Jolly good. Now apply that to the bible. And then acknowledge that your case for thinking that 'day' in Genesis refers to something other than what everyone else means by the term is really incredibly stupid. — Bartricks
It's a good lesson in economics for sure. Economy is merely mass psychology in disguise. — Benj96
Yes, as I see it, this is poignantly true. So then, how do I establish a reasonable idea that can make Sidney a person, apart from me, over there, and so on, NOT reducible to any of the above, given that the above are all true? I am concerned that Sydney got lost in the rigorous analysis and no one noticed. So, I am noticing.
This is, in my thoughts, the second most important philosophical question there is. — Constance
And it is like going home, but this is revealed as within subjectivity, as if, as the Buddhists' say, one already is the Buddha, and it is a matter of discovering this. — Constance
Would someone please tell my why, when I greet my uncle Sidney, I am not "greeting" exclusively (!) systems of neuronal activity? — Constance
Why are brains and uncles different regarding this epistemic connection? — Constance
But how does anyone know anything? — Bartricks
Your criticism of me only works if I am correct. — Bartricks
How do we really know anything? — Bartricks
What am I arguing, Hugh? — Bartricks
I know what you mean — praxis
I don't care for the phrasing — praxis
Just today I drove a half-hour to a client's office only to realize upon arrival that I forgot my briefcase, so lost in thought was I. — praxis
Now, once more: do you think 6 days and 4.54 billion years are the same? — Bartricks
One thing that doesn't make sense in this is how Constance refers to knowledge suppositions as both cultural artifacts and fundamental attachments. If they're fundamental then they're not cultural. — praxis
There is this tendency to think that language interferes with "liberation", but it is also true that language makes liberation possible. — Constance
When the world stops becoming something to complain about… — schopenhauer1
These I don’t get. — schopenhauer1
Can somebody sum up just why anti-natalism is such a popular topic? — ssu
I recall James' "blooming and buzzing" infant: this is what it would be like to without language. — Constance
Forgive my lack of nuance but all experience is lived experience and we're continually intuiting or perceiving and predicting subconsciously according to our conditioning. — praxis
A tough cookie in that one: what is "knowledge of the world"? And what is "lived experience"? — Constance
But if we are to have imaginary gardens, we probably had best keep our capacity to claim that gardens are at least sometimes in the class of places were plants are grown. — Banno
The most fundamental attachment is knowledge of the world. — Constance
It seems that if one supposes that to be 'real' is to be a 'member of a non-empty class' then Frodo, being a member of the class "Hobbit", is real. — Banno
I've been using "language" and "linguistic" to convey "intentional communication capable."
If "language," by definition, means verbal expression (and it does), then, by current vocabulary standards, I've been wrong to claim all of the animal kingdom possesses language. — ucarr
This is a way of saying being alive and conscious is synonymous with being linguistic. — ucarr
That's animal communication not language. Conveying information is not a high enough bar for language.
— Baden
What is language for if not conveying information ? — RussellA
Exactly. No conscious individual in possession of information needful of communication exits without simultaneous possession of language. — ucarr
a la Andy Rooney. — Mww
a throne dwelling elder, with a flowing grey beard. — Tom Storm
it's not hard to see how some people might regard the world through shit colored glasses. — Tom Storm
Buddhists do not consider liberation a temporary mental state. — praxis
So it is not wrong to say that the Sun orbits the Earth. It just leads to much more complicated equations that give you no good intuition for the behavior of gravity. — Banno
Here, seeing as how you are incapable of doing your own research...
How General Relativity Complicates What We Know About Earth's Orbit
So it is not wrong to say that the Sun orbits the Earth. It just leads to much more complicated equations that give you no good intuition for the behavior of gravity.
Sometimes this forum is like dealing with toddlers.. — Banno
I'm asking you to explain what it is you think you are arguing for. Not an unreasonable request, surely? — Banno
The question is which is the more objective, the more informed, view in relation to the question as to whether the Earth is stationary relative to the Solar System; the view from the Earth or the view from nowhere in particular, i.e.the view from anywhere not confined to the particular. limited view(s) from Earth? — Janus
In any case all I was looking for was a counter-argument to the argument that the more objective view is the less limited, more comprehensively informed view. — Janus
