Public transportation is just as much available as ever. — god must be atheist
The decline of availability and convenience of public transportation happened not due to capitalists closing down railway lines and making city bus service less frequent... it's because people like to get into cars, drive to somewhere, and then drive back again. — god must be atheist
We are not to be blamed for the decisions we do not make. — god must be atheist
The using of society's benefits IS your decision. — god must be atheist
If the capitalist pigs, as you call them, — god must be atheist
You don't use them because the capitalists force you to, you use them because without them you'd perish. — god must be atheist
So I put to you this: is a person who uses energy as much as the average person in his community, not hypocritical, when he blames the builders to build his home, when he blames the car manufacturers to build his car, when he blames the clothes manufacturers to make his clothes, and the producers of his food, and the transportation companies to deliver this to him or to close to him where the goods are available without much work to him... — god must be atheist
If you were NOT hypocritical then you would simply give up these benefits, and then you could claim moral superiority. But until such time, you simply can't. — god must be atheist
You insinuate (but don't state) things that you want to accuse me with, but there is no accusation, only an insinuation of it. — god must be atheist
Some people just can't take the blame when it's due. It's a spineless, cowardly attitude to blame others for one's own wrongdoing. — god must be atheist
Why do you do this? — god must be atheist
I am not told to laugh off ideas that there are power differentials, and that with more power comes more to blame. — god must be atheist
I simply pointed out to you who I think is to blame for an energy-using, consumerist society. — god must be atheist
if I am not stupid, then why would I repeat stupid slogans? — god must be atheist
Do continue, Xtrix. I was told to laugh off shit like the arguments you present. — god must be atheist
Tell me again how stupid I am in your esteem and what lead you to that conclusion. — god must be atheist
It's a spineless, cowardly attitude to blame others for your wrongdoing. — god must be atheist
YOU are doing it, and so am I; time to stop blaming THEM, the greedy capitalists. They are not using, per head, or per capita, more energy than you and I use, and blaming them for providing us what we want and demand is HIGHLY HYPOCRITICAL. — god must be atheist
or every single thing he did that night was heroic — Miller
You obviously don't know what Libertarianism means. — Harry Hindu
Why you still vote for the same people that have been in power for 50 years and expect things to be different? — Harry Hindu
Most of today's scientists will claim to assume "naturalism" in their endeavors. Someone famous once said that "I believe in God, I just spell it n-a-t-u-r-e." I've heard this a lot from the likes of Sagan, Dennett, Dawkins, Gould, and many others -- especially when contrasting their views with religious views or in reaction to claims that science is "just another religion."
It's worth remembering that science was simply "natural philosophy" in Descartes' day, Newton's day and Kant's day. This framework and its interpretation of the empirical world dominates every other understanding, in today's world, including the Christian account (or any other religious perspective, really). Therefore it's important to ask: what was (and is) this philosophy of nature? What is the basis of its interpretation of all that we can know through our senses and our reason?
A clue is given from the word itself: "natural." And so "nature." This word comes from the Latin natura and was a translation of the Greek phusis.
It turns out that φῠ́σῐς (phusis) is the basis for "physical." So the idea of the physical world and the natural world are ultimately based on Greek and Latin concepts, respectively.
So the question "What is 'nature'?" ends up leading to a more fundamental question: "What is the 'physical'?" and that ultimately resides in the etymology of φῠ́σῐς and, finally, in the origins of Western thought: Greek thought.
Thus the "metaphysics of presence" is our philosophical ancestry, with several major variations: phusis, eidos, ousia, substance, God, nature, matter, energy.
The 'now' is simply used for marking before and after, and in counting time. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's it; we cannot pin down a now. I tend to think it's important to be aware of what we are doing in the kind of Buddhist sense of "mindfulness". That's not a presence which can be pinned down, or elaborated into a theory; not a 'thin' present-at-hand kind of presence, but it seems to be the foundation of any examined life,and I can't see phenomenology as important except in this regard. — Janus
Maybe it's off-topic and more in line with Heidegger's idea of authenticity. Do you see that idea as being related to his treatment of being? — Janus
But I wasn't proposing any metaphysic, I was trying to speak phenomenologically, which is to try to articulate lived experience. When we are "busy "being" (coping, interacting with, engaging with, "on the way to," etc)" is it not always now that we are doing that? — Janus
You can do a heavyweight, substantive reply with one line, or offer tons of fluff. — frank
I am taking liberties in the sense that I don't claim what I am saying is what Heidegger would say. I don't say the past or future are illusions, but that they exist, as past and future, only now. This does relate to Husserl's notions of retention and protention. Do you think Heidegger would say that dasein, the 'being-there', is now? — Janus
Time doesnt exist because you have to know time is consequence of pyhsical nature, so you notice time because cycle occur, people know it hapened one day because sun make one cycle, and if you go as deep as you can, you know smth happened because you saw cycle, change happens out of this, and we say this happening: time. — Nothing
If time is objectified it appears as a flow or movement from past through present to future. But this is an abstraction; for lived time there is only now, not a 'dimensionless-point' now but an infinitely expansive now in which, and only in which, the future and the past exist as such. — Janus
Thnks for answer,
try time think one time you consider cycles and another time you say there is no cycles. If it is only now, tomorow never comes, past doesnt exist, or you show me, where ? Please try with cyles. I am looking into: time exist because cycle exist — Nothing
I think what it tells us about their being is that they occur in a certain mode of our being -- call it an abstract or linguistic mode, of which I would include mathematics and music. Quantities and geometric shapes are human phenomena. This is a Kantian move, really, but with the "subject" and "time" as interpreted differently.
— Xtrix
That’s helpful for explaining what you’ve been trying to get at. There’s more to do, but I could definitely see preferring to start here. — Srap Tasmaner
asking how long it takes for a number to be a number is meaningless
— Xtrix
Yes, well, that’s the point of saying that mathematics is ‘timeless’ — Srap Tasmaner
Numbers -- and words -- are products of the human mind, of the human being.
— Xtrix
And? What does their being the products of Dasein tell us about their being? — Srap Tasmaner
By hand, it might take you a minute or two to work out that 357 x 68 = 24,276. A calculator or computer will do it faster, but still take a measurable amount of time. But how long does it take 357 x 68 to be 24,276? — Srap Tasmaner
If we move to the secondary sense of "time", as what is measured, we find the conception of a continuity without any nows. The nows are seen as artificial. Therefore, when Heidegger says “The succession of nows is interpreted as something somehow objectively present..." in your quoted passage, this is a misunderstanding of Aristotle. It conflates the distinction between the primary sense of "time", and the secondary sense of "time", which Aristotle tried to establish. — Metaphysician Undercover
Corporations should have their powers checked as much as the governments. Monopolies need to be broken up and competition promoted. — Harry Hindu
Mathematics is a human activity. Humans do indeed exist “in” time (or, better, “as” time).
— Xtrix
So the second sentence supposes an identity that is not there? — Heiko
Mathematics do not know time. — Heiko
