Can you provide direct quotations? — baker
Your interpretation is not in line with Nazi ideology. — baker
It seems to me that in the background of this discussion there is the idea that intelligence and consciousness are extremely important elements of the universe, so that we have some tendency to even interpret it entirely under this category, like a conscious universe or an intelligent universe. This is still the ancient human tendency and desire to conceive ourselves as the center of the universe. — Angelo Cannata
Martin Heidegger . . . links the law of identity "A=A" to the Parmenides' fragment (....for the same thing can be thought and can exist). Heidegger thus understands identity starting from the relationship of Thinking and Being, and from the belonging-together of Thinking and Being. — Art48
How do you know that?
Can you substantiate your claim with empirical evidence, or is it just conjecture? — baker
Philosophers are the ones that don't seem to realize that as they attempt to re-ask the same questions we asked and solved in the 4th grade. That isn't to say that there aren't some higher level assumptions that we take for granted that can't be questioned - like does God exist - but then ordinary people can be just as concerned about whether god exists (like when they are suffering at the hand of an unfair world) as a philosopher can. — Harry Hindu
n Genesis it is very clearly stated multiple times that man was created in the likeness of God. There is no possible secular counterpart to this. — Moses
See Does Reason Know what it is Missing?, Stanley Fish, for a discussion of Habermas' analysis of this issue.) — Wayfarer
Hillel’s formulation of the Golden Rule — schopenhauer1
One should never do something to others that one would regard as an injury to one's own self.
- Mahābhārata 13.114.8 (Critical edition)
Thus the Golden Rule is extremely informal. There must be more rigorous ethics underpinning it, and that is the point of ethical reasoning. — schopenhauer1
Well, other people might not want to be treated the exact same way you want to be treated. That’s why the golden rule fails, in my opinion. Better to find out how they want to be treated first of all instead of assuming that everyone wants the same treatment as yourself. — NOS4A2
The issue I think is that while we are indeed “hard wired” for empathy and compassion, this doesn’t tell us why someone who isn’t hard wired for empathy and compassion (or someone who is racist, sexist, etc) is “wrong.” — Paulm12
He has split the GOP, and now I think I saw a poll indicating at least 50% of them are more or less anti-Trump. — jgill
However, I am telling myself that I should go and vote but feel tempted not to do so because the various leaders don't see to represent much hope for change in any positive sense. — Jack Cummins
So how do we reconcile this? By looking beyond and within the generic abstractions we call ‘agreed-upon facts’ to the actual affectively relevant way that each of us contextually forms the sense of an agreed-upon fact. — Joshs
Even when we consider the possibility of emotions in AI machines, discussions are not based on our emotions, but on scientific criteria. — Angelo Cannata
The fact that natural selection tends to generally choose people who are empathetic and cooperative thing doesn’t mean people who deviate from this view need to be corrected. — Paulm12
Characterizing an argument to dismiss it is not the same as addressing it, especially since there are 2000-year-old, traditional explanations still being accepted and discussed today. — Art48
Exactly, because those Nazi officials understood suicide as a honorable ending. — javi2541997
The availability of cheap contraceptives implies that abortion isn't necessary for responsible women of child-bearing age. If I don't want an omelette, I shouldn't break an egg. To break an egg, make an omelette and then throw it away is being mean, not only to the egg, but to yourself as well. — Agent Smith
So, the corollary here would be "I believe in physicalism, but I don't know if physical reality exists?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
Anyhow, to come fill circle, I think the rationale for this sort of speculation, aside from being idle navel gazing, is that assumptions tied to our ontology bleed into our methodology and science whether we like it or not. This is probably even more true in we don't critically examine our ontology, but instead pick it up by osmosis, as a default. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If the existence of God / the physical nature of reality don't have any practical import, and if no evidence supports their being true over their not being true, wouldn't it make more sense to be agnostic? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Religion is much more than people's opinion of what god wants. — Merkwurdichliebe
These are not truths (re: philosophy), they are principles or criteria for determining – approximating – truths (re: science, history, politics, art, love). — 180 Proof
"unless other ontologies can prove they are true, we should go with physicalism." Why is that ontology the default we need positive evidence to move away from? — Count Timothy von Icarus
If "the physicalist who is a methodological naturalist doesn't make truth claims about the nature of reality," then in what way is their position physicalist? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Physicalism is a factual truth-claim. It's the claim that the physical, which is mind independent, is ontologically more primitive than experience; that the physical supervenes on everything that is. Arguably this definition is too broad to be particularly meaningful... — Count Timothy von Icarus
To give us hope for a better life. Here, we suffer pain and disease and war. We lose loved ones. Without God, what would you tell a mother who just lost her child? And for justice. — Art48
(That's more the subject of Kelly Ross' article Meaning and the Problem of Universals.) — Wayfarer
How does one know that, certainly causing so much "pain" to family and friends, one's own "pain" will end with deliberately killing oneself? — 180 Proof
This is the basis of all evolved cognitive systems including h. Sapiens. You could say that our cognitive systems designate what ‘things’ are. — Wayfarer
He says that all sentient creatures up to and including humans negotiate their environment by seeing in 'gestalts' which are ordered wholes. But these gestalts don't exist in the physical world, they're wholly and solely the creation of the animal mind. He doesn't say that the external world doesn't exist, only that the way in which it exists is devoid of features, structure and form, which are imputed to it by the mind. — Wayfarer
