Where he comes in though is his ingenious method of responding to dilemmas, here moral ones, with counterdilemmas. That's the extent of Protagoras' involvement in this thread about moral conundrums. — TheMadFool
"faith" has always been, in effect, a majoritarian mass delusion (placebo). — 180 Proof
Ignoratio elenchi. Protagoras' technique (counterdilemma) is my focus; nothing about his moral views is relevant. — TheMadFool
Everybody knows the story of a rather interesting dilemma involving Protagoras (the sophist?) and a student of his by then name of Euathlus. Google will take you to the relevant webpages. Here's a good reference :point: Protagoras Paradox — TheMadFool
The story is related by the Latin author Aulus Gellius in Attic Nights. ... The paradox is often cited for humorous purposes — Protagoras Paradox
He is simply setting out how he intends to use the word "fact". — Banno
W specifically means himself only by "I" because facts are truths?when I speak of a fact I do not mean a particular existing thing — Shawn
We
express a fact, for example, when we say that a certain thing has a certain
property, or that it has a certain relation to another thing — Shawn
If the universe is endlessly expanding forever and ever isnt that an infinite scenario? Will it stop expanding? If not then the universe is infinite. If it does stop expanding could it have expanded forever if circumstances allowed it to. — Keith W
major parts of his philosophy is still out of harmony with today's zietgeist — Wayfarer
The significant divide begins when science begins to question, even repudiate, the more central articles of faith — Janus
the advent of science has had an extraordinarily, overwhelmingly positive impact on how we live. — Banno
What's been labelled as subconscious is as much part of nature as the outside world is.the unconscious is doing a lot more, at a much higher level then we often give it credit for — Count Timothy von Icarus
Suppose the subconscious is a great ball of many inter-twined threads doesn't 'information' come out of the mind after the fact as a particular single thread of yarn?recursively self-referential ... only recursively integrated information reaches consciousness — Count Timothy von Icarus
Often the matter of truth does not seem to be quite clearly distinguishable from the matter of taste. ... ...
A certain relativism cannot be denied here. It seems to be objectively given. Individuals are the standards of their chosen philosophy. Everyone truly needs to realize this. — spirit-salamander
However, if we know the speed of the butterfly, the distance between the two spots it's visible in, and the time taken between them, we can easily determine that this isn't teleportation. — TheMadFool
This theory is not a serious scientific proposal. — Daemon
Phi is based on the number and quality of interconnections a given entity has between bits of information. The resulting number — the Phi score — corresponds directly to how conscious it is.
The more connections, the more conscious an entity is, a factor quantifies as PHI
Consciousness, in this model, doesn’t rely on a network of information. It is the network. As such, it doesn’t discriminate based on whether the subject is organic or electronic.
Put simply, high PHI measure means more consciousness — more sentience — no matter who or what you are. — Gina Smith
I got a comment published on today's NY Times story on Trump
'Someone ought to raise the point that if Trump's GOP refuses to recognise the result of the 2020 election then they must forfeit the right to participate in the electoral cycle. Democracy is a system of rules, and not recognising the rules ought to warrant exclusion from the system.' — Wayfarer
Whose democracy do you mean by that?
IIT, based on the scholarpedia page.
In formulating the axioms, Tononi uses these criteria:
1. About experience itself; — frank
Scott Aaronson debunkificated this — fishfry
Your thoughts ? — Amity
The structure of The Symposium and Phaedo, attributed to Plato, is of a story within a story within a story. In the Christian Bible, the gospels are retellings of stories from the life and ministry of Jesus. However, they also include within them the stories (parables) that Jesus told. — Wiki: Story within a story
The best and safest hypothesis according to Socrates is the hypothesis of kinds (eidos or Forms). Two “shares in the reality” of Twoness, one in the reality of Oneness. — Fooloso4
to acquire clear knowledge ...
[1] either he must learn or discover the truth about these matters,
[2] or if that is impossible, he must take whatever human doctrine is best and hardest to disprove and, embarking upon it as upon a raft, sail upon it through life in the midst of dangers,
[3] unless he can sail upon some stronger vessel, some divine revelation — Phaedo 85c-d
when knowledge comes in such a way, it is recollection? What I mean is this: If a man, when he has heard or seen or in any other way perceived a thing, knows not only that thing, but also has a perception of some other thing, the knowledge of which is not the same, but different, are we not right in saying that he recollects the thing of which he has the perception? — Phaedo 73c
arguing both sides of a proposition, to try and achieve synthesis — counterpunch
The idea of opposites not being mutually exclusive will come up several times. — Fooloso4
Death might be seen as a welcome release from the physical body with all its discomforts.
The pain of life v the joy of the afterlife ?*
There is a separation. Not here a mingling as felt by Phaedo. — Amity
the 'argument from opposites' (70c-72e).
It seems to operate on the presumption that 'the opposites' - those given include larger and smaller, weaker and stronger, faster and slower, the beautiful and the ugly, and of course the living and the dead - are intrinsic to the whole process of generation and decay. Also there's a correlative relationship, in that one gives rise to the other - what was smaller becomes larger, what is weaker becomes stronger, and so on. — Wayfarer
The question at issue in the contrast between upward and downward [~transcendental] models is this: whether the unity of opposites exists in the opposites or whether it transcends them. Plato in the Sophist tries [~correctly] to have both [~one for intermingling of Forms and one for participation of particulars in Forms]: the forms remain transcendent while now being the abode of opposites. Aristotle sees in this an opening for a revised, dynamic notion of species and genera. Hegel, it could be argued, tries to join sameness and difference in his own [~i.e. illogical] way. — Scott Austin (2010)
Plato's own Greek terms? And how do we decide on their precise meaning when it has already been determined that the dialogues can, and maybe should, be interpreted in many different ways? — Apollodorus
two particles are entangled — SupernovaGirl
The video hasn’t shown that “observer” has anything do with minds. Or what exactly is and isn’t an observer. — khaled
thesis-antithesis pairs — TheMadFool
Dialectics puts the thesis-antithesis duo in a positive light, assuring the two sides that what results - synthesis - all things considered, counts as progress. — TheMadFool
Any explanations? — Banno
Wittgenstein again very cleverly discovered the obviousity of the common wheel. — god must be atheist
Name calling of 'relativism', being unfamiliar to simple-minded readers (that's everyone) has been the traditional way of spitting on the work of dead philosophers to strengthen one's pretense to divergent views. The Church, fearing dismissal or opposition to its dogma of absolute morality, has done much to cause relative morality and more simply the idea of relativism in general, to be both feared and hated. But with difficulties, logic and science has made small inroads into marshaled academia to the point where relativism is becoming progressive and even cool.the 'relativism' of OC and 'form of life' in general. — j0e
... Gadamer views understanding as a matter of negotiation between oneself and one’s partner in the hermeneutical dialogue such that the process of understanding can be seen as a matter of coming to an ‘agreement’ about the matter at issue. ... This process of horizontal engagement is an ongoing one that never achieves any final completion or complete elucidation — Wittgenstein
"Philosophy is: to reject false arguments -- Witt Big Typescript"Seems to me that Witt is doing a kind of negative metaphysics. Philosophieren ist: falsche Argumente zurückweisen. — j0e
The idea of a general concept being a common property of its particular instances connects up with other primitive, too simple, ideas of the structure of language. It is comparable to the idea that properties are ingredients of the things which have the properties; e.g. that beauty is an ingredient of all beautiful things as alcohol is of beer and wine, and that we therefore could have pure beauty, unadulterated by anything that is beautiful.
(b) There is a tendency rooted in our usual forms of expression, to think that the man who has learnt to understand a general term, say, the term "leaf", has thereby come to possess a kind of general picture of a leaf, as opposed to pictures of particular leaves. — Blue Book
The Ideas/Forms are images. — j0e
