The OP makes me think of the reverse situation. Women want equality but that means a man doesn't need to get up and give his seat to a woman standing in a packed bus but women then brand the man as ignoble. What's up with that? If you like the rainbow, don't you have to put up with the rain? — Agent Smith
Why is the default truth value for a proposition false? Is it though? Atheism? — Agent Smith
What about undecidability? — Agent Smith
Some examples of crimes against society:
1. Abortion
2. Sexual deviance
3. Bigamy and polygamy
4. Disturbance of the peace
5. Violation of helmet and seat belt laws
6. Cruelty to animals
7. Domestic violence
8. Desecration of a flag and public monuments
9. Graffiti
10. Littering and loitering — L'éléphant
It's archaic patriarchic nonsense. — Banno
Ah! So, "there is no good reason to believe in god" implies atheism but it doesn't imply "there is no god"? :chin: There are brands of atheism consistent with this line of reasoning. Could you elaborate on that. Thanks. — Agent Smith
To go from "there is no good reason to believe in god" and "there is no good reason to believe in goblins" to there is no god and there are no goblins is to commit the argumentum ad ignorantiam fallacy (vide infra). — Agent Smith
Mary Midgley is particularly clear and readable on these issues — Banno
Talk of things being solid is grounded in our everyday interactions with solid things, wonky things, liquids, and so on. It's nothing o do with quantum. — Banno
The question is, if you and I see them as being different, how do we go beyond those difference to see what it really is. — Wayfarer
Then what would you mean when you said "we see the same objects (differently)"? — Srap Tasmaner
Example: when you’re devastated from a broken heart being told to cheer up on account of there being more fish in the sea brings you down, not up. But being told the situation is awful helps to relieve the pain, making you feel better. — javra
different people see the same objects in different ways.
— Kenosha Kid
And I don't see how you can say that with a straight face. — Srap Tasmaner
Yes! That bit doesn't confuse me. The bit which confuses me is that objects are mini theories but don't worry about the theoretical import of the object when using it. — fdrake
This makes me very confused. Objects are mini theories — fdrake
The Argumentum ad ignorantiam fallacy states that just because G hasn't been proved, we can't then conclude ~G. The rationale is simple: no proof at all for G is indistinguishable from there is proof of G but you haven't discovered it yet). — Agent Smith
Paradoxes and contrary pairs are sometimes just literary and mnemonic means. They can sound like catchy phrases, witticisms, but sometimes they are just summaries of complex topics. Of course, if one doesn't know those topics, one doesn't know that either. — baker
You would think, someone that is hopeful, optimistic and has an idealistic view of the future would be uplifting, encouraging and motivational, but I find these views, or the concepts that hold about the world to only further depress me further. — Cobra
Recently listened to "Epic of Gilgamesh" and he was described as wise. But clearly he started out unethical, self serving, probably cruel. Is that a contradiction to being wise? — TiredThinker
Are you seriously claiming that I can see a flower more clearly than I could when I was five years old, because that would be the implication of your 'ever-improving' model claim? — Janus
I am not suggesting that we are just novelty producing machines. What I am trying to convey is that we can only experience the world in terms of similarities and likenesses with respect to our history. Everything we encounter, no matter how new and surprising, has our stamp on it already. Nothing is ever completely unfamiliar to us. We can’t make any claims about a world beyond this relationship without lapsing into incoherence. — Joshs
I make that distinction, explicitly. Indeed, you do not seem to have grasped the simple point that we can talk about both our experiences and the things experienced. — Banno
The way I see it, this new trend is mostly rooted in ignorance of Western traditions, which is part of the general cultural decline in the West. — Apollodorus
Enlightenment, regardless of what in particular is meant by it, appears to be such that people tend to generate hostility or envy around it.
Have you ever met anyone who would be happy about another's claims of enlightenment? — baker
What question/s do you think is of most value to ask leaders of countries/organisation?
If you had only three questions to ask what would you ask and why? — I like sushi
Enlightenment is concerned with truth, and therefore, to address the begged question we are forced to affirm that value is an essential part of this.
The matter then turns to value: what is it? An argument over the nature of value is THE philosophical discussion to have. Until the nature of value is revealed, talk about enlightenment is just question begging. This makes ethics/aesthetics the first order of affair. All that talk about Buddhists, theologians and Gods, rationalists and their quest for axiomatic assurance, all of these "narratives" come down to an analysis of value and its meaning. — Constance
On the other hand, as I noted in an earlier post, I am closer to enlightenment than any of you are.
— T Clark
No, no. I am, heh, heh, "far closer". — Constance
I wanted to ask others if they think people or intellectuals in general have a desire to be consistent? — Shawn
Do you know anything that isn't somehow "tied to various narratives people hold"? — baker
I guess I am who I am because I am. — Ragian Azariah
