What I mean by that is that there is no difference between your mind and my mind. They are not a separate entities. — Markus
Not really. Just different. Anyway, there is no way to know one way or another unless humans define things in terms of putting themselves at the top of the hierarchy, as they normally do. It's good marketing. — Rich
If learning is knowledge, then all life forms do this. — Rich
I guess we can have a poll and see how well your facts are doing? — Rich
The issue here, I believe, is that the above two facts are just your personal beliefs — Rich
How did the religious philosophers come up with a omnipotent, omnipresent, and omnibenevolent God when inductive knowledge could not demonstrably indicate such a God? — Brian A
Is there any way to rescue the cosmological argument as a reasonable indicator of God's existence (as in an omnipresent, omnipotent, and omni-benevolent God)? — Brian A
1. The universe has to be balanced. — Markus
Everything must have sprung from something, and that something, I assume, is consciousness. — Markus
If you ponder about it carefully you will notice that all we are is a mere perspective that perceives and is aware — Markus
What tells you we are not the same mind? — Markus
God is necessarily the first cause: "being the first cause" is analytically a predicate of the subject "God." The reason why God must be the first cause is because that is part of God's definition as it were, viz. "the first cause." — Brian A
Can you prove any of this beyond your belief in them. — Sir2u
So what is the reason you have for life? To make the universe self aware. So what did the universe do before humans came along, and what will it do after we are gone? What happens if the universe is not at all self aware, which I am sure it is not? We lose our reason to live so we won't exist anymore. — Sir2u
Why would something as vast as the universe pick some little fucked race like us in a very tiny little piece of itself to help it be self aware. It would be like the jolly green giant sending an atom of its toenail to to find out what is in its left ear. — Sir2u
Since something cannot cause itself. — Brian A
I am hesitant to agree that this is an adequate counter-argument. For, the cyclical universe theory entails the view that there is X-amount of matter that cyclically explodes and implodes, and that matter is eternal. But it is improbable that matter is eternal; rather, it is more probable that the evolving-devolving-matter itself had a cause: viz. why something exists rather than nothing — Brian A
I don't understand your argument about why the causal chain cannot be infinite. I don't know what you mean by the universe "traversing" the infinite. Could you explain a bit further? — Brian A
When you focus right down to it, every single behaviour and action from eating to love and even death can be sourced right down to a mechanism just to sustain the continuation of life. — ThinkingMatt
You still have not proven that there is a purpose or meaning to any life. — Sir2u
Our common notion of causality requires the passage of time. What does it mean for something to "begin" to exist, or "have a cause" outside of time? — darthbarracuda
And most who disagree with you say you are irrational. — Sir2u
So prove it is untrue. — Sir2u
Marc Mayer wasnt one of the main scholars in the study. Nice cherry-picking, though — Thanatos Sand
It has to be repeated again, most murders are not planned, and are motivated by events occurring immediately before the impassioned act of killing--the jealous husband murder. — Bitter Crank
Who knows, maybe it is!!! — Sir2u
I like the idea of incorporating a humane principle into our understanding of justice. — Brian
But that is as individuals, not as a race. — Sir2u
As a race we would first have to agree on the meaning of life for it to be changed, and that is not going to happen your way. — Sir2u
If we accept that the meaning to life is to live it, then everyone will always agree and there will never be any reason to change it no matter what happens. — Sir2u
Studies have shown that capital punishment is no significant deterrent for murder. — Thanatos Sand
First, many murders are committed in a fit of more or less insane anger, jealousy, or rage. The person is not thinking straight at the time. The second reason is that criminals who kill in cold blood are not very susceptible to the threat of execution. They may operate in such a way that arrest is fairly unlikely, they may be 'protected', or maybe they are just a bit delusional.
The same applies to prison terms. The people who are deterred from crime are people who are basically honest and/or are very afraid of being imprisoned (it would ruin their lives). Members of a criminal subculture may not consider a prison term to be that much of a penalty. — Bitter Crank
That is contradictory to your OP. — Sir2u
That is not her finger.
It is treat that she is trying to tempt the dog with. — Sir2u