I don't have a clear concept of how our physiological reward system works so I can't give an exact answer. What if people 2000 years ago experience the same level of satisfaction by having a full meal as what now only winning a hundred grands of lottery can stimulate? Empirically desire seems to be infinitive (which is why addiction can form) so I can't really tell if we on average feel better and "live better lives"(especially if the newer generation takes the advantage for granted).do you think life for the average citizen in a country like the UK or USA has got better or worse or stayed much the same, in the last 2000 years? — universeness
I explained to him it would still be him compelling her to interact with him, even if just by engineering her nature; she would have no choice in the matter. Furthermore, why would, or should, she want him, given any measure of freedom? — ToothyMaw
While I agree that most differences in viewpoints, statements, and beliefs have nothing to do with reason itself and I myself hate "debates" whatsoever in my high school classes in which speech precedes reflection, I do think that in the patriarchic society in which backgrounds and perspectives are instilled to women by men, to recognize the necessity for some new kind of value, as long as this "newness" does not originate merely from the biological difference between men and women, requires a certain extent of inference and judgment - if that's how you define reason proper - upon women themselves.(B)ut I don't think this applies to reason proper, which includes judgement, inferences, deduction, etc
Is it really an agreement or enforcement by the more powerful, in this case, the wealthier, upon the less - but since the more powerful frame the language and culture at the same time, they get to "justify" this enforcement and make people accept it as a norm or mutual "agreement"?If art is bought and sold in a particular price range then clearly there is an agreement among art buyers and sellers about the art's monetary value.
I've gotten started on the I Ching a couple of times, but never got very far. The Tao Te Ching, on the other hand, grabbed me and shook me when I first read it. I find the poetic format much more compelling than the stories in the Zhuangzi. I think that's because I tend to be very intellectual, verbal. I'm an engineer and the Tao has always felt like engineering mysticism to me. — T Clark
Yes, well. I think this says a lot more about Kurzweil than it does about me or you or anyone else. Last time I looked, he was trying to keep himself alive until he can upload his mind into a computer and live forever. — T Clark
I'd say that language in his term is rather some kind of rules, symbolic nor not, that humans perceive, understand, and apply, based on how he arranged the order of discussion in Philosophical Investigations -- language-games, rule-following, and the private language argument. Arguably our subjective world consists of the rules we perceive.Language-games are, first, a part of a broader context termed by Wittgenstein a form of life (see below). Secondly, the concept of language-games points at the rule-governed character of language. This does not entail strict and definite systems of rules for each and every language-game, but points to the conventional nature of this sort of human activity. Still, just as we cannot give a final, essential definition of ‘game’, so we cannot find “what is common to all these activities and what makes them into language or parts of language” (PI 65).
It doesn't make sense or one has to work really hard for it to connect at an emotional and also a rational level. — TheMadFool
The next goal, the follow-up move, is to create something that's more creative than us (technological singularity). — TheMadFool