Did you forget about religion and the widespread belief in evil spirits? The word "deamon" also means an [evil] spirit I believe. What about belief in bodily humors as a basis for disease? — TheMadFool
It's possible that Socrates was kidding about the daemon, or pandering to popular superstition. But he may have simply used the most common term of the time for an "inner voice". Today we have other ways to describe such inward guidance, such as Intuition or SuperEgo. So, Susan could just tell the psychiatrist that she had a "feeling", not a literal voice. — Gnomon
However, we can reply back that it is impossible for simple space NOT to exist. It’s inconceivable that simple space CANNOT exist. No matter what, there must always be simple space.
So perhaps if we tried to apply zero to the external world, we could eliminate everything BUT simple space. (Cartesian skepticism) — telex
One can no longer be certain to any reasonable degree — Torus34
How does one describe the territory? — Valentinus
Factually, Socrates vehemently defended himself at his last trial. I have a vague feeling you're mixing him up with another allegedly existing philosopher who also wrote no words and we only know about his thoughts due to his students' writings. This other philosopher reportedly uttered no words at his trial. — god must be atheist
The patient can be released, and followed up by Dr. Hyppocrates. And our opinion at this time is that Mr. Socrates is fit to stand trail. (What was he trailing?) — god must be atheist
But time travel is an insane idea! :razz: — unenlightened
How about this -- there is something else that controls our desires. Rationality has been the center of this human ability to go against our desires. — Caldwell
This is a really broad question but I will keep it short. I have recently finished reading Spinoza's Ethics and one of the things he tried to push is the idea that free will is just an illusion. I have heard of this idea many times before from different philosophers and I generally agree with it by now. I have for now settled with the argument that we cannot control our desires which guide our decisions, thus we are not really free. Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
Oops!
I suggested the wrong book. The suggested 'starter' book is Analytic Philosophy: A very short introduction, by Michael Beaney.
Sorry for the error.
Regards, stay safe 'n well. — Torus34
Just because you keep repeating that claim doesn't make it true.
So far you have neither demonstrated that your conception of Nothingness is actually a priori in any strict sense, nor that a priori reasoning is even a legitimate method here.
But if you're not interested, that's fine. It's still a worthy topic. :up: — apokrisis
That is just a formula you keep repeating to duck the points I've made. You have yet to justify it as a reasonable position to take - a priori, or otherwise, — apokrisis
Human thought goes nowhere unless it ties the two together. — apokrisis
What you are denying is that you are expressing a Newtonian era conception of nothingness — apokrisis
So you can see I am taking a perfectly "a priori reasoned" approach here. I say if you are arguing a principle, you will want to take it to its most general extreme. If one direction, then why not any number? If a direction, then why not an action, and thus also any number of actions? — apokrisis
But I've pointed out that your a priori reasoning is a straight reflection of 1600s empiricism. — apokrisis
Maybe what folk mean here is that quantum theory can't be understood in classical terms? There is no point banging your head against that particular wall. — apokrisis
My argument is that we have to start from where we are as the thing we are certain about.
So if we are certain that there is no such thing as an empty spacetime of any orderly extent - because quantum theory actually works as our best description of nature — apokrisis
Any serious metaphysics would start from the physics of today. — apokrisis
Rather than something from nothing, or something from something, the third option is something from everything — apokrisis
Do you emphasise the quantum surprise that even an empty spacetime void can fluctuate - produce virtual particle pairs without violating the classical laws of energy conservation?
Or do you instead emphasise the fact that this empty spacetime void is what eventually emerged from the Planckscale Big Bang as a classical suppression of quantum fluctuations? Our Universe is a definite structured something because its thermal flow has decohered all that inherent quantum uncertainty. The radically indeterminate has become the overwhelmingly determinate in terms of the physics. — apokrisis
quantum laws forbid any coherent spacetime from being actually empty of stuff. — apokrisis
More than one noted philosopher in the past has dealt with the concept of nothing. One, if I recall correctly, considered it of great importance in mathematics, where the concept of nothing, zero, as the start of natural numbers resides. You might find the book, A Brief History of Analytic Philosophy by Mr. Stephen Schwartz of interest. — Torus34
If, however, you are talking about nothing becoming something -- specifically an object as opposed to a concept, that's a horse of another color. — Torus34
If we could equate our unconsciousness with reality beyond, should we then care about it? — Eremit
Let's toss the set of null sets into the pot, shall we? — Torus34
But what? If there has never been a thing created out of nothing, what possible substitute could there be? — Kenosha Kid
Do you have any non-religious problem with the idea that there was always been something, and that that something was no intended? — Kenosha Kid