Not to sound facetious, but the primary reason is probably that the United States is far more violent than the United Kingdom...the answer you are looking for is "culture" (amongst other things). It is most likely that our culture in America leads to an allowance and appreciation of more violence than is typically seen in United Kingdom. — chiknsld
For example - a girl is 17 years old. Her brother is twice her age. When the girl is 23 years old, what will be the age of the boy? — Down The Rabbit Hole
He was 34 when she was 17. If she is 23 now then six years have past. I'll let someone else do the math. — Average
I'm not sure why anyone would use this as some kind of sign of intelligence. — Average
Training is still required. Very intelligent people are not likely to mentally reinvent the wheel and everything that followed. Even if they could, it would take entirely too much time. A 19th century genius cannot open a 21st century computer and instantly make sense of it. — Bitter Crank
The correct answer to what? What do you mean by "correct"? What do you mean by "answer"? without some kind of context, even if only hypothetical, I can't really understand you. Can you provide an example? Please forgive me if my questions comes across as pedantic. — Average
Unless I'm mistaken it would then be impossible for any intelligent person to be unable to "determine the correct answer" because this is by definition the very essence of intelligence. Please correct me if I've misunderstood your position or the relevant information. — Average
Would you mind explaining to me what you mean by "work things out"? — Average
So I mean atheism as a positive claim. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Flew put his faith in his own powers of argumentation, and they proved somewhat treacherous in the end. — unenlightened
The word "atheism" can be substituted for the word "theism". — ZzzoneiroCosm
Further, this is not an objection towards God's existence because perhaps souls can prove that. Instead, this is an objection to the premise that fine-tuning is probable under theism; hence the fine-tuning argument is unsound. — lish
However, I have a different opinion on the definition of the experience machine. According to the definition, people who plug in into the machine can and only can experience pleasure. — Howard
Conclusion: Experience machines cannot exist. — Howard
In Nietzsche view the effect outweighs the intention. For example, you see a shady guy walking around and decide to drop an anvil on their head cartoon style, your intention was to hurt them but the effect was that no one robbed. (For this say they were a known robber that had been at large) Should you be punished for the intention or rewarded for the outcome? — CallMeDirac
"Neutral" state of affairs might be better than bad ones (such as harm), but they are also worse than good ones (such as happiness). In light of this, I do think that if it can be good to prevent harms, it can also be bad to prevent potential joys. — DA671
I am not denying it would be good if no one was experiencing pain. The point is that it would be good for someone, namely the person whose valuing of something constitutively determines that it has moral value. — Bartricks
Benatar is assuming that there can be moral value in the absence of any and all valuers. And that makes no sense. — Bartricks
es. The point, though, is that it would be good for someone.
Or are you asking if absence of pain would be good even if no one exists? In that case, no - for the reasons given in the OP. — Bartricks
Absent pain is indeed good, but it is always good for someone, just as pleasure is good when it is good for someone. — Bartricks
Your OP says even those with a bad life are compelled to avoid death, and we would even saw off our arm to do so — Down The Rabbit Hole
No it doesn't. Sheesh. It says that we have 'reason to' avoid death. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Not 'will'. Reason to. Not 'will'. Not 'desire to'. Not 'fear'. Reason to. — Bartricks
I replied pointing out that this is because we are hardwired to do so — Down The Rabbit Hole
Yeah, irrelevant. False. And irrelevant. — Bartricks
you then responded to others and me that it is "intuitive" and "self-evident" that we have reason to avoid death - I reiterated that it feels intuitive and self evident because of our hardwiring. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Again, false and irrelevant. It's called the genetic fallacy- the fallacy of thinking that if a belief or impression has a cause, then that automatically discredits the belief or impression. It works for any goddamn belief or impression of anything at all - so it's a really dumb argument. You keep making it. Draw the inference. — Bartricks
THus, the reasonable conclusion is that death is a portal to hell. — Bartricks
1. If we have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances, including circumstances in which our lives are already sub optimal in terms of their happiness to misery balance (up to a certain limit), the best explanation of this is that death harms us and harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse. — Bartricks
2. We have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances etc. — Bartricks
3. Therefore, death harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse — Bartricks
I take it you are attempting to challenge 1 by arguing that as we can give an evolutionary story about how we might have come to 'believe'that we have reason to avoid dying, we do not in fact have reason to avoid dying. — Bartricks
So your argument is actually - we have no reason to believe or do anything. As well as being obviously indefensible and itself unbelievable, it applies to any argument for anything. So, it is silly. You haven't engaged with my argument so much as rejected the whole project of arguing for anything. If that's what you are reduced to doing, then my argument is very strong. — Bartricks
My view is that there are far too many guns of all kinds in the USA. However, they are here now -- at least 1 per person, averaging out the total supply, and there isn't any acceptable way to round them up. — Bitter Crank
And yet no one I know has ever known a person who was murdered, much less who was shot. What do you make of that? 55 years in this crime ridden city, and never even been pickpocketed. — Hanover
Do you think you have reason to avoid death? — Bartricks
It may surprise some, but a majority of Americans do not own guns.
About 40% of Americans say they or someone in their household owns a gun, and 22% of individuals (about 72 million people) report owning a gun, according to surveys from Pew and Harvard and Northeastern. This figure has declined over time, down from 51% of gun-owning households in 1978. Gun purchases, however, have hit historic highs in recent years and during the COVID-19 pandemic. — Bitter Crank