Yet I feel, despite the trials & tribulations I'm going through, the question "what lies beyond ethics?" is worth asking. — Agent Smith
Well, that the pen writes well, is easy on the hand, is durable, and so on. Could we transpose the form of the good onto a human being? — Agent Smith
What makes 'The Good Life' good?
Felicity Kendal. — Banno
One aspect of self projection which is also worth discussing with you is the professional role personas put on, especially as mental health professionals. — Jack Cummins
I believe philosophy's central project has always been to optimize agency by helping one to unlearn self-immiserating habits through various daily reflective practices (e.g. pythagorean, epicurean, stoic, pyrrhonian, cynical, neoplatonic, peripatetic ... pragmaticist, absurdist, etc). — 180 Proof
I think politics is more specifically the interest of one social group's attempt to manipulate another specific social group or itselves undesired properties into another more desirable trait. — Vishagan
So, why would God bother to create an intricately fine-tuned universe for the sake of souls who don’t need one? — Art48
ll try, but I admit I am running out of ways to explain myself.
I've numbered the propositions below so it is easier to refer to them.
1. x cannot be used to support x. This is circular reasoning.
2. The scientific method is, simply put, verification by empirical evidence.
3. All success stories resulting from the scientific method are types of empirical evidence.
4. Therefore, these success stories cannot be used to support the scientific method.
To be extra clear: The scientific method is a correct method. It is not inherently circular. What is circular is to attempt to defend the scientific method by appealing to the scientific method. To use an analogy: The laws of logic are true. But we cannot use logic to support the laws of logic. — A Christian Philosophy
That's says more about you than it does about Nietzsche, I'm afraid. — Tate
Nietzsche is himself something to overcome. — Tate
My point would be that even in the face of a widely unpopular and unjustified war, many families still sent their sons to war primarily because of this flawed calculation of suffering and value - and it isn't an accident that evangelical conservatives broadly supported the Iraq war, despite the evidence - their entire doctrine is based around this flawed notion of suffering and value. They are the easiest to sway with an argument of sacrifice. — 64bithuman
The christian claims: e.g. that God exists; that Christ is God; that man has a soul; that good and evil are objective; etc. — A Christian Philosophy
A grieving Mother seeking value in her son's sacrifice would be reassured to know that the sacrifice did have a bigger value. — 64bithuman
In essence, it was easier to just explain to everybody that they died for the greater good — 64bithuman
If you accept those axioms, then we get to the discussion I was hoping to have, which is that our relationship with value and suffering is dangerously flawed and can be taken advantage of, particularly when we begin to make the false assumption that suffering always entails value and fail to recognize that sometimes suffering is just suffering, full stop. This may seem obvious, but I would argue that it isn't and that we are extremely prone to falling for this false correlation. — 64bithuman
But honesty, as Billy Joel once said, is such a lonely word. — 64bithuman
I would argue that the drive of consumer capitalism is not strictly to eliminate suffering, but rather to rise to opulence, — 64bithuman
Also as a sidebar to a sidebar, I don't think that technology has been developed predominantly to pamper the human body - what about missiles, medicine, etc. — 64bithuman
. I do not agree that modern Western culture is all about the avoidance of suffering. — 64bithuman
Since they don't have spiritual or religious believes, thinking about it leads to emptiness, so they simply avoid it and focus on the moment. — Skalidris
I'm just wondering if we could deal with the fact that there is nothing, and be happy about it). — Skalidris
t is also true that often the poor suffer tremendously and work very hard only to die destitute. — 64bithuman
This is kind of what I'm trying to talk about, our expectation that suffering inherently holds meaning — 64bithuman
Philosophy is the search for truth; thus if Christianity is in fact true, then philosophy will find Christianity. And if Christianity is not true, then philosophy will find that too. — A Christian Philosophy
Getting back to Trump, isn’t his genius that he doesn’t even make an effort to fill in the blanks of his sophist arguments. He just puts the idea that needs justification out into the public sphere and demands folk find the justification. — apokrisis
(This is of course a caricature. When actual PoMo texts aspire to rational discourse, the standard socialised mistake they make is to discover the dialectic at the centre of every metaphysical debate and huff, well if two opposites can both be true, then nothing can actually be considered the stable truth. — apokrisis
we can presumably move on to the complete liberation of primal screaming. :up: — apokrisis
Why wouldn't you want to use simulation theory as a tool to refine your understanding of reality and epistemology? — Yohan
This is a meaty philosophy topic. One of greats. — Yohan
Its simple. I have yet to find any solid foundation on which life as we know it is grounded upon, therefor I remain open to the possibility that no such foundation exists. — Yohan
It is the biggest show on earth, and maybe the cosmos. So there's a rather obvious project. Organise your life so as not to miss any part of this ultimate story. — apokrisis
I meant the opposite. It is the compounding of the confusion dressed up as continental cleverness. — apokrisis
Are we gonna spend our lives trying to get satisfaction and meaning out something that might not even be real? — Yohan
a fragmentary or fragile self that it becomes unstable. — Jack Cummins
Or do you think someone in her position should not drink at all? — Fooloso4
A pretty pessimistic conclusion where the only alternative is to be ... a poet and philosopher. — apokrisis
Roll on the PoMo revolution. — apokrisis
I am asking the question of what it means to find the "true" self. It is a fairly complex question because it involves the social and existential sense of selfhood? How important is the idea of a 'true' self? To what extent is the self bound up with relationships with others, or as being, alone, in relation to the wider cosmos, and making sense of this? — Jack Cummins
C) being a member of the Republican party — Real Gone Cat
I don't like your proof because it proves me wrong, and I simply reject it possibly with some baseless argument or foolish comment. — SpaceDweller
As to whether I'd rather hire a prior drug user to deal with drug policy — Hanover
