the many, all else being equal. — Bob Ross
But this is not a principle according to this theory.
You affirmed it in your justification: you said you should absolutely sacrifice the one to save the many because it increases, all else being equal, potential and actual concrete entities (e.g., cut of the arm to save the body); and I am absolutely inclined to agree with you that your theory would need to conclude this. — Bob Ross
The outcome of the example is based on particular circumstances and context.
With all due respect, I don’t think you know what ‘all else being equal’ means. Here’s a link to a blog post about it. — Bob Ross
In a theoretically objective morality, consequentialism is the only real conclusion.
Absolutely not. If you affirm this, then you are disregarding duty and principles—which are entirely deontological. — Bob Ross
Some actions are wrong merely because they violate an ethical principle, and not because the action’s consequences do not maximize what is good. — Bob Ross
Can you imagine an objective morality that is not consequentialist?
Yes, many. Kantianism, Aristotelianism, mine, etc.
The problem with consequentialism is that it makes the evaluation of right and wrong solely a matter of analyzing the consequences of actions; which precludes intentions, duty, principles, etc. — Bob Ross
Likewise, it has absurd results in some cases (e.g., utilitarianism’s enslavement of 1% of the population, sacrificing one for the many, etc.). — Bob Ross
As a very clean example, take the 1 vs. 5 trolly problem (we discussed before). A consequentalist is usually inclined to say “sacrifice the one for the five”; and a deontoligist is inclined usually to say “do not pull the lever”. — Bob Ross
Ok, this means that Dave could not have been doing anything else but torturing.
This is so irrelevant. The question is if Dave is right to torture Billy to acquire the skill of torturing. You are misunderstanding what ‘all else being equal’ is and constantly sidestepping the hypothetical by importing new variables that don’t matter. — Bob Ross
What is the choice the person has Bob?
The choice is whether or not to torture Billy to acquire a new skill (of torturing people aptly). — Bob Ross
If only what is good is to maximize the number of concrete entities, then it will not always pan out such that societies which enact such policies (as you described) are morally better. — Bob Ross
The point is that you are just thinking about it in terms of “the means justifies the ends”; and you have too, since you have committed yourself to consequentialism. I reject it. — Bob Ross
However, it cannot have a first cause if one understands properly what an infinite set of all causes is. It is logically necessary that it does not have a first cause, ironically. — Bob Ross
Thank you very much for the link. I had not read it before. How does this explain the incident where the patient knew what the doctor was thinking? — Truth Seeker
The second you say that C is not the entire end to the chain of causality, is the second you conflate C with something else. C is the series of causes in total, so, by definition, you cannot be correct in that there is a cause which is not a member of C. — Bob Ross
The first cause is the most fundamental one, the cause that each effect depends on. Every other cause needs God. So if he didn't exist, neither would anyone nor anything else. — BillMcEnaney
How do you know that there is no consciousness after brain death? What about all the people who have Recalled Experience of Death (RED) and the stories they tell of visiting other places and the beings they meet there? — Truth Seeker
If the toe had a mind of its own (and was a person), then, no, I don’t think it would be moral to cut it off to save the body. The problem with your analogy is that the toe is inert and lifeless; while the individual is a life. — Bob Ross
I understand, however, that, according to your view, sacrificing one for the sake of saving the many, all else being equal, is good (because it leads to a maximal quantity of the “entities”); but, as an external critique, that seems immoral (to me). — Bob Ross
The problem is this word "universalization". The only universal is, "More existence is good"
All I meant, is that “one ought to sacrifice on to save five” as a principle is leads to a worse world (by my lights). — Bob Ross
You are just too consequentialist for me (; — Bob Ross
What could the person have been doing instead of torturing the victim?
Dave could not have been doing anything better: disregard it for the thought experiment. — Bob Ross
All else being equal, learning a skill increases the potential for concrete entities; and I don’t think you are denying that. — Bob Ross
That which creates better harmony, to use your terms, is going to be more existent that one which puts unnecessary stress on the body and lowers its health.
Yes, but how does it lower the potential or actual concrete entities? I don’t see a direct causal link between negative emotions and the decrease in potential/actual concrete entities. — Bob Ross
Wouldn't society have been better off if the kind enacted policies which grew and supported people?
No (if I view it through the lens of your theory). — Bob Ross
We know that monarchies as a form of government do not create the kind of robust, wealthy, and happy societies like republics for example.
A monarchy could create, total net, more actual concrete entities than a republic. — Bob Ross
Take napoleon, for example: his dictatorship inflicted much suffering onto people and unnecessary conquest; but he furthered the society in ways, which would not have been done otherwise, by use of force—e.g., higher education, public roads, public sewer systems, central banks, etc. The man was not a good person, but incidentally did good things that were very impactful on society. Total net, he was good for humanity IF one only thinks about it in terms of the consequences of his actual total net; — Bob Ross
Here’s another scenario for you to digest: — Bob Ross
If you don't like the idea of atemporal causes, then I am talking about an infinite series of temporal causes and there are no other causes that are not in that infinite series.
The series, conceptually, can be represented as a set which I will call C.
C itself has no cause, because it is the series of all causes.
You are claiming either the series C is not infinite, or that C itself leads to a first cause. Neither can be true, so I am not following your argument for this part. — Bob Ross
PS___I'm proposing a new thread with similar implications but different presumptions : a First Cause implies a Final Cause, produced by the operations of an Efficient Cause, working in the medium of a Material Cause. What could we call it? The First Concept? The god-who-shall-not-be-named inquiry? — Gnomon
For the sake of the argument, I am going to step up and respond with "My 'crazy' idea of reality is that it is an infinite series of atemporal and temporal causes, and this doesn't lead to there being a first cause".
By your admission in the quote above, you are arguing that somehow my claim here does end with a first cause. So, how does it? — Bob Ross
Mhmmm, “its just a theory” is a comment only a person who doesn’t know what a theory is says as a cop-out: not my forte. But I get your point. — Bob Ross
There’s a clear distinction, but they are not distinguishable in the sense you want it to be. Induced, abduced, and deduced conclusions all rest on intuitions. You cannot escape intuitions epistemically: there’s no such distinction whereof one concludes something without the aid of an intuition. Again, I mean “intuition” in the sense of an “intellectual seeming” and not a “gut feeling”. — Bob Ross
In terms of your theory, I see how sacrificing one for five overall increase “existences”. However, it seems very immoral, by way of an external critique based off of moral intuitions. — Bob Ross
Also, I would like to mention that, if you accept it in the case of lizards, then I don’t see why you don’t accept it for humans: it is basic consequentialistic calculation you are making here. — Bob Ross
In other words, the universalization of such a principle as “one ought to sacrifice one to save five” leads to an overall worse world (by way of external critique); but if it is a better world (according to your theory) then it simply seems as though you have blundered somewhere. — Bob Ross
There is no other value in honing a skill if one's goal is simply to hone a skill.
It increased potential existence, which, according to you, is a valid moral consideration. — Bob Ross
Taken in comparison of emotion vs emotion alone
Firstly, as said above, it is not a comparison solely of the worth of emotions: it is a comparison of actual and potential existence in terms of the consequences of which action one takes. — Bob Ross
Secondly, emotions are irrelevant themselves to your theory: what is good, according to you, is “more concrete entities”. You evaluate this in terms of actual and potential concrete entities. — Bob Ross
Likewise, many kings historically have committed series atrocities, but total net increased “existence”. This is the problem with pure consequentalism: it only cares about maximizing the goal (in this case, goodness) by way of an outcome. — Bob Ross
Is there no end to dialogs about First Cause? Can these threads become infinite? — Gnomon
If these side-track questions are of interest to posters on this First Cause thread, I might be inspired to start a new thread on tracing Causation from First Spark down the evolutionary trail to the emergence of Inquiring Minds, who ask unverifiable open-ended questions ; taking the risk of sounding stupid or clever on a public forum. :smile: — Gnomon
You've been extraordinarily generous with your time, energy, and patience in the interest of the thoroughness of our dialogue. — ucarr
Your exertions herein have afforded me an ample supply of time and opportunity to practice and develop both my debate strategy and my execution. — ucarr
I'm now going to bow out from our dialogue. — ucarr
If by causality, you really mean temporal causality; then that needs to be clarified in the OP. Your OP clearly, taken literally, is discussing an infinite causality in 6 and not an infinite of temporal causality. — Bob Ross
You have not negated the possibility of an infinite of causality which does not lead to a first cause; instead, you have now negated the possibility of an infinite of temporal causality not having itself a cause (at best). — Bob Ross
First cause - The point in causality in which there is nothing which caused a set of existence
This isn’t proven, because you are now shifting your argument to discuss the impossibility of an infinite temporal causality having no cause; well, that’s simply not what one would argue if they are arguing that causality is infinite proper. — Bob Ross
I would also like to mention, that one could also posit coherently that T is equal to C because all causes are temporal; and that C/T is eternal and that C/T is not a first cause. In other words, using T instead of C doesn’t help your case, because T being eternal doesn’t make it a first cause. — Bob Ross
Will do. However, if I interpret your idea of “first cause” as merely “something which is no cause”; then this is a vacuously true truth that no one, atheist nor theist, will deny — Bob Ross
But whatever you are feeling about the situation, the feelings drive the thoughts. — Brendan Golledge
However, when it comes to anything new, for which no known social consensus exists, they show themselves to be very stupid. — Brendan Golledge
I was disappointed to find that most of the replies did not even attempt to address the content of what I said, but replied superficially to some tertiary thing. — Brendan Golledge
I have written several posts on several forums in the last several months, and typically I got very few replies (I suppose I didn't use any buzzwords that lit up people's social brains), or else I reliably got +3/4 of the replies only in response to a particular buzzword, like "God", and the topic I wanted to discuss was left mostly unaddressed. — Brendan Golledge
You begin with "On the Values Necessary for Thought" and end with 3 paragraphs on "Fear of the Lord is the Beginning of Wisdom." And you raise many issues in between. I do not wish to discuss all the issues raised and I do not know which of the many issues raised is the one you wish most to discuss. — Arne
When you posit that C is the set containing all causes (i.e., contingent events) and that the universe has a cause (i.e., is a contingent event), then the universe is a member of C and NOT C. You are conflating them. — Bob Ross
Philosophim, you must remember that the stipulation you gave is that C, which can be whatever you want to call it, is a set of infinite elements containing every cause — Bob Ross
Firstly, infinite causal chains are central to your premise. Is this an admission your premise is therefore flawed? Secondly, I'd like to see you argue against the logical merit of infinity as a concept, thereby simultaneously arguing against the logical merit of your premise. — ucarr
I know you're not persuaded by my logic and I, likewise, am not persuaded by yours. I hope you don't feel obligated to refute my arguments here. — ucarr
I’m arguing that nothingness cannot support an intersection with somethingness. — ucarr
The series itself has no cause, and this makes it the first cause. But then you are saying the series is the first cause. — Bob Ross
You also must consider that we're not evaluating the set, we're evaluating the set as part of a causal chain.
An infinite set of all causes is not a part of a causal chain. — Bob Ross
You also must consider that we're not evaluating the set, we're evaluating the set as part of a causal chain.
An infinite set of all causes is not a part of a causal chain. — Bob Ross
A brute fact is not necessarily a cause. — Bob Ross
Statistical probability is a math-based science. Calculating probabilities is not educated guesswork. Either the math is correct or it isn't. — ucarr
Don't imagine the casinos in Vegas depend on educated guesswork for their profits. — ucarr
If you dial down determinism and probability to zero, you are left with neither form nor content. One might refer to any remainder, if such exists, as undefined. The intelligibility of form and content won't allow your pure randomness to come on stage. — ucarr
You're correct about rejoicing with Bob Ross over his understanding first cause cannot be verified empirically. Were that the case, with pure randomness extant empirically, you and Bob Ross wouldn't exist. — ucarr
Neither. Zero is a number. It holds a place on the number line between -1 and 1. Don't confuse it with non-existence. — ucarr
Consider: ∅={ }; this is the empty set. So, if ∅={ } = nothingness and (1) = first cause, then they are disjoint sets, meaning they have no common members. So, the intersection of ∅={ } and (1) takes us right back to ∅={ }. — ucarr
Here is an argument that implies your pure randomness is an idealization. If, as I believe, pure randomness is the absolute value of disorder, then it's not found in nature. — ucarr
You can walk into an empty room. You can't walk into a non-existent room. — ucarr
Just above you agreed thoughts are things. Still earlier, you agreed the presence of a thing changes what it observes, so your thoughts observing true randomness change it. — ucarr
Every infinite causal chain inevitably traces back to its first cause. If it does it's not infinite because infinity never begins. If it doesn't, it's not a causal chain because every causal chain has a first cause. — ucarr
My point is that an equation that computes to either infinity or undefined does not represent: "Every causal chain inevitably arrives at a first cause." — ucarr
I'm assuming an infinitely existing universe makes sense and is possible. If you agree, then the equation makes perfect sense.
— Philosophim
I agree. An eternal universe makes sense. One of it's salient attributes is the absence of a beginning. If you try to say an eternal universe is itself a first cause, you're positing it in its causal role as the outer parentheses set with itself as the inner parentheses set, but you're prohibited from doing so by the rule of set theory that says a set cannot be a member of itself. — ucarr
Let me repeat a second time what I repeated above:
Infinity is not a discrete number. It therefore cannot be precisely situated on the number line. It therefore cannot be precisely sequenced in a series populated with numbers. For these reasons, infinite values cannot be computed directly. — ucarr
My reference to QM, therefore, is, in turn, a reference to a first cousin of randomness, quantum certainty. Since elementary particles are also waveforms, and since waveforms and their uncertainties are related to randomness, QM, which deals with these uncertainties, might also be speculated to deal with randomness, this especially given the relationship between random quantum fluctuations and the singularity. — ucarr
From the evidence above, it's clear to me you're talking about gross measurement tools being grossly inaccurate — ucarr
Perhaps now -- given the similarity of uncertainty and randomness -- you can see my reference to QM is not random. — ucarr
I could show the pertinence of QM within this context, but I acknowledge that that pertinence introduces narratives too far afield from your points. — ucarr
Regarding #1 -- My direct attack -- were that my purpose herein -- would be an attempt to show that first cause doesn't exist. I think 180 Proof is doing a successful job in managing that objective. — ucarr
I'm not directly attacking "first cause is logically necessary." Perhaps it is. — ucarr
That the infinite series of causality just is, doesn't make it a cause; thusly, it is not a first cause. — Bob Ross
The infinite series of 'causality' is really the infinite series of causality-es, and asking "what caused-e this infinite series?' is an incoherent question, so we throw it out. — Bob Ross
Have either of you read Process and Reality by Alfred North Whitehead? — AmadeusD
It all starts with the idea that "Existence is better than no existence". What is existence? What 'is'. Matter, thoughts, concepts, etc. But how do we separate existences into discretes?
You conflated them again. “existences” here refers to beings, and ‘existence’ refers to Being. — Bob Ross
If "Being" is existence, then "Beings" are just discrete identities within existence. Meaning that from my definition, more discrete identities is equivalent to more existence
The first sentence I have no quarrel with; but the second doesn’t follow. More discrete identities equals more beings, and definitely not more Being. — Bob Ross
I am thinking of Being as a substance: that substance, by my lights, is not increasing when you are able to meaningfully separate, through identity, two different things upon one emerging from the other. Are you claiming to the contrary? — Bob Ross
"Existence is good." I'm not
sure "Existences" are innately good;
By my lights, your whole analysis or ‘increasing existence’ is actually ‘increasing identities’; so it is confusing me that you are saying that you are unsure as to whether existences (beings) are good. — Bob Ross
Then, what makes more beings good? Is, somehow, more beings directly correlated to more Being? Is that the idea? — Bob Ross
I think the best that I can argue is that if there is an objective morality, "Existence is good" must be at the base of it all.
This is, if I remember correctly, because you think it is internally incoherent to posit that non-existence is good; but I don’t think it is. — Bob Ross
Intuitions are subjective, while facts are objective.
…
Let me define intuition. Intuition is a strong feeling that bends us for or against a decision/conclusion.
I was meaning ‘intuition’ in the philosophical sense: an intellectual seeming. If by ‘intuition’ you mean ‘a gut feeling’; then I rescind my earlier comments about it. Inuitions, in your sense, are useless to epistemology. — Bob Ross
However, this does not negate my original point, which used my sense of the term, that epistemically all knowledge is predicated on intuitions (about evidence); so the proof that the earth revolves around the sun being a fact is predicated on some set of intuitions—being that it is epistemic. — Bob Ross
No question-dissect the first lizard and save the others if there was no chance of failure or complications.
I disagree with that. — Bob Ross
The next scope after individual human beings is society.
Why? That’s entirely arbitrary. — Bob Ross
They key difference is whether the doctor respects the agency from the human being involved. Volunteering your life is fine, but taking it against your will is not.
Why? How would it, total net, in society, decrease “existences”? — Bob Ross
We are sacrificing a life for...what?
Dave is torturing Billy to practice torturing. — Bob Ross
What value is returned?
Dave is better at torturing people, and this increases the “potential beings/existences” he is capable of. — Bob Ross
Why is torturing good?
That just begs the question: I am asking you whether or not it is immoral for Dave to torture Billy in this scenario. I am surprised you are going to such extents to avoid answering. — Bob Ross
o be completely transparent with you, I think you already know that most people would automatically say “no, it is immoral for Dave to torture Billy, because it is does not respect Billy’s rights” without needing any further elaboration; but I think you equally recognize that your theory doesn’t afford such an easy answer.... — Bob Ross
...because the deciding factor, by-at-large, for you in this scenario is going to be potential existences. Quite frankly, I think you are committed to saying it is morally permissible and obligatory all else being equal (but I don’t want to put words in your mouth). — Bob Ross
"If we torture this man 1 hour prior to his death, we absolutely will save five lives."
I understand that you want me to add in something like “and Dave will only have been able to torture an evil captive effectively in order to save millions of lives from a terrorist attack with the practice he got from torturing Billy”; but I am not going to do that. — Bob Ross
Right now, the scenario is claiming Dave will increase overall, all else being equal, potential “existence” (as you put it) because he has a new skill, and is better at it. — Bob Ross
If you can't quantify it, then we can't answer it according to the theory.
This doesn’t make sense. You are saying that you cannot answer if Dave is acting immorally when he tortures Billy for practice; when answer should be an emphatic “yes”. — Bob Ross
What value does being a better torturer give?
Originally, I was saying it would help him as a member of a government agency; so presumably to save lives by torturing captured opponents. However, to keep this really simple, let’s say it is just for its own sake. Dave is practicing torturing people for the sake of being better at it; just like how one can practice basketball for the sole sake of getting better at it. — Bob Ross
Can you show me one equation in your reference that doesn't compute to infinity? Yes, you can. There's one equation that computes to "undefined."
— ucarr
Which one?
— Philosophim
It's your citation. Find it yourself. — ucarr
Can you cite an equation with infinity as an input value that computes to a well-defined discrete position on the number line? It needs to be a number neither irrational nor approximate.
— ucarr
Its logic.
— Philosophim
No. Can you cite a math equation that... (see the underlined above) — ucarr
And Ucarr, the logic and math are all ways to break down the argument into a way you can see more clearly. The argument hasn't changed.
— Philosophim
Nor has its faulty logical support. — ucarr
First, we discussed earlier how true randomness cannot be influenced by anything else. So QM is useless.
— Philosophim
My citation is not in reference to your true randomness narrative. It refers to placing an irrational number onto the number line without calculating in terms of limits. Your mistake entails assuming that because you see no connection between our debate and QM, therefore I must be randomly throwing it into the mix. — ucarr
A common misconception about the uncertainty principle in quantum physics is that it implies our measurements are uncertain or inaccurate. — ucarr
In fact, uncertainty is an inherent aspect of anything with wave-like behavior. — ucarr
This doesn't resolve the ambiguity but, rather, re-enforces it: when you use the term 'cause' in the infinite chain, it does not refer whatsoever to the same thing as when you use the term 'cause' outside of it. You are using the term 'cause' in two toto genere different senses, and conflating them. — Bob Ross
Otherwise, if you mean to refer to 'X "caused" <...>' in the same sense as causality within the series, you are simply not contending with an actual infinite series of causality when positing X: if the infinite series is the totality of all causality, then there is necessarily no causality outside of it and, thusly, X cannot 'cause' the infinite series but, at best, can only be afforded as a brute fact explanation. — Bob Ross
Are you talking about constraints that empower precision of measurement: "our capability to measure or observe," or constraints that limit precision of measurement: "shuffling cards that we cannot see"? — ucarr
So, in our phenomenal world, material outcomes of material things in motion always have a measure of determinism attached. — ucarr
Probability cannot be cancelled in the real world. Therefore, your thought experiment with true randomness is an idealization. — ucarr
There is no true randomness outside of a thought experiment. — ucarr
There is no nothingness outside of its paradoxical presence within a thought experiment. The metaphysical binary of existence confines us to existence via self-contradiction. We cannot exit ourselves from existence, not even via our thought experiments. Your thought experiment re: nothingness is thoroughly embedded within existence. If it weren't, it wouldn't be possible for you to entertain yourself with the thought of it. At no time are you making contact with nothingness, so your arguments from a supposed but fictional nothingness are paradoxical non-starters. — ucarr
Entropy is just the separation of matter and energy from a higher state to a lower state over time. This has nothing to do with true randomness.
— Philosophim
If by higher state you mean level of organization of material things into functional systems, then explain why level of organization has nothing to do with its opposite: no organization, i.e., randomness? — ucarr
Based on how I've defined probability, what do you think?
— Philosophim
I think the answer is "yes." I also think it not possible to have a state of total non-organization. So, no true randomness. If no true randomness, then no general anything-is-possible. — ucarr
There is no true randomness outside of a thought experiment.
There is no nothingness outside of its paradoxical presence within a thought experiment. — ucarr
In a complicated way, thoughts are things. — ucarr
True randomness breaks apart all connections of the material universe. — ucarr
Just as you can't observe an elementary particle without changing it, you can't observe true randomness through a thought experiment without changing it. — ucarr
In all cases of what you experience and therefore know, you're connected with the objects of your observation. — ucarr
In your act of observing true randomness, you prevent it from being true. — ucarr
That's the same thing as 2T + infinity = y
— Philosophim
As I recall, y is an infinite value, and thus it has no discretely specifiable position on the number line; it's unlimited volume over limited extent between limits. It never arrives at a start point (or an end point). — ucarr
Let us suppose true randomness is not a process. Is it still a phenomenon?
— ucarr
What is your definition of phenomenon?
— Philosophim
Since a phenomenon is an object of a person's perception, what's already been said about observation of a material thing (facts as thoughts are material things) applies here too. — ucarr
With your language you're saying -- literally -- that true randomness does not exist. — ucarr
Within the context of your thought experiment. And, as you think, your thought experiment has no dimensions, so, by your thinking, where does that posit the universe? Well, the one you think incepted from nothingness exists within the context of your thought experiment within your brain. See below for your own verification of this.
Hey, welcome back Bob! You still retain the title of the first person who realized this could not be proven empirically.
— Philosophim — ucarr
“More existence” is not synonymous with “more entities”, and you seem, so far, to be confusing the two (with all due respect). When you denote something with “more existence”, that is more of Being, not more beings. — Bob Ross
Why is this important? Because, if you are claiming “more entities is better”, then your argument is about finding maximal complexity and number of beings; whereas if you are claiming “more existence is better” then your argument is about the increase of Being itself. — Bob Ross
Perhaps my analytical mind is overcomplicating this, but I genuinely can’t tell which claim you are intending to make; and so far it seems like you intend to provide an “ontological” analysis but then provide an “ontical” one. — Bob Ross
By proof, I just mean an argument which provides reasonable evidence for, that hopefully I will find sufficient to conclude that, your position at least validly purports that “more existence [or entities] is better” is objectively true. — Bob Ross
Thus it is by no means an empirical conclusion, but a logical one.
I would never, nor should anyone ever, demand your to prove via solely empirical tests that morality is objective because that is impossible: metaethics is, and always will be, philosophical. This does not, however, mean that no proof can be provided; nor that metaethics is not a science. — Bob Ross
It is an attempt at building something objective, though this can only be proven with exploration.
There is never going to be a way for you to explore your way into proving that “more existence [or entities] is better”: that is a prize sought after in vain—for ethics, at its core, will always be arguments from reason without a definitive scientific test that can be performed to verify it. Viz., you will never run into a phenomena that “more existence is better”, nor any test of phenomena that renders it (definitively) true. — Bob Ross
"Your intuition is objectively wrong, and here is rationally why."
This is impossible. Your “rational why” is predicated off of intuitions as well. You are shooting yourself in the foot by trying to argue with an inuitionless perspective. — Bob Ross
Our intuitions that the Sun circles around the Earth my exist, but they are objectively wrong.
That they are objectively wrong is based off of intuitions of the (overwhelming) evidence that the earth revolves around the sun; and not some sort of epistemically inuitionlessly obtained “objective truth”. — Bob Ross
Taking into consideration that the person does not know the value of the human beings on the tracks, and the statistical likelihood that any one person is going to equal or surpass the impact on existence that 5 people will in total, you should change the track to hit the one person every time.
What about the 5 patients thought experiment? Is is moral for the doctor to kill and dissect one innocent, healthy person to save 5 terminally ill patients? — Bob Ross
I think my example is just as defined, I think you are just fully appreciating that everything else is equal. — Bob Ross
I think that if you understand that it is invalid to ask “what other ways could one save the people that are tied to the tracks besides pulling a switch (and condemning one party to death or letting one party die)?” then you can understand that it is invalid to ask “what other ways could Dave practice torture without torturing someone?”. You are inadvertently trying to smuggle new variables into the equation — Bob Ross
You are counting back to a start point: — ucarr
Can you show me one equation in your reference that doesn't compute to infinity? Yes, you can. There's one equation that computes to "undefined." — ucarr
Can you cite an equation with infinity as an input value that computes to a well-defined discrete position on the number line? It needs to be a number neither irrational nor approximate. — ucarr
In the link to Cantor's differing levels of infinite series, can you cite a passage addressing infinity conceptualized as an infinite series with a discrete starting point? — ucarr
You need to go into probative details now because: a) you need to meet the same standard you apply to me:
If you want to say I'm wrong, you're going to have to prove I am wrong, not merely say I am.
— Philosophim
; b) show how my reference to QM is random and irrelevant to this context; c) show how my citation of Shrödinger's Thought Experiment is both misunderstood by me and misapplied to this context. — ucarr
Number 6 in the OP is false, and springs from a conflation of an originally valid conception of causality into a conception of explanation—i.e., number 1 starts with a standard conception of causality about events and by the time one gets to 6 it somehow transformed into a conception about explanations without conceding that the conception changed. — Bob Ross
6. If there exists an X which explains the reason why any infinite causality exists, then its not truly infinite causality, as it is something outside of the infinite causality chain. That X then becomes another Y with the same 3 plausibilities of prior causality. Therefore, the existence of a prior causality is actually an Alpha, or first cause. — Philosophim
then 6 doesn’t disprove the possibility of an infinite chain of events — Bob Ross
Can what could or could not have been lie beyond probability in the case of true randomness? — ucarr
This question is meant to suggest entropy weakening true randomness to something not authentically random. — ucarr
Is probability only possible in the absence of true randomness? — ucarr
This question is meant to suggest any event -- including inception of a first cause -- by the fact of its existence, prevents true randomness — ucarr
From Heisenberg we have reason to believe we can't know every essential attribute of a thing simultaneously — ucarr
Imagine that each causation within a causal chain -- because of the fact of its existence -- generates a prior (or subsequent) causation. How does the chain of causation reach the point of no prior (or subsequent) causation? — ucarr
Let us suppose true randomness is not a process. Is it still a phenomenon? — ucarr
This question is meant to suggest that if true randomness is to any degree intelligible -- as in the case of it being a phenomenon, even if not a process to a specifiable end, then it must possess a specificity of form and content — ucarr
Because of what we know from QM — ucarr
So a male might be a zachar but not a gever. And I think this distinction reverberates in society today. Masculinity is achieved, not automatically granted to all males regardless of condition or behavior. — BitconnectCarlos
So for this reason I think it's wrong to call transwomen "men." They are not. They occupy a unique third space. — BitconnectCarlos
IN a world where there are female and male brains, easily identifiable and uncontroversial - aberrations in development could feasibly lead to an otherwise fully male person attaining some behaviour due to their brain structure, only found in 'female brains'. — AmadeusD
If the earliest plan[ck] diameter is uncaused, or true randomness, then it fits the definition of 'first cause'
— Philosophim
This is the crux of our disagreement. I understand 'randomness' to mean uncaused, acausal, without cause; you are denying this, claiming the opposite – that randomness itself (as if its an entity rather than a property) is a "first cause". This difference is more than a semantic dispute, sir. One of us is spouting jabberwocky ... :roll: — 180 Proof
I will argue that given an eternal universe – which can be construed as an infinite causal chain – a precisely determinable first cause is not possible. — ucarr
Question – Has pi been situated on the number line? Answer – Yes, but asymptotically.
Philosophim, you’re establishing a set containing an infinite series and then counting back to its start point and asserting no prior member to the start point can exist. — ucarr
For the math representation of your premise, you need an equation that computes toward the limits bounding your infinite series. In other words, you must treat the volume of your infinite set as an approximation forever approaching a limit. — ucarr
You should immediately discard your current would-be equations that use infinity as one
of your input values. Using infinity as an input value is a violation of math form. It’s like trying to start a combustion engine with water instead of gasoline. Fundamentally wrong. If, however, you have your own math that rationally discards proper math form, that’s another matter. Do you have your own system of math? — ucarr
Your language for your premise needs to draw a parallel: Infinite causal chains are infinite series made empirical and bounded by eternal existence instead of by limits. — ucarr
Infinity is not a discrete number. It therefore cannot be precisely situated on the number line. It therefore cannot be precisely sequenced in a series populated with numbers. For these reasons, infinite values cannot be computed directly. — ucarr
The Crux: QM Governs Cosmology – an infinite causal chain cannot have a precise first cause because it amounts to putting the whole number line – infinite in volume – within itself. Infinite values can be bounded (as argued above) but they cannot be definitively sequenced. — ucarr
Given these limitations, the attempt to sequence an infinite value amounts to claiming a given thing is greater than itself; this irrational claim holds moot sway within QM, as in the instance of superposition; prior to measurement, the cat is neither dead or alive. — ucarr
Within the objective materialism of modern science, logic and computation assume axiomatically the eternal existence of matter, energy, motion, space, and time. These five fundamentals preclude any direct connection between something and nothing. Therefore, all existing things are mediated through the fundamental five. — ucarr
If we represent the infinite series of nothing-to-something as undefined, or 1/0, and observe that infinitely small approximates to the limit of zero, then infinitely-small-to-zero and its reverse take an infinite amount of time. So, speaking logically and computationally, nothing-to-something is a bounded infinity of undefined. — ucarr
you commit a compositional fallacy, Philo, arguing from the causal structure intrinsic, or dynamics internal, to "the universe" to the conclusion that "the universe" is the effect of a "first cause" that is extrinsic, or external, to it — 180 Proof
to it when, in fact, our best science (QG) describes "the universe's" earliest planck diameter as a random event – a-causal. — 180 Proof
The "BB" didn't happen c13.81 billion years ago – the limit of contemporary cosmological measurements – but is, in fact, still happening ("banging") in the manifest form of the ongoing development – expansion – of the Hubble volume (i.e. observable region of spacetime). — 180 Proof
A first cause 'is'.
— Philosophim
And thus, as I've pointed out already ↪180 Proof, it's not a "first cause" but is the only cause (e.g.) à la Wheeler's one electron postulate. — 180 Proof
In your case, the universe has no start, but has always existed.
Not quite. For me, existence itself (i.e. no-thing / vacua (à la atomist void or spinozist substance)), not "the universe" – a random inflationary fluctuation (according to QG), "always exists" (how could it not?) — 180 Proof
There are now no more questions of prior causality to explore.
This is so because "prior causality" is as incoherent as "prior existence" or "prior randomness" or "prior spacetime" ... — 180 Proof
Thus the start of the causal chain, or the first cause.
Analogously, the number line itself (i.e. infinity) is not the "first" number. Zero is not the "first" number. Logically, there cannot be a "first" number, Philo. Wherever we happen to "start" counting is not necessarily "first" in the sequence of events. — 180 Proof
I had in mind memories of growing up feeling different and alienated from most of my male classmates, as well as my father, brothers and cousins, on the basis of behaviors and comportments that I believe I was born with, that I didn’t fully understand or know how to articulate. — Joshs
It sounds like you have never had to think about yourself in terms of gender because your gender behavior never stood out from your peers — Joshs
I notice you haven’t said anything about the studies associating gender with functional brain organization, like that mentioned earlier in this thread by wonder1: — Joshs
we identify highly replicable, generalizable, and behaviorally relevant sex differences in human functional brain organization localized to the default mode network