I wasn't sure. I agree with you but I'm arguing that there isn't any morsl concern warranted by inexistent persons. — 180 Proof
The unexaminedlife is not worth living. — Socrates
The Lorentz factor is unbounded. — jgill
And I know vastly more about the school of intuitionism compared with your lack of knowledge about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And your emoticon doubly seals it! Who could ever defeat an emoticon? — TonesInDeepFreeze
What is the size of the set of possible states of the universe? I suspect this is the true nmax. Would this be a number best expressed as x^y^z? — hypericin
Empty generalization and bluster. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Forgiveness should be sought for inflicting harms. However, it can also be sought for removing/preventing all positives. — DA671
I haven't, not I'm inclined to read, the "argument" you mention. I try not to splash around in somrbody else's mythological (superstitious) bathwater. — 180 Proof
Oh my, did you hear of a desperate person who wanted to say we revolved around the sun? I mean, its plainly obvious by looking in the sky that it revolves around us. The need to escape God's glory, and our singular importance as human beings in this world is a mental illness for sure!
I think you get the point. The inquisitive and curious mind does not mock attempts at discovery, but always gives it a chance. — Philosophim
At least p-zombie Jesus wouldn't feel pain on the cross. — Marchesk
Well, what if the only universe that existed was the p-zombie one? Then physicalism would have to be true! I swear that sometimes Dennett and friends come awful close to arguing for that universe. — Marchesk
He's the real question. Would Jesus die for p-zombies? — Marchesk
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
Speak for yourself. :smirk:
Philosophers: folk that use language like its a game or art
Ordinary folk: folk that use language to communicate — Harry Hindu
temptation — ArielAssante
And what you call "fatalism" I call futilitariansm. — 180 Proof
No one chooses the historical moment or the place or family or culture-language/s or social class in which one is born. No one chooses their ancestry, ethnicity, color, sex(uality), talents, limitations, handicaps. No one chooses their desires or disgusts or cognitive biases. No one chooses the natural disasters they suffer or diseases that afflict them. No one chooses psychopathy or mental illness or to become suicidal. No one chooses accidents or black/white swans that happen to them. No one chooses never-decreasing entropy (e.g. "the arrow of time") or aging or forgetting. So much of what one is and becomes one cannot choose – this is fate – the hand one is dealt (in a game, and with rules, one does not choose) played with sorrow or with joy: choose! Futility (what you call "fatalism") or amor fati? No one chooses even to face this choice — 180 Proof
The devil says, hey Jesus if what you say is true throw yourself off this cliff and God will save you. This is not about experimentation. — ArielAssante
test — Bylaw
faith as in trust in. I am not denying epistemological issues, just that the massah quote is about having trust in God, not belief in God's existence. — Bylaw
Deus, sive natura — 180 Proof
