LLMs now routinely write clear and flowing prose. — Jamal
I think, given the dangers of AI, and the ways in which prominent members of this site have used it to make themselves look smarter than they really are, that its use should be banned altogether on this site. — Janus
Or maybe you see authoritarianism everywhere?
— Tom Storm
Then I wouldn't see it at all, as there'd be nothing to contrast it against. If everything is orange, you can't tell it's orange. — baker
Oh? Or maybe you fail to notice their authoritarianism? — baker
Authoritarianism is when your dad punches you in the face if you steal your neighbor's bike (even though no one saw you). Totalitarianism is when you're a masterless slave, toiling in a quarry for eating an apple that fell off a passing truc — Astorre
This resonates perfectly with Kierkegaard: Faith is a personal act. Faith is silent. — Astorre
Oh? Or maybe you fail to notice their authoritarianism? — baker
Please share: do you see the "preacher's paradox" or do you think it doesn't exist? — Astorre
He asserts: I want others to be saved, too. After all, is it wrong to wish for others to be saved? — Astorre
True religion is not about possessing the truth. No religion does that. It is rather an invitation into a journey that leads one toward the mystery of God. Idolatry is religion pretending that it has all the answers.
If our reason represents us to be intrinsically morally valuable, it is telling us that our moral value supervenes on some of our essential properties — Clarendon
Liberalism has all sorts of definitions. — Leontiskos
One of the central problems with liberalism is the incoherence of its neutrality principle. Liberalism claims that it is a neutral, universal, tradition-independent framework, when in fact it is one particular, non-neutral tradition among others. The liberal state envisions itself as a kind of referee who oversees the game but does not interfere on behalf of any side and has no value-commitments of its own. It is perhaps the only political philosophy which pretends that it is itself neutral; which pretends that it utilizes no metanarrative in ordering narratives. — Leontiskos
I don't see how it's possible to deny that there is order in the universe, regardless of humans perceiving it. If solid H2O sometimes floated in liquid H2O, and sometimes didn't… If photons sometimes traveled at 299,792,458 mps, and sometimes didn't… If electrons sometimes repelled each other, and sometimes didn't…. if the strength of gravity sometimes followed the inverse square law, and sometimes didn't... On and on and on and on and on... It would be chaos if those things didn't always work the same way under the same conditions. The universe would be chaos. If a universe could exist at all. — Patterner
There is meaning, and there is order. We find those things. — Patterner
Why is that? — Patterner
The invitation in your OP was to consider how we use the word"cause", and you showed that causal chains and inferring probabilistic causes are quite different ways of speaking.
— Banno
That's what I was trying to do. I don't think I've been very successful. — T Clark
Kinda reminds me why Buddha never answered questions on what is "reality" and such because it didn't really matter. I kinda like his stance. — Darkneos
As for consciousness, strong evidence points to a neuroscientific basis. Doesn't matter if you guys talk about it often on this site, doesn't make it accurate. — Darkneos
When you say something is a standard view you're implying a degree of popularity, even the context of your post showed as such. — Darkneos
There is a difference between "we don't directly engage with reality" and "reality cannot be known". Again science it a strong argument that we don't have to directly engage with it to know it (which would explain why it's findings frequently go against our intuitions). — Darkneos
It never claims to have perfect knowledge of the world and acknowledges it could all be wrong, but we currently don't have a better method for understanding reality, and this one is working really well. Shockingly IMO. — Darkneos
sounds like a looney thing to think, especially since embodied cognition has fallen out of favor due to it's flaws (and evidence against it). — Darkneos
There is a difference between "we don't directly engage with reality" and "reality cannot be known". — Darkneos
RadicalJoe I’m guessing the above isn’t quite what you were trying to inspire? :joke: — Fire Ologist
I don't radically disagree with much — Tom Storm
It's not ad populum fallacy, also you're the one who claimed it first by saying it's a standard view yet when I say it's not suddenly it's a fallacy. Though I would argue philosophy is a popularity constest. — Darkneos
This is the heart beat Mother Earth needs to hear and feel. — RadicalJoe
By being better human beings today we choose to invest in a better world for tomorrow. — RadicalJoe
Helping each other, our shared humanity, is what truly defines who we are. — RadicalJoe
Celebrate diversity as a strength that enriches our deeper collective consciousness. By accepting and embracing our differences, we fuel our collective strengths and struggles. — RadicalJoe
But that is what is meant especially since it started with "The external world that cannot be know" by their own words. Your assessment is still incorrect. — Darkneos
It's actually a minority position among philosophers. — Darkneos
Kant merely said that we don't directly perceive it. Heidegger was kinda nutty on that end. — Darkneos
More or less it's a position you have to accept to get anywhere in philosophy otherwise you're dead in the water. — Darkneos
But given the success of science it could be reasonable to say we do directly make contact with it. — Darkneos
t is, especially since it doesn't seem like they understand what they are saying with "External world" in air quotes. Suggesting it cannot be known means there is nothing to be a part of since it's all in your mind.
External world and reality means there is a world to be a part of that does not depend on you for its existence. I feel that much should be obvious to gather from what I'm saying. — Darkneos
It's self refuting if you think about it. Like if there is no "External world" that kinda renders philosophy moot. — Darkneos
But right there you point to the core dynamic that organises society - a balance between competition and cooperation - and then shrug your shoulders and say there seems to be no natural order in the way humans collectively organise. — apokrisis
And yet maths tells us that even chaos is a structured pattern. — apokrisis
But I mean, in our models of the world, we only have to be right for all practical purposes. We don't need to know everything to know enough. — apokrisis
But what happens when the greenie and the developer meet to discuss their mutual prejudices? Doesn't the frustration soon rise to the point where each must assert their dominance in terms of some moral absolutism?
Or don't you talk to developers much. What do you make of a spectacle like Trump telling the UN that climate change is the world's biggest hoax? — apokrisis
My preferred interpretation of W's statement is that the fly bottle is something the fly has contrived and by which it mistakenly thinks of itself as apart from the rest of the world instead of a part of the world. So, showing it the way out would include correcting misconceptions, e.g. the belief in an "external world" which can't truly be known, mind/body and other dualisms. The fly bottle is self-imposed. — Ciceronianus
Reality is dichotomies all the way down. Not turtles. — apokrisis
So causality is foundational. It is always just our idea of reality. And yet also, one has a reality to check things with. Once you understand this is the game, the rest is just working out the details to the point you find a good reason to care. — apokrisis
Do humans need to do this for everyday living? Almost universally they prove that they can get by without any measurable degree of logical or mathematical or experimental rigour.
They can just see trees and mountains and imagine instead how much better things would look with as a flattened plaza with some public artwork and this year's version of fashionably blocky buildings. Even beauty can have its necessary other. Be determined by the eye of a beholder. Be considered as a celebration of all things civilised and well-machined. — apokrisis
Yes. But so often the fly is comfortable where it is. — Banno
It's also worth noting that the argument is not that all hate speech causes violence - another rhetorical ploy being used here. It's more about the othering that is central to hate speech, together with the issue of the culpability of the speaker in subsequent violence. — Banno
But not everything is living and embodied in Nature. You need a model of causality that is large enough to even hopefully account for the reason why a Cosmos would exist. And one that goes beyond flowery words to have mathematical and quantifiable consequences.
Co-emergence is a better way to think about this rather than via a constraint/freedom dichotomy.
— Joshs
But the argument is that freedoms and constraints co-emerge. In logic, that is what being a dichotomy means. That which is formed by being mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive. — apokrisis
