Cauliflower is good either is a fact in respect of some criteria, — tim wood
It also doesn't suggest doxastic voluntarism like the wording of "choice", and "acceptance". — S
He examines the human experience of knowledge as the
experience of absolute and limitless transcendence. — Rank Amateur
Physical possibility is what's possible given the laws of physics. — frank
No, it's not that, it's a fundamental disagreement about appropriate lines of enquiry. I'm a foundationalist, and as such, I think that some lines of enquiry are misguided. This is one such case. — S
What you're doing isn't very clever, in my opinion. It's just like a child who keeps asking why. The standard is just the standard. If you act in accordance with it, then you're reasonable, and if you act in violation if it, then you're unreasonable. That's it. — S
67% of 58 voters say that they belong to a religion, yet only 36% of 58 voters say that they consider themselves a religious person. — S
The concept here is, it is difficult to make a reasoned argument against the proposition that man has some in inherent need for knowledge, and understanding. And he has some need for understanding his purpose. And as far as i am aware of them, all of the philosophical attempts to define such meaning, that does not include something "God Like" are unconvincing. If it is existentialism, absurdity, hedonism, nihilism - none seem to convincing - at least to me, and I believe in general. The best individual answers i have heard on this point - tend to be a kind of secular spirituality. One that are focused on love of others, on some selflessness. Which I wont argue against, but always seem rather God centered to me - just without the God. — Rank Amateur
All one would have to say is "If you do such and such actions, maybe 'as if' certain things were true, or in the manner of playing along with some particular fiction, then it can have x, y and z benefits, including insights, etc." That seems to be all that's saying, really, and that wouldn't be near as controversial.--at least no more controversial than saying that people receive benefits or gain insights from interacting with the arts.myth was a programme of action. When a mythical narrative was symbolically re-enacted, it brought to light within the practitioner something "true" about human life and the way our humanity worked, even if its insights, like those of art, could not be proven rationally. If you did not act upon it, it would remain as incomprehensible and abstract – like the rules of a board game, which seem impossibly convoluted, dull and meaningless until you start to play.
Religious truth is, therefore, a species of practical knowledge. Like swimming, we cannot learn it in the abstract; we have to plunge into the pool and acquire the knack by dedicated practice. Religious doctrines are a product of ritual and ethical observance, and make no sense unless they are accompanied by such spiritual exercises as yoga, prayer, liturgy and a consistently compassionate lifestyle. Skilled practice in these disciplines can lead to intimations of the transcendence we call God, Nirvana, Brahman or Dao. Without such dedicated practice, these concepts remain incoherent, incredible and even absurd.
What he was referring to, was a concept of his theology called "pre- apprehension". Pre apprehension is the concept that it is man’s nature to search for the infinite, because he is either totally or partly, aware of its existence. This implicit knowledge is the base for knowing all things. Rahner would describe what we explicitly know of the universe as an island floating on a sea of a preapprehed knowledge of all we do not yet understand, but are aware of its existence. Man is a creature in the boundary between the physical world we inhabit and the infinite world we are innately aware of.
I am not aware of a good argument that can dismiss this very natural part of the human condition. Camus called this desire absurd, and that was an outgrowth of existentialism which says we can define this for ourselves. — Rank Amateur
Isn't it logically and metaphysically possible for the laws of physics to be different from what they are? — Echarmion
By virtue of this, we know P is also true at a metaphysically and logically impossible world. — frank
When people say morality is "mere" preference, they're ignoring the bulk of what it is we do when we do morality, — VagabondSpectre
To the “mile” example, if someone or some persons invent the mile, then thats what it is. If someone else comes along and says “no, a mile is ten feet” then they are full of shit. — DingoJones
You're saying that moral "truth" has to not depend on human preference, because human preference is not objective. That's meta-ethical. — VagabondSpectre
No, but the stances we take on issues like these factual issues do impact our moral actions and arguments. — VagabondSpectre
In other words, whether or not it is true that X causes autism can determine whether or not an action is moral — VagabondSpectre
I was making use of terminology previously used in this thread. The rest seems to also be about nitpicking semantics. Ignore what I said, then. — javra
When you say "the moral part", you're appealing to a meta-ethical definition of morality as theoretical. When I say it, I appeal to morality as an applied [meta]-physics in service of human values. — VagabondSpectre
If a) it is objectively true that subjective beings hold presence — javra
if b) it is objectively true that all subjective beings share a grouping of core characteristics that thereby validly makes them subjective beings, — javra
c) it is objectively true these core characteristics entail common, or universal, core wants (e.g., that of living life with minimal dolor), — javra
it is objectively true that all subjective beings hold an implicit, if not also explicit, understanding of what is good for them, — javra
Basically you could also argue that science itself amounts to personal preference about which empirical beliefs to adopt, but you would be focusing on the wrong thing. — VagabondSpectre
“I like cauliflower” is not an opinion, it is a persuasion, grounded in feelings, and cannot be false. — Mww
The standards of reason arbitrate. — DingoJones
Think about how often, in practice, someone promotes the opposite...
"It is right to undermine the health of your child?"
Physical and mental health are such basic necessities to well-being and happiness that in practice nobody ever disagrees with the idea that promoting the health of children is morally important/obligatory. — VagabondSpectre
I accept that people don't automatically understand this stuff, and I even understand why they reject vaccines; they're just wrong about it. — VagabondSpectre
The answer is “apply reason to see which person is correct.”. — DingoJones
In a nutshell their claim was that now because of global terrorism, violence/oppression of women, and so on religions thenselves are causing harm and are unnecessary. — kudos
If you take a neutron star on its own, I posit that the curve associated with its mass could be measured as an angle. — wax
Your question has been answered, just not in the way you would like me to answer it. I — DingoJones
dangerous on account of individuals believing without question in something with no room for rational arguement. — kudos
The question if an event would be equally likely to exist or not exist given some reason to believe it doesnt exist. — kudos
does the belief that others should all ascribe to atheism itself necessitate a nonbelief in all things of this nature? — kudos
All men believe what they sense, but does argueing for the universal spread of atheism mean that one must systematically deny anything outside of its realms of plausibility? — kudos
If they say they like cauliflower, that's either true or false. — tim wood
Many people are looking fondly back to 1950s and want to re-create them. — Ilya B Shambat
I don't need a consensus to know, for example, if someone has presented an invalid argument. If the standard was validity, then they're being unreasonable. That's how this works. — S
You use the standard. What you are talking about is accepting the standard. Im not saying anyone must accept reason, only that should they choose to do so, they are accepting a particular standard, some basic rules that govern what is reasonable. If they do not follow that standard, regardless of whether or not they claim to be doing so, then they are not being reasonable.
The consensus would be in deciding whether or not to BE reasonable, it is something you agree or decide to do. The creation of that standard needs no consensus.
Someone creates a mile, a certain length of distance that they call a mile. If another person says “i just walked 10ft, a whole mile” then they are not correct according to that created standard of a mile. They claim its a mile, but there is a fact of the matter about what a mile actually is and 10 ft isnt it. No consensus required. This person can claim they are using miles, or they can use km instead, or feet instead or whatever..they could get a million people to call 10ft a mile. Doesnt matter, it doesnt change the created standard and when they claim 10ft is a mile they are wrong, they are just calling something else a mile that is not. They have not accepted the standard of the mile, but have rejected it or redefined it into something else (ergo, not a mile). — DingoJones
How about because your examples are not opinions. "I like cauliflower," "I prefer Evil Dead to Casablanca," are categorical statements, true or false as what they aver is true or false. An opinion is a judgment with respect to some criteria. "In my opinion, X is better than Y." — tim wood
Whether or not a person thinks they are being reasonable, there is a fact of the matter of whether they actually are. — DingoJones
