You've lost me ... — 180 Proof
Okay, but that's a providential idea, Smith, not a "quintessential conspiracy — 180 Proof
I think this point is only one conception of "God" and even then it's not "conspiratorial" but occult instead. Most of reality experienced by human beings is unseen, not "conspiratorial". Besides, in the Abrahamic tradition for instance, who (or what) is conspiring with "God" to carry out this "quintessential conspiracy theory of cosmic proportions" if there is "only one God"? And what is being transgressed – "law" is being broken – to constitute a "cosmic conspiracy"? — 180 Proof
Everything happens for a reason.
God moves in a mysterious way. — William Cowper
There are no accidents. — Master Oogway
If I may fuse Wittgenstein and Gadamer, then I postulate that 'automatic' metaphor (the kind we act on without noticing) is hugely important for us to be intelligible to one another. At the same time it's one of the major opponents of the philosopher. My fancy way of putting it is...the past that haunts the future that haunts the present. We are future oriented beings whose very goals are determined by inherited ways of talking/thinking. But it's only this inheritance that lets us think at all.
I ask myself how language could develop to include more and more 'literal' abstractions. I don't think some God put the idea of cause and God and rationality in our skulls. I imagine we'd have had to start with names for objects and embed them in a dialogue that lifted them from such a narrow use. — jas0n
we are mostly stuck — jas0n
concept of God — Jack Cummins
Gandhi — Jack Cummins
In 2016, 3 million deaths, or 5.3 percent of all global deaths (7.7 percent for men and 2.6 percent for women), were attributable to alcohol consumption. Globally, alcohol misuse was the seventh-leading risk factor for premature death and disability in 2016. — www
Idk. I referred to gnosticism which says we're "spirits" trapped in prison-matter separated from "God" as an example of a 'metaphysical conspiracy'. — 180 Proof
And if the truth is that some - many - terms are not definable in the way you suppose, you would pretend otherwise in order to retain your mythology? — Banno
The latter connects "ideological / existential" dots arbitrarily (i.e. inductively) in a paranoiac manner whereas the former tend to fill in "transcendent(al)" gaps deductively from arbitrary axioms in a dogmatic manner. Sometimes they converge e.g. Gnosticism — 180 Proof
Exciting how? — baker
You mean, the distractions? — baker
It ends in aging, illness, and death. How else? — baker
Of course I'm not joking. Let's assume that two straight lines is "close" to being a single curved line, two being "close" to one. The curved line is a single line, the two straight lines is two distinct lines. Now you seem to think that the more straight lines you put together, 3, 4, 5, 6, the closer you get to being a single line, such that as you approach an infinity of straight lines, it becomes one curved line. Can't you see that you're going the wrong way? Instead of getting closer and closer, you're getting further and further. Producing a larger and larger multiplicity does not somehow produce the conclusion that the multiplicity is getting closer and closer to being a single entity. — Metaphysician Undercover
A man focussed on goals and always in a hurry — unenlightened
My goal is to grow old and die, and to do it as slowly as possible — unenlightened
Scholars of the highest class, when they hear about the Tao, take it and practice it earnestly.
Scholars of the middle class, when they hear of it, take it half earnestly.
Scholars of the lowest class, when they hear of it, laugh at it.
Without the laughter, there would be no Tao. — Laozi
The Tao is ruthless — Laozi
And this happens. So what?
Further conversation might well reveal their differences.
Alternately, which of them is right? How will you decide?
All those infernal threads that start "what is..." reduced to froth. — Banno
I threw the bathwater. There was no baby in it. — Dan Barker
So a family resemblance can be put in disjunctive normal form, but is extensible or retractible, changing the criteria with use. — Banno
Merriam-Webster:
Above the level of molecular biology, the notion of "gene" has become increasingly complex. The chapter in which Ridley addresses the ambiguities of this slippery word is an expository tour de force. He considers seven possible meanings of gene as used in different contexts: a unit of heredity; an interchangeable part of evolution; a recipe for a metabolic product; … a development switch; a unit of selection; and a unit of instinct.
But if you like polysemy, be my guest. Although, to me, it seems unseemly — jgill
A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. — Witty
Not with wrath do we kill, but with laughter. Come, let us kill the spirit of gravity! — FrIEdrich NIEtzsche
I don't mean to offend you. Maybe the metaphor is obscure. The point is simple. You didn't choose the sounds you chew when you have to talk to strangers and deal with the business of life. You didn't....invent the English language....or do I need to prove that? Am I so bold to be quite sure that neither of us forged their code we are currently employing? — jas0n
How does one measure certainty ? — jas0n
Language is received like the law' is something that it obvious once noticed. — jas0n
