[T]here are general truths regarding what is good for us that derive from human nature and the nature of human societies. But we are limited in our ability to know these general truths because human reason is weak and fallible: Human beings are capable of exercising reason and yet arriving at almost any foolish, destructive, evil, poisonous thing. Given this reality, conservatives give primacy to inherited traditions, — Colo Millz
What I call good is not humankindness and responsible conduct, but just being good at what is done by your own intrinsic virtuosities. Goodness, as I understand it, certainly does not mean humankindness and responsible conduct! It is just fully allowing the uncontrived condition of the inborn nature and allotment of life to play itself out. What I call sharp hearing is not hearkening to others, but rather hearkening to oneself, nothing more. — Chuang Tzu
I remember an answer which when quite young I was prompted to make to a valued adviser, who was wont to importune me with the dear old doctrines of the church. On my saying, What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within? my friend suggested,--"But these impulses may be from below, not from above." I replied, "They do not seem to me to be such; but if I am the Devil's child, I will live then from the Devil." No law can be sacred to me but that of my nature. Good and bad are but names very readily transferable to that or this; the only right is what is after my constitution, the only wrong what is against it. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
The resulting debate, therefore, concerns the epistemology of moral improvement: whether justice is better secured by refining the wisdom of the past, or by subjecting that past to rational critique guided by universal moral principles. — Colo Millz
This is a nice summation that gets at what I was aiming for which seems to have been glossed over in most replies I have so far. — unimportant
T Clark defends hunting with his family from an typically anthropocentric perspective because it serves him and his own in group, with no regard for the needless killing of animals for one's own fun. — unimportant
Does the act of killing some other creature enhance the fun and togetherness? that would be a rather chilling and bloodthirsty claim to stand by. — unimportant
It is about questioning what is held as traditional and asking 'can we do better'? — unimportant
In my opinion it is about separating the wheat from the chaff which comes from well considered analysis of these traditions and not holding any particular one as out of bounds because 'tradition'. — unimportant
T Clark and his rifle — Outlander
I would say the assumptions, what values are deemed more important, are ultimately a matter of convention... of tradition. To say otherwise one would have to assume some objectivity to values, and that is a whole other can of worms. — ChatteringMonkey
I would say the assumptions, what values are deemed more important, are ultimately a matter of convention... of tradition. To say otherwise one would have to assume some objectivity to values, and that is a whole other can of worms. — ChatteringMonkey
Aah ok, but then I would just say this isn't about logic. — ChatteringMonkey
Anyway this is beside the point of the OP probably, I also don't quite got what you were getting at. — ChatteringMonkey
About conservation of truth. — ChatteringMonkey
What is known/judged to be comfortable, comforts the comforted. When the moralist or the lawmen show up, then goes the task of providing justifications for what should or shouldn't be allowed.
If we were Bonobos we'd run around naked and greet each other with a touch of our genitals. A disgusting culture of depraved traditions to be sure. Luckily none need to appeal to reason or tradition. It is what it is. — Nils Loc
Can you make the case that an appeal to reason yields better results than an appeal to tradition, not only on an individual level, but also on a societal level? — ChatteringMonkey
Yes — unimportant
Hunting season has come around again and it has got me reading up around it and that is an oft touted reason for its continuance. — unimportant
I just read the wiki of appeal to tradition which is a nice summation of this documented logical fallacy. — unimportant
When I declare a communist/anarchist state I will call the public holidays by generic names such as 'festivity day x3827.5' — unimportant
Steppenwolf - Hermann Hesse. — Hanover
slow, steady empirical analysis, — Colo Millz
So I was wondering, does philosophy and mathematics have anything to say about the possibility, or otherwise, of perpetual economic growth?" — Peter Gray
The em-dash usually gives it away like the OP of the Cellular Sentience thread. — Forgottenticket
You claim NOMA is "baloney" but don't even try to make your case. — 180 Proof
I agree with SJ Gould, Wittgenstein, Spinoza et al that 'religion & science' are non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA), or in other words ... — 180 Proof
I used it to denote stereotyping. — Copernicus
But, to the point of social realism, whatever the anchors and whatever the grounding, the man or woman is a real man or real woman at the conclusion. — Hanover
I don't see why. — Copernicus
If transwomen are women or transmen are men just because of cultural or habitual identity, does carrying a gun or shooting down schools make a Norwegian an American, or does loving KFC chicken make a caucasian man an African American, regardless of ethnicity or nationality? — Copernicus
And again the conversation about sex is held mostly by men, on men's terms ... — baker
I guess my question is whether the user’s understanding is genuine, authentic, and owned by them.
— T Clark
Often times it's not. — Pierre-Normand
Objectively 'sex' is masturbation by means of another body; beyond that we interpret the process of opening-closing this desiring circuit with any number of fantasies (i.e. projections), especially those which subjectively intensify (someone's) self-pleasuring experience.
This is my experience also. — Pierre-Normand
The issue whether their own understanding of the (often quite good and informative) ideas that they generate is genuine understanding, authentic, owned by them, etc. ought to remains untouched by this concession. — Pierre-Normand
That was a friendly interpersonal addition and remark, which should not have distracted from the main point of the post. — Outlander
It only has to be a surprise to you in order to produce insight, it doesn’t have to be a surprise to the llm. Unless you have exceeded the rigor of philosophical understanding embodied by the best minds that the a.i. can tap into, there is no reason it can’t enlighten you. — Joshs
What gets really funny, and endearingly so, is when you start talking about creative ideas you have about make some invention or technology, and it starts talking to you in this new-agey surfer dude type of tone. — ProtagoranSocratist
The main reason I would discourage its use is that the rapid development of AI, which given the unpredictability of the ways in which AI will evolve, is dangerous, is driven by profit, and is fueled mainly by consumer use. — Janus
Let's say I'm doing a "solo non-assist run" as far as the life I live goes. :grin: — Outlander
Yet what has stayed consistent is a reference to sex and age. What we consider the age range for an adult has changed, but not that we ever considered a man as 'a female'. — Philosophim
What is this question doing on a philosophy platform? It warrants a biological truth, not argumentative conclusions. — Copernicus
Because those questions have subjective answers and argumentative grounds. Biological issues are subject to experimental and empirical truths. — Copernicus
Ah, but the thing i find unsettling is that A.I. is also dishonest, it tries to appease you. However, yes, sometimes it is better than the weirdness of real humans. — ProtagoranSocratist
Yes. Insight results from thinking, which AI is incapable of doing. Noam Chomsky called the LLM's glorified plagiarism. I agree. — creativesoul
I will have faith that a philosophy board will let people do philosophy. — Philosophim
