There is always trickledown. — raza
I don't know how to answer that. Why would I suffer when I can make another suffer instead? Empathy? Love? — unenlightened
'Quo vadis?' is a moral question — unenlightened
However, at least Trump appears to be more honest and stick to his values and points with regards to the other issues (immigration, tax cuts, Obama care, etc.). — Agustino
It is the fashion to proclaim that there is nowhere to go, and think this is deep philosophy, but this is because there is a fashion for running away — unenlightened
Human rationality matures out of and is equally dependent upon the randomness of irrational thought. — Marcus de Brun
Irrationality therefore is the fountainhead of creativity and rationality its temporal limitation. — Marcus de Brun
Trump has done such a fabulous job of bullshitting the electorate that nobody knows what to believe - well, enough people to always provide him the benefit of all the doubt he’s sown. It’s like one of those firefighting airplanes that goes overhead and dumps this enormous cloud over everything. — Wayfarer
Several experts on financial crime and espionage told the FT that the most troubling part of the interplay between Trump’s past in business and his present in public office was his potential susceptibility to blackmail. Keatinge, the Rusi expert on illicit finance, calls such a scenario “the number-one fear of any intelligence agency”. Knowledge of an illicit transaction might not be as sensational as the most notorious claim in the former MI6 officer Christopher Steele’s dossier on Trump’s Russian connections — that Russian intelligence had footage of the future president instructing prostitutes to urinate on the Moscow hotel bed in which the Obamas had once slept. But it could be at least as powerful if used as kompromat with which to pressure the president. — FT
Paywalled. — Wayfarer
although upon reflection I fail to see why a particular possible world should be more real than others, or what it would even mean... — litewave
Well, it just says that the actual world is represented by a designated point in logical space. But why is this point designated? — litewave
It is already apparent that Wittgenstein's idea aims at the construction of a geometrical representation for the logic of propositions, and that his "logical space" is an abstract space like the "phase‑space" of physics or the "sample‑space" of the theory of probability. And this leads immediately to the next and most essential question: what are to be the points of this abstract logical space?
The right answer: to this question has been already given by Stenius (Wittgenstein's 'Tractatus', 1960): every point in logical space is the representation of a possible world! (Stenius' answer is not the only one that has been suggested, but none of the others will do as an interpretation of Wittgenstein's position.) Let's call these worlds "logical points". We have thus:
Logical space = the totality of logical points,
The logical the set of logical points which
place of “p" = would make the proposition "p" true.
One point in logical space is designated: it represents the actual world. (Since each possible world is incompatible with every other the designated point is unique.) Of course, we do not know its exact position; but if we know a proposition "p" to be true, we know the designated point to lie in that area of logical space which is the logical place of "p". Thus we have:
"p" is true = the designated point is contained in the logical place of "p".
According to Frege the denotation of a proposition is its truth‑value; according to Wittgenstein the denotation of a proposition is its logical place (= a set of possible worlds). And 'this makes clear, why formula (F) has to be rejected.
"I'm not talking about sex."
Then what? — InternetStranger
