Comments

  • Any high IQ people here?
    Sure, have at this part:

    IMO, (certain tests) (are) far more useful to society as a criterion for disqualifying idiots from being allowed to squat in high places180 Proof

    I filled in the parts in parenthesis. Are these tests actual IQ tests?
  • Any high IQ people here?


    Sure, whatever floats your boat. Call it a stupidity test as you did, whatever that means.
  • Any high IQ people here?


    So, since you use the term, "high aptitude" I suppose you see this as non relevant to academic achievement? I mean, the correlation is pretty strong between the two.
  • Any high IQ people here?


    So, I take it your not happy with the test...
  • Any high IQ people here?


    But, you do agree that what you describe as a competency test doesn't amount in any manner to psychometric IQ testing?
  • Any high IQ people here?
    What your basically asking for is a competency test, no @180 Proof?
  • Any high IQ people here?


    It wouldn't be an intelligence test if it was about, as you say, "
    deplorable state of many developed societies (re: climate change, WMD proliferation, human trafficking, neoliberalization, etc)180 Proof
    "

    So, your argument is a non sequitur, no?
  • Any high IQ people here?


    I don't know man. It's Jack fucking Nicholson, so who gives two shits?
  • Any high IQ people here?


    So, essentially your not happy with the test or criteria?
  • Any high IQ people here?
    I've heard that Von Neumann was to brilliant people as brilliant people are to normal people, and it's the brilliant people who said so (and who else would be in a position to do so?).

    Probably Von Neumann would or did destroy an IQ test, but that's trivial compared to the work he did, which is what surely impressed those brilliant people who could half-understand him (or rather understand him by taking much longer than he did to arrive at the thought.)
    hanaH

    Yes, he was called Johnny by his peers at Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project.

    It's amazing how quickly he understood the implications of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem's right after his seminar.
  • Any high IQ people here?
    That is probably true, although we cannot get them to do a test. I have read that Einstein's IQ was "only" about 160, but I don't know if he was tested or if it is an estimate.Janus

    Yes, that's what I heard also. He actually is often quoted with saying that the cult of individualism is so highly regarded that he found it close to or actually grotesque.

    Similarly, Newton stated he was peering through the shoulders of giants before him in his own discoveries.

    Have you heard of John Von Neumann?
  • You don't need to read philosophy to be a philosopher
    It would be strange to say that a pragmatist would argue against inquiry or thinking when only presented with problems.
  • Any high IQ people here?
    I suggest you take a look a Chris Langan's "CTMU Theory". The highest IQ in the world, or at least in the US.

    It's quite remarkable.
    Manuel

    Ah, I haven't spent too much time reading it; but, I think I might look into it.

    What are your thoughts about it?
  • Any high IQ people here?


    Yeah, I notice you usually post interesting things about anything philosophy related.

    Hmm, LSD and psilocybin, I tried microdosing LSD at college, and it definitely pushes you in 'some' direction to try harder or encourages some kind of creativity in effort towards aims and goals. I also took Psilocybin after college to reduce anger in my life. I'm pretty sure it helped with that.

    I'm not sure how much of IQ is navel gazing or just ego inflation. I tend to think that the cult of individualism comes off as inflated in human civilization. Yet, it seems true that Newton, Spinoza, Shakespeare, and Aristotle had very high IQ's.
  • Any high IQ people here?
    Idk, it's kind of strange that when you look at philosophy, you definitely encounter something of a unconscious urge to get smarter.

    Would Plato have still produced his works with an average IQ?

    I wonder, because the counterfactual almost doesn't obtain when you reduce their IQ's.
  • You don't need to read philosophy to be a philosopher
    Your version of pragmatism is lacking in strength or verging on the utilitarian aspect of function and utility.

    My take on your OP was that this would be quite close to quietism once all these issues become trite or redundant for you.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.


    Again, is this the Aristotelian conception of arete or virtue? Also, there are preferred indifferents.

    As a side issue of this thread, do you think apatheia is a natural conclusion of Stoicism or even quietism?
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    Then why your glum OP?baker

    Because I'm not very happy about apathy in Stoicism. It seems like a natural result of Stoicism.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    the philosophy of the Stoics isn't the philosophy of someone who has given up on life, it's not quietism; it's also not the philosophy of someone who is simply trying to develop a soothing narrative for their troublesome life. No, it's the philosophy of someone who is proactive; someone who seeks to be in control, but who also recognizes the limits of it. And who never gives up. The best description I can think of for this is "ambitious".

    (This also seems to be the aspect of Stoicism that is so appealing to modern enterpreneurs among whom the philosophy of Stoicism has a mesure of popularity.)
    baker

    I think in line with the above we have to consider that Stoicism is a philosophy of rationally guided behavior (especially after reading about the divine logos guiding us all, women and men alike). This is what stands out as perhaps most appealing in Stoicism.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.


    Shakespeare also incorporated a lot from Stoicism...
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.


    Somewhere at 12:30 he suddenly says SHIT-BRICKED, and this was beautiful in front of an academic audience.
  • Mary vs physicalism
    It's a derivative of Wittgenstein's beetle in a box.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    What would you refer me to read, @Amity?
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    As you were/are/will be.Amity

    Of course I regard Chrysippus laughing at the donkey eating figs and then suggesting that it should have some wine with it as someone worth reading.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    If Shawn registers - might be interesting to compare thoughts.Amity

    *Wallow wallow*

    hoginslop-pig-in-mud.gif

    It's a pigs life.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    Stoicism occurs naturally when all passion is spent, (...)unenlightened

    I never viewed the Stoic as a Carpe Diem entity. I always thought Jordan Petersons lobster eating SSRI taking bloke was closer to what can be conceived as a Stoic.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    Well you are the expert in this, but you don't read satisfied.unenlightened

    It be a sulken sort of satisfaction. My memory commands me not to desire or fear too much as things are happening as they do with or without my influence on their happenings.
  • Kripke and Santa Claus
    Coca-Cola-Santa-Claus.jpg
    Santa loves Coca Cola.
  • Kripke and Santa Claus


    Must have been a conspiracy then.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    Desire and fear are the push-me-pull-you pet of the failed stoic; they relate to the future. To be fearful of desire, or desirous of escaping fear is to be caught up in the world.unenlightened

    I have my concerns over this, with respect to finding little motivation or desire to become this way with respect to my fate or destiny or whatever nature or God has in store for me. I'm cautious and quite apathetic about these current events.

    Be caught up in the world, therefore, while you can. There will be time enough to be a stoical corpse.unenlightened

    I say this with trepidation; but, isnt the lofty minded philosopher concerned with other more valuable or dare I say important issues than being caught up with the world?

    One can be satisfied in their depression or current apathy, no?
  • Kripke and Santa Claus


    According to Kripke it's this:
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_theory_of_reference

    Not sure if it's a theory of truth altogether...

    With that said, Santa's baptism is still undocumented, with him thus being a myth, yes?
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    Regarding Stoic apathy, there's a very well known dictum of the Stoics to not demand that life happen as you wish it would; but, just the way that it does, and you shall go on well.

    I find this reminder hard to accept at times, even though I'm a sage at Stoic apathy now due to it, jokingly.
  • Inner calm and inner peace in Stoicism.
    In regards to Stoicism, and this will come off as trite; but, modern day living is taxing on the Stoics mind.

    By which I mean that it takes quite a lot of effort to quell the anxiety of making money enough for one's needs or taking care of a family or making time in one's schedule for appointments and family, AND on top of all this behaving in accordance with virtue.

    That's mostly what I have in mind.

    I guess the plain old simple truth is that I'm a depressed guy that has sought solence in Stoicism; but, the scale was tilted towards attaining Stoic apathy out of my natural disposition towards life and depression. That's about all I can say as the motivating factor of this thread, @Amity...
  • When Alan Turing and Ludwig Wittgenstein Discussed the Liar Paradox
    Are you trolling me?TonesInDeepFreeze

    Not at all. If people struggle with understanding that 0.999... is 1 then, 0.999... exists inside the sequence of [(10^n)-1]/(10^n) when starting from 1 to n approaching infinity.
  • When Alan Turing and Ludwig Wittgenstein Discussed the Liar Paradox
    You can see the infinitesimal hiding there.
  • When Alan Turing and Ludwig Wittgenstein Discussed the Liar Paradox
    What? .999... is not a sequence. It's a number. That number is 1.TonesInDeepFreeze

    How about:
    [(10^n)-1]/(10^n) As n approaches infinity from 1?