↪Pattern-chaser
nihilism is accepting the uncertainty. It has no bearing on how we deal with it as there is no should in nihilism. Nihilism doesn't say: it all doesn't matter so you shouldn't care. It just says: it doesn't seem so far that any of it matters — khaled
Nihilism as I define it is just that accepting what you have — khaled
Please elaborate on this "if". What do you mean nothing is distinguished from anything else. — khaled
Understanding, n.: a cerebral secretion that enables one having it to know a house from a horse by the roof on the house. Its nature and laws have been exhaustively expounded by Locke, who rode a house, and Kant, who lived in a horse. — Ambrose Bierce
Premise: A sensical statement with a truth value of true or false that is verifiable logically — khaled
Objective: Self evident to all observers — khaled
P1: the use of logic requrires premises
P2: to prove a conclusion true, one needs to use true premises to reach it (restatement of above assumption).... — khaled
Logic only preserves truth. So if you want to verify a premise logically, you have to present an argument of which it is the conclusion, — unenlightened
But this is anyway not at all what is meant by 'objective'. Rather, it means 'what is the case regardless of what any number of observers say, think or believe — unenlightened
whose truth value can only be verified when logic is applied. — khaled
you are actually endeavouring to deal with a difficult question, which I think unenlightened has addressed with admirable clarity. — Wayfarer
And if I happened to choose to denounce all culturally defined moral virtues and go on a killing spree you can only tell me I'm wrong relative to the culturally defined morale virtues I denounced (which is why it's near impossible to truly reeducate criminals). — khaled
If you take affects away I'd say you trivialize any result of a philosophical discussion — khaled
It makes a difference only because I decided it would and my decision it would is arbitrary. — khaled
This argument is still coherent even if P0 had been: an objective reality does not exist. There is no reason to assume either of these. — khaled
Which is bullshit, because if you really were in that situation, you wouldn't be able to shrug it off — Wayfarer
And nothing anyone can say here will change that — Wayfarer
The belief that an objective value/knowledge/morality is non existent — khaled
Also, just because something is immune to change regardless of what you think of it does not mean that what you think of it is actually the case. — khaled
That is the initial assumption in my argument and is restated in P2. I use premise and conclusion interchangeably because they are ontologically the same thing, a statement that can be true or false whose truth value can only be verified when logic is applied. There is a critical point in my definition of premise and that is:
Premise: A sensical statement WITH A TRUTH VALUE OF TRUE OR FALSE that is verifiable logically — khaled
P3: only self-evident premises can be known to be true before any application of logic — khaled
The rules of logic can be taught and used by everyone however as I replied to unenlightened before if you divorce verification from logic you do NOT get an objective knowledge/morality/value but you leave people with much more leeway. — khaled
there's always someone who can honestly disagree with anything. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is exemplary though is that there is no argument between me and the coffee pot; the pot does not argue that it s empty or prove that it is empty, it just is, and I just find out through the same senses that make me aware of there being a coffee pot. — unenlightened
this is not logic, this is just the way the dream goes - in this dream, coffee pots don't fill themselves. — unenlightened
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