Do you conclude from this that all those professors getting paid to teach and write are not doing philosophy? — Fooloso4
The separatist impulse, — tim wood
If you were to visit most university philosophy departments the faculty would regard this claim as quaint. — Fooloso4
I think we've pared this down to a question of language. — T Clark
Bleh, A creature is more than a memory. When a person dies they take nothing with them but themselves. Even if ou argue that their perception of the person is a person I'd say that that perception is merely an extension of the dead person.
No one takes anyone with them into death. — New2K2
When we measure, we compare one thing, what is being measured, with another, a measure. So, no, I don't think most animals do that. — T Clark
Measurement is a matter of social convention. We, humanity, decide on how to measure by what standards, — T Clark
If the intention of a questioner is simply to find agreement there is doubt about the whole point of the enterprise. — Amity
Questions are not always easy to form. Even well thought out questions with a view to reasoned discussion can lead down surprising avenues to explore, including others' reactions. — Amity
We aren't ideal, we have to deal with the unideal. And we ask unideal questions for all kinds of reasons. — Amity
Compared to the classroom experience, the 'new' part of learning in TPF environment is perhaps less about people showing or witnessing character but more about processing our own thoughts, feelings and attitudes. — Amity
Reason tends to fly out the window when we feel under attack. Initial sensations of dislike or discomfort can limit our ability to stand back and think 'straight'. — Amity
I don't mind being 'pissed off' or people being 'pissed off' with me. — Amity
It shows passion and action.
It is better than complete apathy or indifference. — Amity
A little bit of aggravation is good for the soul. Now is that 'wise' or not ? :chin:
I find a distinction between that which is wise, and the love of the pursuit of it for wisdoms sake. The former is simply being, and the latter is seeking the reason for it.
Socrates may deny being a wise man, but lets say we perceive him to be such. If he presented himself to an open forum, I would ask him questions to understand why he is or is not as I perceive him to be. If he wanted me to piss him off in the pursuit, I guess I could try to humor him. But he would have to tell me that, or I'd have to ask him: "Hey Socrates, how best can I get you to explain to me why I think you are wise? Should I piss you off, so you can show me I am wrong about you? Or should I just ask well-thought-out, probing questions?" But if he just wants to go be wise somewhere, I'll leave him alone. — Amity
nd yet Good is a way for Man to measure. A blob of clay is a blob of clay. Easy to mold or hard to mold, brittle, dark, light.
Good or bad comes from what Man wants, and so I feel you might have boxed yourself in. — New2K2
SYMBOLIC OF ALL MATTER. You agreed. — god must be atheist
But you contradicted this, by this: — god must be atheist
You keep calling me an idiot, — god must be atheist
calling me out on all kinds of drummed up reasons? — god must be atheist
1. What kind of vetting ? How would it help ? — Amity
Comments about thoughts are part and parcel of being challenged, no ? They are a stimulus which can be responded to. Both in positive and negative ways. Part of the learning process. — Amity
We didn't "transmogrify" into the measure of all things. We invented measurement. Measurement is human enterprise. Why else would we care about measurement except as it applies to ourselves? What would we ever measure except things that have an effect on our lives? — T Clark
Loving wisdom doesn't mean you have any. I've never been quite sure how to interpret this 'love of wisdom'. It sounds passive and slightly lackluster. It seems to miss something of the vigor attached to challenging one's assumptions and beliefs and actually fighting to comprehend something new and alien. — Tom Storm
And humans love to think they are wise. Whether they are or not. — Monitor
As Gore Vidal used to say - 'When I die I'm going take all of you with me." — Tom Storm
Humans think like humans for human reasons - the world and us is to some extent 'created' by our corporeal strengths and limitations. — Tom Storm
Well, on one hand you said it is not all things that are dead matter that you judge, and on the other hand, you agree it is all things that are dead matter you judge. — god must be atheist
it is easy to refute my point — god must be atheist
that I am wrong in doing so, by drawing my attention to the opposing side of your contradictive claims. — god must be atheist
So would you say the purpose of philosophy is to satisfy the love one feels for wisdom? To seek out truth, and be able to use logic to defend it?
I would argue, that that's pretty well it. Or very close to it, at any rate. — god must be atheist
Beyond that, it makes sense to me that our understanding of the world, reality itself, is a function of our particular human nervous system and perceptual organs. — T Clark
By attributing a quality to a blob of wet clay, honestly I thought it was symbolic of all dead matter. — god must be atheist
But you say, that the buck stops at blobs of clay. — god must be atheist
No. — Monitor
You mean, "how can someone not agree with me?" — god must be atheist
By dividing ALL things into being good and not good, you give all things a measure of goodness or badness. — god must be atheist
And good and bad are qualities that are humano-centric; without humans (or equivalents) the terms "good" and "bad" would be meaningless. — god must be atheist
It's true that language itself also would not exist; but you use the language to translate your judgment of things (good or bad) into human-understood information. — god must be atheist
Language is a transfer element; the "good" and "bad" are primary judgments, the measure of man, and only of man. — god must be atheist
But don't we all make philosophical decisions every day? Don't we decide what events "are" and then how best to live with them? We may be wrong, or do it poorly, or don't want the awareness of what we are doing but no one else is doing it for us. Don't we all have a current world view that we have accepted whether we worked at it or not? — Monitor
When I look upon a blob of clay, I see good; not because I see potential for it to be molded into something good (for it could just as well be molded into something bad) but because a blob of clay is good in and of itself, regardless of what we do to it, or what it might become later. Man is not the measure of all things.
— James Riley
By saying "good" of something, James Riley inadvertently made man the measure of all things.
How one can shoot himself on the foot in one easy step. — god must be atheist
And then you may lose whatever precious little freedom you now have. — Fooloso4
We met the new MAGA, same as the old MAGA, didn't we? — 180 Proof
I don’t want isolation. By “leave me alone” I mean I want them to quit meddling in my life. That’s what you fail to recognize. — NOS4A2
So in essence is it better that someone is happy with little drive/ ambition or that they’re constantly unsatisfied but driven and motivated? — Benj96
In nations where the public health responses so far have been efficient and effective (e.g. Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam, Iceland, Germany, (Scandinavia), Australia, New Zealand, etc), you are quite right, NOS: their approaches have been much more collectivist than not. However, nations mislead by individualistic, reactive, populist governments like the former Trump maladministration, BoJo's clown show, Modi's "Raj", Xi's sweatshop gulag, Putin's klepto-czarship & Bolsonaro's junta, for example, demonstrate yet again that not working collectively – collaboratively – on common complex problems is disastrously self-defeating. — 180 Proof
What about the autonomy of the baby? — Gregory
By all accounts Tesla has never gone anywhere near meeting projected production, — Janus
you need to be able to store the energy, or back-up those windmills with fossil fuel generating capacity, — counterpunch