but are these not a product of mind — kill jepetto
That objects cease to exist when not perceived is implausible. Why would any reasonable person believe that? — S
As I mentioned earlier, right or wrong is a property of human actions, the value standard is a property of human beings (certain things are universally valuable to humans) and that standard is also implicit in the action (since an action is done by human beings). — Andrew M
Great, more philosophy jargon. Please translate that. — S
If you can't explain what it is about it which doesn't make sense to you, then your claim can simply be dismissed as unwarranted. I'm speaking in English in a way that makes sense, and in a way that other people can understand. I'm not saying anything like "fribgfh cgjjdfk hjkkfdf vhh" or "hat the field flying at to was". — S
Firstly, I don't even need to argue that they're not abstracts, if that's what I thought, if you're only making a claim without any supporting argument. A claim without any supporting argument can simply be dismissed.
Secondly, I don't really care what you call them. And, like I said before, I would rather avoid going down that route of whether they're abstracts or not. For starters, it isn't even clear to me what's meant by that. They are what they are. We don't need to call them anything extra. — S
Now, you're going to have to be way more specific here and go into further detail about that, because it makes sense to me. It should make sense to anyone who speaks English. — S
Should we hope for, or expect, every pupil to achieve all of this — Brett
But it's not that we just want to prove existence alone. We also want to prove that God has certain attributes too. — TheMadFool
That doesn't come as much of a surprise. Okay, so you've told me your position. I don't accept it, of course. You can attempt to argue in support of it if you want to. — S
But once we take it to this extreme, language has lost its purpose — ZhouBoTong
Misunderstanding accompanied by a dichotomy that is inherently incapable of taking proper account of morality — creativesoul
Even if you see green? — Banno
So Joe's action can be measured against the value standard applicable to human beings. Whether his action is moral or not is a logical consequence of applying that standard. — Andrew M
