Comments

  • The American Gun Control Debate


    Wouldn't past wars be an incentive to seek more peace? I don't think North Korea gets out much and they are very military oriented. Not sure the last confrontation they've had in recent decades.
  • The American Gun Control Debate


    Well if this actually is an empire maybe we should work harder on that towards a more democratic society?
  • The American Gun Control Debate
    I assume the right to bare arms (as vague as it is) was placed as the 2nd amendment because of fear of the United States becoming an empire like England. But clearly that didn't happen. And England is no longer an empire either. And I think there are more guns than people in the U.S. And maybe 2 million guns for 60 million people in the U.K.?

    First off. How did things get this out of hand? And secondly, how much more government redundancy and representation is needed to make Americans feel safe regarding our democracy? More senators per state? More term limits? Ranked choice voting? What can take most of the guns out of circulation?
  • The American Gun Control Debate
    Anyone know what page my post was transferred to after it was moved from my own topic page?
  • Is science too rigorous and objective?
    https://www.simplypsychology.org/wundt.html

    I just remember something along the lines of Wilhelm using a metronome to determine a most desirable speed of ticking. And other researchers determine the golden ratio is the most desirable way to create shapes. The idea of desirability versus not is subjective even if it it is binary?
  • Can there be a proof of God?


    My philosophy professor gave us the terms theist, one who believes in God(s), atheist, one who doesn't believe in God(s), and a "super atheist", one for which the idea of God(s) doesn't exist. I don't know if proving God is deductive or not. If a God were all knowing and all powerful and had no wish to be discovered than they never will be.
  • Who are we?


    How do we know "choice" as it seems to be isn't just animal mechanisms? Pure instinct pretending to be more?
  • Who are we?


    Well we can see atoms or at least the protons and we can measure gravity waves with special equipment, but we haven't yet measured or even defined our consciousness. Maybe just learned self preservation behaviors given precedent over behaviors that are risky. Beyond that I don't know its purpose.
  • Who are we?


    If we are 4 dimensional and contain the entire snake of frames from conception to death, what keeps that snake from spanning the entirety of time? Events conspire to bring all of us here. Everything is the consequence of what came before? Are we apart of the star dust that ultimately became our material as well?
  • Who are we?


    Aren't our behaviors and choices somewhat guided by nature, culture, and how we perceive the world has treated us? Under different circumstances wouldn't the same "self" have made different choices?
  • Who are we?
    I guess the last thing left after everything else is stripped away that can longer be divided and contains the sum of everything that matters to us as part of how we tend to define ourselves as unique from others.
  • If there were a god, are they fair?


    If we achieved fair as defined by that image would events still occur or would it be like universal cooling whereby entropy affectively ends?
  • If there were a god, are they fair?


    Would an all knowing and all powerful being need to make upgrades? And couldn't they fix all issues in a space of time and in a way that it goes unnoticed or unremembered?
  • If there were a god, are they fair?


    How do you measure the gratuitousness of the human suffering? We aren't all offing ourselves? I don't understand your statement about creating us sick.
  • If there were a god, are they fair?


    Do we know the will of this god to know if we are doing the right things to the world they created?
  • If there were a god, are they fair?


    You speak of some religious references. We don't know if there is a hell. Buddhists believe in a temporary hell and Jews don't believe in a hell at all. I am only asking about all that exists that we can observe.
  • Philosophers and their country.
    Assume to compare philosophers by their generational time period. I'm just wondering if there are themes.
  • Philosophers and their country.
    Is this a silly question?
  • God(s) vs. Universe.
    Are our personification roughly identical whether we imagine god(s) or a non conscious force?
  • The order and sequence of life.


    Well age research into to epigenetics has made progress giving people a biological age separate from chronological age. And some have managed to reverse their biological age in some or most cell types. And in mice models they have improved their health to youthful levels and in many cases extended their lives as a result by a good 30%.
  • God(s) vs. Universe.


    My question is basically regarding our limitations for imagining our origins as well as the nature of our world in general. What we may tend to project onto these ideas.
  • The order and sequence of life.
    So nobody would spend more time learning handwriting, art, math, and all the stuff we currently only get bare minimums assuming most won't be used to the highest levels ever again? Maybe date later in life since procreation isn't a short window anymore. Maybe spiritual retreat at any age. Lots of unintuitive things could happen out of order and to better degrees.
  • The order and sequence of life.


    I meant eternal life and eternal health. Age experts tie the two together as the worst disease are the direct result of cellular aging.
  • What is a philosopher?


    Unfortunately dentists are far less regulated than MDs.
  • What is a philosopher?
    Also do philosophers need credentials to be called philophers? There certainly are those that do it professionally and the definition of philosophy has changed a lot during its history. Certainly people thought before the word philosopher existed. But people also studied human behavior before the term psychology existed and wasn't a formal study until Wilhelm Wundt which is much more recent. I certainly couldn't call myself a psychologist without being sued?
  • Typical reading speeds?


    Phone reading has become easy for me, but book reading is harder. I recommend blue light reduction options. The speed certainly depends on the language and phrasing and tendencies towards run on sentences.
  • What is a philosopher?
    Was the Marquis De Sade a philosopher? I don't know what he contributed, and his works were only publishable in some places, and only after decades. Was he just a mad man with opinions on why people should abuse the crap out of one another?
  • What is a philosopher?
    Also are politicians philosophers in the sense that they have views of how things are, how human behavior works, what is fair, and how things should be rearranged?
  • What is a philosopher?
    Are there any well known philosophers that one might argue isn't legitimate as a philosopher?
  • What is a philosopher?
    My philosophy 101 teacher said that philosophy isn't merely a person's point of view or way of living. Is there anyone that can't call themselves a philosopher?
  • Phrasing of multitudes.


    Shouldn't it be 1/10 as strong?
  • Phrasing of multitudes.


    Exactly. It seems like a poor use of phrasing many people use.
  • Is Infinity necessary?


    So no object goes on forever? Infinity only refers to repeated processes that are intended to go on forever but of course cannot because we ourselves are limited by time?
  • Last Thursdayism
    Is last Thursdayism about time dilation as that the pace of time varies, or is it about lets say a God creating everything within a weeks time giving the impression that things have been around longer? Like the bible saying humans haven't existed longer than 3,000 years and yet there is evidence of human history alone for 10,000 years?
  • Is depression the default human state?


    Yeah, I meant infrequent depression. Not clinical. I think people assumed the latter.
  • Is depression the default human state?


    You maybe right. But boredom is certainly less robust than sadness or something that grabs our attention. What in boredom compels us to find stimuli? If we fail to get out of boredom what do we face?
  • Is depression the default human state?


    Being sad or cautious must be a default? We seek change then? When we are happy and carefree that isn't most of the time? We always have to keep digging deeper in life?
  • True Opposites??


    Metaphysics you are saying deals more in absolutes?