you're essentially equating the "universe" with Kant's thing-in-itself — Xtrix
First of all, acknowledging that women are not the only ones capable of ‘disarming’ violence with humour, hospitality and humility is an important part of this discussion. — Possibility
domination is a pointless illusion — Possibility
For me, it is to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration. — Possibility
We're well into the 21st century and we're without a new understanding of morality; two centuries later! — Rand
We don't need a purpose for humanity from anyone. We need a definition of moral principles for everyone, to create our own purpose. — Rand
I love being feminine and hopefully, it is obvious I believe feminity plays an important part in human societies. — Athena
We need to demonstrate the value of kindness and gentleness — Possibility
We need to argue for a more accurate view of reality than ‘domination’ — Possibility
My granddaughter who takes charge of shelter programs is proud that she can disarm men carrying knives with her feminity. She and I know if a male were sent in to take the knife, the problem would probably escalate. She goes out of her way to be none threatening to maintain peace. How angry can you get with a big cute bunny? :lol: You can identify the women in charge of a shelter, they are the ones who wearing the hat with a spinner thing on top, or a bunny suit. — Athena
Those who say space is discrete or that the continuous doesn't apply to the real world are morons and I refuse to debate them anymore. — Gregory
In the sense that you're attempting to achieve it, I can't possibly think of any less academic setting than an anonymous online discussion. — Rand
Or emotion is just a type of reason. — Rand
We can't talk about the universe in any way, yet you are talking about it. — Xtrix
That means many minds, much greater than yours, have struggled with the question of what science is. — Xtrix
You could be right or wrong, but simply declaring it accomplishes nothing. — Xtrix
I'm always struck by people who want to quickly and confidently proclaim a definitive answer, or some solid definition, for something or other -- without any context. I'm further struck to watch as they're satisfied by this, as if by doing so they've settled anything. — Xtrix
Spouting empty nonsense won't be tolerated -- it'll be, properly, ignored. — Xtrix
Then why bother distinguishing the two and say nature happens "in" the universe? — Xtrix
asking what one "gets out" of philosophy is implying it has to have some use, which is reminiscent of those among us who can't see the value of anything that can't be monetized. — Xtrix
"I am the center of the universe, and everything else moves around me." — Pneumenon
What part of the universe isn't nature? — Xtrix
We're trying to explore the basis for the word itself -- which was a Latin translation of the Greek word "phusis." — Xtrix
Is it possible that women may think fundamentally different from men — Athena
Subsequently, existential philosophical discussions result in the erosion of will power with no associated benefits for gaining insight and emotion becomes the driving motivation for discussions instead of reason. — Rand
how can a brain (with all the various properties of material objects), be caused to do something by something that lacks all material properties (no mass, no energy, no charge, and no location in space)? Or does the mind actually have some material properties? If so, which ones?
• If minds occupy a specific location in space, where is this? Does it occupy the same space as the brain?
• How does the brain deliver sights and sounds to the mind? For example, does every neuron connect to the mind, or only certain ones, or combinations?
• If a mind can become detached from a body (as in an OBE), how is it able to perceive what is happening in the absence of being connected to sense organs? If sense organs aren’t needed when disembodied, why are they needed when paired with the body?
• Do minds pre-exist bodies, or do they come into existence with the body? If the latter, when? At fertilization? Does it develop in parallel with the brain?
• What ties a specific mind to a specific body? E.g. if a mind causes me to raise my arm, why can’t my mind cause you to raise your arm?
• If my mind causes me to raise my arm, and simultaneously your mind causes you to raise your arm, how do we know it wasn’t my arm causing your arm to raise, and your mind causing my arm to raise?
• Memories are lost when brains are damaged from trauma or disease, suggesting memories are encoded in the brain. If memories are physical, and destroyed as the brain decomposes at death, but your mind survives, in what sense is that mind still YOU? i.e. what aspects of YOU is your disembodied mind? — Relativist
meaning=purpose, but since things do not have purposes but are given purposes by the individual, purpose=use. So, what sorts of things are useful? Everything you know and perceive and do is useful in the game of the will to power, which is why Nietzsche's amor fati is indispensable from the conception.What sorts of things are meaningful? How do these things become meaningful? To whom are these things meaningful?
All thought, judgment, perception, considered as comparison, has as its precondition a "positing of equality," and earlier still a "making equal." The process of making equal is the same as the process of incorporation of appropriated material in the amoeba. "Memory" late, in so far as here the drive to make equal seems already to have been subdued: differentiation is preserved. Remembering as a process of classification and pigeonholing: who is active?