Yet here you are, talking relying on the power of speech.Philosophers have not shown, but surely some have said, that speech has power. But if it is not physical in nature, how can this “power” have physical consequences? This is action at a distance, or worse, magic and sorcery, and without a viable theory to explain how speech can manipulate matter that’s the kind of superstition it shall remain. — NOS4A2
Sure.But instead you attempt to demonstrate that it is something you know syllogistically. And so, it becomes something to be examined by reason not religion, — Fooloso4
Athiest have been good to me and religious people too, l have also seen a fair amount of assholes from both sides likewise.
Let's stop debating generalizing atheists and religious people. — Wittgenstein
No, because I don't want trouble.Because they'd be excommunicated for speaking such blasphemy? — praxis
Here's something from the Catechism of the Catholic Church:What books? If you're going to make claims like this you should be able to back them up.
I fear it's too late, that we're past the tipping point anyway.to live sustainably — Xtrix
Part of the ecological skepticism here is that these government interventions and incentives aren't effective. Laws are passed, funds are provided, projects are designed, but nothing really happens and the money somehow vanishes.Since the state has always been involved in the economy, there's little reason not to push for intervention in the case of energy. Government action, as you mentioned, requires public pressure -- and that can't happen in isolation. That has to happen with organization, when large groups of people come together and push for their programs. My entire objection is that this aspect gets under-emphasized when discussing climate change, or left out entirely. — Xtrix
Or simply not to your liking, but possibly still valid and sound.If their arguments are vacuous then they would be invalid and or unsound no? — Janus
Sure.I think the point about the ad hominem fallacy is that it consists in assuming that someone's arguments are invalid or unsound or vacuous without examining their actual arguments.
What criteria should terminate Why? — Cheshire
Unfortunately for theorists, this topic requires some real examples, to wit:I want to see how they actually hold up against life's hardships, regardless of whether they are theists, atheists, or whatever. I want to take them to Rhodes, to see how they jump there.
— baker
that there was some thinking on the horizon — Kenosha Kid
When I got home a friend asked if I'm religious now. I replied sincerely: fuck off.
— Christoffer
Not that I wished this upon you, but it would be more relevant for the OP topic to see your reaction and your attitude toward life if the accident would leave you permanently and severely disabled. If you could still be so cheerfully saying that life is meanigless. — baker
When in Rome!but, no, despite it being pointed out to you twice, you're still blocked by a need to be hostile, while complaining that the thread is blocked by the hostility of others.
Baffled, but I guess you never promised to make sense.
I can't post their real names. But I'm thinking of several religious people who have advised me on religious choice in just this way, and it's also a theme I've found in some religious books. The idea that one should "look within, honestly, without bias, and then one will see religious/spiritual truth" is hardly revolutionary.Who said that? — praxis
Because the government's freedom of speech trumps your freedom of speech.Many countries claim freedom of speech and press and yet censor freespeech. — Protagoras
Yes, or pen and paper, as the case may be.So I need a printing press to have free speech?
You keep presenting it that way, though, such as here:t's not a dichotomy. This isn't either-or. I never said it was, and I never said you said it was. — Xtrix
No, the notion that the way out of this is through individual, isolated actions like composting and recycling, rather than collective/political actions. — Xtrix
I think you've read something into my posts that isn't there, though. Perhaps we need to talk more.What I object to is the emphasis. — Xtrix
Of course. Much of what goes on nowadays under "caring for the planet" is nonsense, usually intended to get us to buy the advertiser's product or service. It's also dangerous because it can create in people a false sense of accomplishment and contribution -- "Look, I have a cloth shopping bag, I'm protecting the environment!"If we think we can get out of this with isolated actions, that's a pipe dream. — Xtrix
But you speak with great confidence. This is enough of a clue.I haven't claimed to figure anything out. I've put forth no meaning of my own. — Kenosha Kid
Freespeech is in no way similiar to having a door on your house.
A conversation is not a private house. — Protagoras
In that case, you're addressing a dichotomy I never proposed. It's a false dichotomy.No, the notion that the way out of this is through individual, isolated actions like composting and recycling, rather than collective/political actions. — Xtrix
Do you think restricting speech needs to be justified? — Pinprick
For centuries, it was expected of soldiers to have courage under fire, hence the phrase.On the other hand, a foxhole denotes an active war context in which the cortisol response would make the notion of "happy" almost satirical in a neurotypical person. — Cheshire
Of course. But what I see in this is braggartry. When people say or imply in any way that they "have it all figured out", I want to see how they actually hold up against life's hardships, regardless of whether they are theists, atheists, or whatever. I want to take them to Rhodes, to see how they jump there.Sorry, that it's no loss to an atheist/physicalist that we have no teleological meaning. — Kenosha Kid
You're creating a hostile discussion environment that is not conducive to discussing the topics I want to discuss.I'm doing no such thing. Everyone is free to try to take the conversation in an on-topic direction, although no one is obliged to follow them. I couldn't tempt WF to go my way, but there's nothing stopping you, fill your boots. Since my and WF's conversation died ages ago, the obvious blocker is that you're spending your time talking to me about my conversation instead of having yours. — Kenosha Kid
One imagines that the theist - for all his inventions of sky daddies and karmic mysteries - has a lack of imagination so severe that he has to invent a whole 'mythos' to cover over their total inability to recognize 'meaning' seeping through every pore of the universe without all that trash. Theism is and will always be simply a hatred of the world, motivated by a deep existential impotence, projected outward as a defense mechanism, and then demanded of everyone else on pain of suffering that same complete failure of imagination as they have. — StreetlightX
Of course.My description is limited to the constraints in understanding how different ideas of life's meaning appear to different people. — Kenosha Kid
You're blocking the conversation from getting anywhere, it never develops into the directions I want it to go in.I'm hardly painting him as a placard-waving, abortionist-murdering, homophobe who loves his guns
The implication being that ...?just for pointing out that the only meaning he recognises isn't worth a damn to many of us.
This is a strawman.I think they believe that it's impossible to find meaning for yourself and that it must be spoon-fed to us by some robed authority figure. — praxis
I wasn't joking, I replied to your OP request. I thought about what resources could be useful for learning about the topic you raised, and I posted some links to them. Have you read them?Seriously, I thought you were joking - criticizing my ideas about ad hominem arguments by making ad hominem arguments against me. It would have been a great joke. — T Clark
Sure, but the class/caste/segregation system is still well and alive, it's just more subtle.I look around society and I see a very unnatural state. For example, I see a drive to force almost against our will different segments of society, different groups, different biologies, different backgrounds, together in a way which, compared to a historical sense, seems very forced, engineered, calculated, planned and ultimately is unnatural in that historical sense. — JohnLocke
It's not a new idea. The ancient Stoics, for example, set out to be happy and content, regardless of circumstances.Is this just petty rhetoric? The notion there is a religious alignment that makes people "happy" under life and death circumstances is absurd. — Cheshire
Whereas you don't seem to be able to wrap your head around the idea that a meaning derived from a teleological creator isn't worth a damn outside of a creationist framework, that other meanings that are worth a damn in other frameworks are actually the weightier ones in those frameworks. No one's craving a higher purpose from a non-existent entity, it's not that conceptually difficult. — Kenosha Kid
The point of my conversation with Wayfarer is that he believes these sorts of meanings, where there is some higher purpose intended and some ultimate goal to aspire to, have values generally, such that to be without such a meaning is a loss.
— Kenosha Kid
That's correct, and I stand by that. — Wayfarer
Making good use of things is a ridiculous idea?I don't, because it's a ridiculous idea. — Xtrix
Possibly because it is more rarely witnessed.Meanwhile: catching fish and releasing them is arguably more brutal but rarely condemned. — IanBlain
An areligious person was bragging about the benefits of their areligious stance, and I wonder if such people can still brag like that once life gets hard.I’m curious about what prompted you to start this thread, then. Struggling to see a point. — Wayfarer
It's my own experience, and the experience of many seekers who turn to religion when they are facing hard times. Existential despair can be a powerful motivator.What evidence do you have for that curious claim? — Tom Storm
It's hard to objectively measure hardship and suffering to begin with. One person's rock bottom might be another's "still manageable". But the point is that they both have a notion of "fallen on hard times", even though they differ in what exactly that means in practical terms (for one, it might be living in a one-room apartment, for another, sheltering in phone boxes).I was an atheist when I was broke (years ago) and had to shelter in phone boxes at night to stay dry. My situation made no difference. You are either convinced of something or not convinced of something.
I only said that some people lose their religion when life goes bad, that I have perceived a trend.You also made the claim that people lose their religion when life goes bad.
For some people, they seem to be. There are many factors to consider.So is it the case that you think people's beliefs are held in place by their situation?
It doesn't get much traction in religious/spiritual settings either.But he says that philosophy seeks that meaning through understanding, not through mere belief, although that is a distinction I guess won't get any traction here. — Wayfarer
Indeed, a self-respecting philosophizer shouldn't read philosophy books or converse on philosophy discussion forums simply because he's bored or can't sleep.The point about any kind of philosophical hermenuetic is to try and discern what factor, if anything, they are pointing at, so as to disclose a larger truth.
Only on the condition that there is rebirth/reincarnation.That depends on what is at stake. If we're simply material aggregates and death is the end, then nothing is at stake. But if there is a higher purpose, and we don't see it, then we've missed the point. And it's a very important point to miss. — Wayfarer
Of course. I think this loss of meaning goes hand and hand with the increase of material wellbeing, or at least with the enormous emphasis on it that is evident in modern times.But overall, the erosion of the sense of meaning, the loss of the sense of mankind having a meaningful place in the Cosmos, has been a major theme in modern culture, expressed in countless works of philosophy, drama, art and literature. — Wayfarer
Acknowledging one's sources is an immediate manner of bringing man's relationship with the Cosmos to one's awareness.I don't think it's necessary to be religious to live a meaningful life, but as a consequence of my own search, I interpret religious ideas as expressions of mankind's search for meaning or of the relationship of the human and the Cosmos. Ultimately the major religious figures achieve a kind of cosmic identity, in more than simply a symbolic sense.
I don't know. I've never had a single experience with religious/spiritual people or their texts that I would consider positive or encouraging. Of course, they're all eager to blame me, but I take this eagerness as a sign that they have nothing to offer, or that I'm simply a lesser being who is simply out of their league and would only waste her time trying to understand them.By orientating our understanding in the light of theirs, we are able to realise something similar.
I think it would do you good to read some books on critical thinking.I don't know what you mean. Hey, wait a minute!!! Isn't calling me "naive" an ad hominem argument!!! You did this on purpose didn't you?
It's rather that you don't raise enough questions about yourself and about why you're reading ro discussing something.
— baker
I don't know what this means either.
Part of thinking critically is determining your own intentions and your own reasons for reading something or engaging in discussion about it. But given what you say above, you seem like someone who has a chaotic, unsystematic approach to reading and discussing. No amount of other people proving their credentials, or you proving their lack of those can make up for your own lack of clarity about what you want to get out of a conversation.
— baker
I'm trying to figure out whether this is an ad hominem argument too. I think it is. Boy. This is fun. — T Clark
