Quite succinct, and non-polemical. But I was hoping for some why or why-not discussion, that I could learn from. You could take your pick of a few comments or quotes that will illustrate a philosophical position or principle. For example, "No" could be construed as Nihilist. But is that just an emotional feeling, or a reasoned philosophical position, or a theory of how the world works? Please notice that I omitted a heavenly element from consideration. :smile:No. — Tom Storm
Although I'm not comforted by scriptural assurances that "all things work together for good", I do infer a kind of Logic to the chain of Cause & Effect in the physical world --- and an overall proportional parity between positive & negative effects. Of course, that mathematical & thermodynamic symmetry may not always apply to the personal & cultural aspects of reality : to people's feelings about those effects. I won't attempt to prove that vague belief in balance, but it seems that philosophers have always been divided on the question of a Just World — Gnomon
Isn't that what philosophers have always done : to superimpose a reasoned worldview upon the myriad & contradictory details of the world we are "thrown" into? To make sense of what we sense ; to justify what seems unjust? To catch what is thrown at us, and throw it back with intention? To make choices that are not imposed upon us? :cool:I have encountered no reason to superimpose a philosphy or religion upon this in order to make its seem less appalling. — Tom Storm
Isn't that what philosophers have always done — Gnomon
Yes. If we wake-up one day and find ourselves in a world of simple positives & negatives --- warm milk vs warm urine --- as helpless babies all we can do is cry that "this wet diaper is appalling". But over time, we learn to take the ups & downs of life with self-help philosophical equanimity. The mature world is no longer Good vs Evil, but a nuanced environment that can be managed by rational actors into a worldview where we can look forward to waking up tomorrow in a familiar place with new challenges to manage. "A place to leave behind, and a place to approach". :smile:This is a tricky kind of causality to contemplate. It is not the reductionism of "cause and effect". But it was already where metaphysics started with Anaximander and his pre-socratic cosmology. . . . .
And then we get to the vexed issue of good and evil. Which is problematic because it replaces the complex systems causality of the natural world with the polarised story of a cause and effect world. A mechanistic viewpoint. Instead of a pair of actions that are complementary – as in a dichotomy or symmetry breaking – we have just a single arrow from a here to a there. There is a high and a low, a good and a bad, a wonderful and an awful. There is a place to leave behind and a place to approach. — apokrisis
The mature world is no longer Good vs Evil, but a nuanced environment that can be managed by rational actors into a worldview where we can look forward to waking up tomorrow in a familiar place with new challenges to manage. — Gnomon
Yes. We humans, however, are too often not "fair and just". — 180 Proof
The mature world is no longer Good vs Evil, but a nuanced environment that can be managed by rational actors into a worldview where we can look forward to waking up tomorrow in a familiar place with new challenges to manage.
— Gnomon
Yep. — apokrisis
Is the real world fair and just?
— Gnomon
Yes. Humans, however, are too often not "fair and just". — 180 Proof
That leaves three things - the good, the evil, and the nuance in between. — Fire Ologist
What I am trying to say is that. if we live in a world of nuance, we don’t just live in a world of nuance; a world of nuance can only be so nuanced with it’s good and bad, and so these two are NOT nuanced but absolute. — Fire Ologist
Both is a third thing. This third thing is a paradox. — Fire Ologist
This is a physicalist, scientific, currently predominant worldview - it is just for steel to cut flesh, for the moon to orbit the earth, as it is for the electron to orbit the proton; all is fair and just, following along as if in perfect willingness to follow every law to the letter. — Fire Ologist
Each (human) "individual" is a (eu)social being first and foremost. — 180 Proof
baseline of a middling balance is what is "good". — apokrisis
If good versus evil become good in the resolved middle, then what happened to evil? — Fire Ologist
a discussion of moral extremes — apokrisis
towards the balancing middle — apokrisis
Yeah, nah. — apokrisis
religious and spiritual beliefs promote the assumption that the universe is fair — Gnomon
Heraclitus’ Logos did not resolve the paradoxes — Fire Ologist
balancing of stability and plasticity? — apokrisis
reality not in general a balance of logos and flux — apokrisis
Flux contains the paradoxes. The Logos is not within it, the Logos is about the paradoxes flux brings. — Fire Ologist
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