.I bring up a lot of the negative aspects of the human experience
., and the structural suffering of life
.I guess this can be construed as complaining.
.But then, I am bringing up disapproval of a negative state of affairs. In this case, it is the negative state of affairs of life itself.
.It is perhaps to catalyze people to look at it for what is going on to us as a whole.
.I was playing a simple game, and I had this realization that life may be devoid of meaning; but, still be enjoyable.
.Firstly, one can say many things about life, that it sucks, is full of suffering, that they wouldn't want to bring children into such a world, and so on... But, despite all this, life is a mystery nonetheless. We came about by a stroke of chance, depending on whether you're religious or not.
.As things are, scientists explore nature and in their own way feel the mystery of life through reason.
.Religious types might feel similarly; but, instead of 'reason', it's faith.
.I will most likely never be too religious a person, although I'm sure many scientists might have become religious over the sheer complexity of nature or elegant simplicity. I'm too firm a believer in reason to be persuaded by storytelling.
.”You believe in an un-acknowledged and unsupported assumption that the physical world that we live in is the "actual", "existent", "physical" and "real" one, in some (unspecified) sense in which the infinitely-many other possibility-worlds aren't.” — Michael Ossipoff
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I do not deny the existence of other universes in a multiverse
., or even independently.
.I am only saying that, as we are not in dynamic contact with them, they are epistemologically irrelevant.
.”there's no reasons to claim that they're [the physical possibility-worlds]"real" or "existent", whatever that would mean.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Anything that can act in any way exists. That is sufficient reason to think that things that act to inform me are real.
.”There's no reason to believe that your experience is other than such an abstract logical system.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Of course there is. The things I experience act on me and I am aware of their action on me. Abstract logical systems do not act on me in the same way.
.”If you claim that this physical world is more than the setting for the hypothetical logical system that is your experience-story, then in what respect to you think that this physical world is more than that.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Because mere hypotheticals can't act on anything.
.”Do you believe in unparsimonious brute-facts and unverfiable, unfalsifiable propositions?” — Michael Ossipoff
.
No.
speaking of worlds as simply "possible" allows one to confuse logical, physical and ontological possibility. — Dfpolis
...distinctions whose advocates can't specify what they mean by them — Michael Ossipoff
I can. I said :
"P is possible with respect to a set of facts, S, if P does not contradict the propositions expressing S." — Dfpolis
Logical possibility means the proposition is consistent with S = the facts we know.
Physical possibility means the proposition is consistent with S = the laws of nature.
Alternately, one may mean the proposition is consistent with S = the laws of nature plus the facts we know about a physical state.
Ontological or metaphysical possibility means the proposition is consistent with S = the nature of being qua being. — Dfpolis
"But you don't know what you mean by "actual". Or, if you do know what you mean by it, you're keeping it to yourself." — Michael Ossipoff
By "actual" I mean operational or able to act. — Dfpolis
As mere hypotheticals can't act, they aren't actually facts.
" "Fact" is often or usually defined as a relation among things, or as a state-of-affairs". — Michael Ossipoff
OK. As long as the things and states are actual, I have no problem with this.
"in what regard, in what manner, do you think this physical world is different from merely the setting for your hypothetical life-experience-story, consisting of a hypothetical logical system such as I've described?" — Michael Ossipoff
Because a hypothetical story represents actions and states of affairs that did not occur.
Forms like "this one" are "stylistically raised" and not equivalent to pronouns. "Jo ate the cake, but this one didn't like it." vs. "Jo ate the cake, but they didn't like it." I much prefer "they". — Dawnstorm
Someone who rejects gender, implicitly rejects my gender as well as their own. — Marcus de Brun
Gender rejection as such is little different to homophobia.
Notwithstanding that, the rejection of one's gender implies the existence of a dis-ease with ones genetic gender.
When we respect the choice of others (as we apparently must do) we also ignore the pain that lies behind the disassociation.
People have the right to choose that their pain should be ignored by self and by others. However that which is ignored can rarely be ameliorated.
They should be as progressive as they want; just keep it in the family. — Bitter Crank
They seem to want everyone to march in lock step. Surely progressives don't want to be dictatorial, do they?
My own mother tongue has a gender neutral word for the third person: "hän". The word hän refers to both sexes, hence a Finn cannot now exactly which gender one is from the word. Yet I don't think this changes the culture or gender relations in any particular way. — ssu
Facts are actual, not merely possible
[/quote]Possible worlds might be a consistent set of posits, they are not a consistent set of facts
What makes it the case that one thing in one possible world and one thing in another possible world are the same thing? — Michael
Is it really so odd to see it used this way when it's for an explicitly gender neutral person? It seems exactly the same to me. — MindForged
speaking of worlds as simply "possible" allows one to confuse logical, physical and ontological possibility. — Dfpolis
.By now it seems you've begun to speak as if your complex system of hypothetical propositions is a thing that "exists", even apart from and independently of any physical world. But this claim is extremely controversial. — Cabbage Farmer
....independently of any physical world.
.Catastrophic counterintuitiveness The theory does not accord with our deepest intuitions about reality.
.This is sometimes called "the incredulous stare", since it lacks argumentative content, and is merely an expression of the affront that the theory represents to "common sense" philosophical and pre-philosophical orthodoxy.
.Lewis is concerned to support the deliverances of common sense in general: "Common sense is a settled body of theory — unsystematic folk theory — which at any rate we do believe; and I presume that we are reasonable to believe it. (Most of it.)" (1986, p. 134). But most of it is not all of it (otherwise there would be no place for philosophy at all), and Lewis finds that reasonable argument and the weight of such considerations as theoretical efficiency compel us to accept modal realism. The alternatives, he argues at length, can themselves be shown to yield conclusions offensive to our modal intuitions.
.Do you have something like the "possible worlds" of modal logicians in mind here?
.An important, but significantly different notion of possibilism known as modal realism was developed by the philosopher David Lewis."[1] On Lewis's account, the actual world is identified with the physical universe of which we are all a part. Other possible worlds exist in exactly the same sense as the actual world; they are simply spatio-temporally unrelated to our world, and to each other. Hence, for Lewis, "merely possible" entities—entities that exist in other possible worlds—exist in exactly the same sense as do we in the actual world; to be actual, from the perspective of any given individual x in any possible world, is simply to be part of the same world as x.
.According to the indexical conception of actuality, favoured by Lewis (1986), actuality is an attribute which our world has relative to itself, but which all the other worlds have relative to themselves too. Actuality is an intrinsic property of each world, so world w is actual just at world w. "Actual" is seen as an indexical term, and its reference depends on its context.[6] Therefore, there is no feature of this world (nor of any other) to be distinguished in order to infer that the world is actual, "the actual world" is actual simply in virtue of the definition of "actual": a world is actual simpliciter.
.
At the heart of David Lewis's modal realism are six central doctrines about possible worlds:
.
Possible worlds exist – they are just as real as our world;
[…but I make no claim that the hypothetical physical worlds (consisting of systems of abstract implications about hypothetical propositions about hypothetical things, and of self-consistent configurations of mutually-consistent hypothetical truth-values for those hypothetical propositions) exist other than in the sense that we can refer to them and speak of them.
In agreement with Lewis, I speak of our own “actual” physical universe as really no different in kind, or in existence-status, from all the other hypothetical logical systems called “physical worlds”.]
.
Possible worlds are the same sort of things as our world – they differ in content, not in kind;
.
Possible worlds cannot be reduced to something more basic – they are irreducible entities in their own right.
.
Actuality is indexical. When we distinguish our world from other possible worlds by claiming that it alone is actual, we mean only that it is our world.
.
Possible worlds are unified by the spatiotemporal interrelations of their parts; every world is spatiotemporally isolated from every other world.
.
Possible worlds are causally isolated from each other.
Reason is in fact the path to faith, and faith takes over when reason can say no more.” Thomas merton — Rank Amateur
Since when does a Roomba care if you turn it off, or accidentally spill water into it, or if it falls downstairs? — Michael Ossipoff
Imagine a world where there was NO adversity. No problems of any kind. No bad weather, no conflict, no natural disasters, no famine or death... You know what would inevitably occur? The analytical centers in your brain would essentially begin to atrophy, having Nothing To Process. Meanwhile, more and more of your brain would be used to process enjoyment and creativity. Eventually all rationality would be lost until all that was left was a brain that could only operate on instinctual satisfaction of desire. — Lucid
The point is that adversity, struggle, and conflict are an essential part in what has given us the intelligence and awareness we so appreciate, and without which, we would be little more than animals with a sense of wonder. — Lucid
Since when does a Roomba care if you turn it off, or accidentally spill water into it, or if it falls downstairs?
Have the wisdom of a Roomba.
Sure we care about what happens to us--enough to do our best to achieve what we like, want or prefer, and, to that end, to last as long as we can.
But we're about our likes and preferences--as we act on them, when it's time to act on them.. We're not about the outcome when it happens.
Kentucky Buddhist Ken Keys pointed out that we don't have needs.. ...only likes and preferences. — Michael Ossipoff
I intend to come back through and reply to those who have replied to me. I will admit, I'm not quite sure how to respond, in some cases.
For now, a question. When a writer writes a book. Are they condemned as evil for the horrors in which the characters experience? Unless the book is merely just a cover for the author to live out some fantasies, no. Why is this? Because adversity makes the story interesting, in a most cases.
Yes it's possible to have stories without any conflict or adversity, and yes they can be enjoyable; but they're often short, and simple, and thus proclaimed as children's stories.
So when the author writes of this crazed psychopath who unleashes his killing rage and murders hundreds of people, what makes this acceptable? Not merely the fact of it being a story, because if it was clear that it was just the guise for murderous fantasy, and held nothing in the way of plot or resolution, we would be sickened. — Lucid
If we lived in a perfect world... We'd die of boredom or lose our capacity for intellectual examination of life, much as the creatures in hg wells the time machine became simplistic and juvenile after completely dominating their environment. — Lucid
Many people have brought up various diseases. But isn't it the point of a disease for us to overcome it?
It's when we are in the story and unable to see the true scope of things that we find evil so tragic and intolerable.
.”You’re confusing “different from” with “in conflict with”. “ — Michael Ossipoff
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No I'm not.
.Many or most vocal Internet atheists are actually heretics to their own chosen methodology. They're eager to apply reason to the other fellow's beliefs, but not to their own, which reveals they're not actually interested in reason at all, but have instead confused it with ideology.
.You're confusing line spacing with full stops.
.Your "Atheist Science-Worshipper!" over the top rhetoric
Faith is believing something when there is insufficient evidence for a more formal conclusion. Sometimes when there is no evidence at all. Much of the time, this is reasonable. — Pattern-chaser
What's interesting about this phenomena is that it illustrates how faith is a human issue, not a religious issue. — Jake
There's no fundamental difference between vehement theists and vehement atheists, it's the same process at work in both cases.
.”Incorrect. If it's not in conflict with established fact, or in conflict with reason, then it's reasonable.” — Michael Ossipoff
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What a pointless "if". It is, by its nature, in conflict with reason, else it wouldn't be a matter of faith.
.”The matter of God, or the matter of the nature or character of Reality as a whole isn't amenable to, or a topic for, proof, reason or logic.” — Michael Ossipoff
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No, that's not true with regards to the matter of God. This very discussion, as well as others, attest to that.
.I suspect that your error here is treating the matter of God as if it is the matter of God as per your personal take on it, whereby you've made it such that God is a special exception. You don't get to have exclusive say on God.
.“And, regarding a matter that logic and reason don't apply to, the only way to be in conflict with reason would be to try apply reason to that matter. ...as you're attempting to do.” — Michael Ossipoff
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No, you don't seem to understand that a matter of faith, by nature, conflicts with a matter of reason.
.They are chalk and cheese. If where I live were a matter of faith, which it clearly isn't, then there would be no conflict with my faith that I live on a boat in France, even though reason leads to the belief that I live in an apartment in England. Is a boat an apartment? Are England and France the same country? No, the two sets of beliefs, as well as how they were obtained, clash. They are in conflict.
If your theism is a matter of faith, then it's not reasonable — Sapientia
, and if it's reasonable, then it's not a matter of faith.
Your belief, given that it is held as a matter of faith, is in conflict with reason
we, or maybe it is just me, are not communicating well. I have no clue how any of that applies to what I think. — Rank Amateur
I agree with you both, that our tools may well be inadequate to understand such a thing as God. — Rank Amateur
And this point is at the heart of skeptical theism, which I believe to be true.
But it seems, we as human beings have some inherent drive to understand our reason for existence.
So, what are we to do? Use the tools we have, as feeble as they might be? Or throw up our hands and ignore the drive?
Personally, my theism is a matter of faith.
But it is important to me that this belief is not in conflict with fact or reason, which would than make me a fool. I believe we have the tools, as weak as they are, to wrestle with the question that theism is or is not reasonable.
Before we continue with all this wonderful logic dancing, could somebody please prove that human logic would be at all relevant to anything the scale of a god?
It seems that discussions such as this one pretty much always assume without questioning that reason is relevant, and then proceed in earnest based on that assumption. That process might be compared to a theology convention where everyone takes it to be an obvious given that the Bible is the word of God, and then from that unquestioned assumption proceed to have a Bible verse interpretation debate.
If you're an atheist, imagine you are at that theology convention. You probably won't get sucked in to the Bible verse interpretation debate, because you will first ask for proof that the Bible is anything more than a pile of human opinions. That is, you will reasonably challenge the authority the entire debate is built upon before agreeing to engage the Bible verse interpretations.
That's what I'm asking for, before we dive in to logic dancing could someone please demonstrate that something as small as human reason would be at all relevant to something the scale of gods? — Jake
I am not sure I have ever heard of someone claiming theism, acknowledging omniscience, and benevolence but excluding omnipotence. — Rank Amateur
I can't see how any of this waffle explains the creation of Loa loa filariasis.
God remains culpable. — Banno
I am not sure I have ever heard of someone claiming theism, acknowledging omniscience, and benevolence but excluding omnipotence. — Rank Amateur