Coincidentally, and perhaps more to your point, his “solution” is to claim this is essentially a false dichotomy. — Pinprick
Not explainable by physical
processes — Pinprick
Incapable of acting causally — Pinprick
so really, squish a mosquito because the itch is inconvenient, or kill the guy ahead of you line, because he is slow to make up his mind...both ways a life is ended for your comfort. The second involves a human, so we attribute more value to it, but there shouldn't be. — Book273
I fully agree. The same holds for Dualism. "Variations" exist because you cannot explain everything but just using a "label". This is why I personally avoid to use "-isms" and "-ists". They are boxes that limit a subject, attribute, idea, etc. The can be devoid of meaning. For example, what would be the meaning of saying "I am a nihilist"? Each person would get a different idea about me! Well, if they get one! :smile:There are multiple "kinds" of monists from idealists, to physicalists to materialists, to God knows what else. I think they're all the same — khaled
By this reasoning, it's a-okay to kill people... Hence your monism cannot support a healthy human society but may be useful philosophy for serial killers. — Olivier5
nobody said life was fair. — Primperan
Not even me! What I am driving at is that a philosophy should not just be about what is the case, which is rather the domain of science, but also and primarily in what ought to be the case, which behaviors are desirable and which are not. What goals should we pursue? etc.
For me, a decent philosophy cannot be value-less. — Olivier5
Another way of looking at that is that every time there seems to be multiple things that make up the world, they turn out to be made up of one thing. — khaled
The pattern: Every time we reduce reality to a single substance, we're faced with the problem of having to reconcile contradictory qualities, something impossible. Does it make more sense to insist that monism is true and that all contradictions are illusions or to abandon monism as nonsensical. The choice: contradiction OR no to monism. — TheMadFool
This is not an argument against monism. The fact that a circle is not a square is also no argument against geometry. Monism means that everything consists of only one substance. In the broadest sense matter is, what something weighs, applies also to light. — SolarWind
Greco-Roman paganism never speaks of helping the weak. For instance. Rather, they were thrown into the circus. — Primperan
then nothing is of any particular value.. — Olivier5
The French poster for that film had the film as "Les Jeunes qui porte des lunettes de Soleil." — Book273
Yours must be a very boring world, where everything is in the same shade of grey. — Olivier5
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