But humans can choose not to bring more life into the world.
— schopenhauer1
This is absurd, of course, because even human extinction neither solves nor, for that matter, even addresses the problem of suffering (i.e. entropy). — 180 Proof
Kant rejected the possibility of doing traditional metaphysics.
— Janus
My friend, Kant is traditional metaphysics.
It's pertinent that those who emphasis Wittgenstein's rejection of metaphysical statements so often stop at the Tractatus. Yes, he showed that metaphysical statements are senseless, but then showed that metaphysics is more than just statements.
One can act in silence.
Wittgenstein did not put an end to metaphysics, so much as showed that it is better done in action than in philosophical speculation. — Banno
problem. It's my little obsession. If ever you do find the mood for this, you might want to check out Simon Critchley's Little, Almost Nothing. He explores the impact of ethical nihilism — Constance
What if I, a biological male, identified as a transgender male (a female that identifies as being a man?) — Harry Hindu
These seem to me just Feuerbachian projections of culturally-relative, anthropic ideals (i.e. imago hominum) — 180 Proof
She was asked to define a woman. — Harry Hindu
Positivism — Wayfarer
Implying that the religious situation is no more than a realization of one's lack of cunning? But then, the term "supernatural" just gives religion a bad name, which it usually deserves. But the reality of religion lies outside of the cunning and the supernatural. It is something else. — Constance
Certainly wouldn't. How do you think the lucky guy would feel 'hey we've brought you back to life, but all your relatives died a million years ago'. — Wayfarer
What if the meaning of 'pain' is everything 'around' the otherwise ineffable painfeeling? The 'pain itself' is the hole in a donut. The dough is buying aspirin, saying the word 'pain,' etc.
The mess goes back at least to Aristotle:
Spoken words are the symbols of mental experience and written words are the symbols of spoken words. Just as all men have not the same writing, so all men have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all, as also are those things of which our experiences are the images.
How can Aristotle know this ? Did he mindmeld with all his buddies when they complained of toothache? Or is this some kind of mostly unquestioned folk psychology that evolved as a convenience? — jas0n
-I don't know when you stop beating your wife? can you see the problem in your initial statement?
And how entering that home will allow you to know???
What methods will you use to FALSIFY that universal negative statement? — Nickolasgaspar
And when the you lie there annihilated by your own foolishness at the horse's feet, THEN the religious event has its grounding. — Constance
What would there to be gained by decoding it? Aren't we already embodiments of it? Doesn't 'what we are' exemplify 'what it means'? — Wayfarer
And maybe one never quite achieves full comprehension ? Then what would we do? Sounds like death. — jas0n
-I don't want to be absolute but at least most if not all of the OP and the comments I have checked do not meat the philosophical standards.(zero epistemic evaluation or support of the assumptions used in the hypothesis) — Nickolasgaspar
• Tenure-Chasing Supplants Substantive Contributions
• Confusion between Philosophizing & Chronicling
• Insular Obscurity / Inaccessibility (to outsiders)
• Obsession with Language too much over Solving Real-World Problems
• Idealism vs. Realism and Reductionism
• Too Many Miniproblems & Fashionable Academic Games
• Poor Enforcement of Validity / Methodology
• Unsystematic (vs. System Building & Ensuring Findings are Worldview Coherent)
• Detachment from Intellectual Engines of Modern Civilization (science, technology, and real-world ideologies that affect mass human thought and action)
• Ivory Tower Syndrome (not talking to experts in other departments and getting knowledge and questions to explore from them or helping them) — Nickolasgaspar
I forgot to address your point.
You stated that " I don't mind people using philosophy as a psychological crutch, to validate their own thoughts and feelings."
-The issue is that when claims are designed to validate thoughts and feelings they are no longer philosophical , by definition (etymology and goal of the method).
Philosophy's goal is wisdom. Wisdom can only be achieved through logic and Knowledge.
Logic and knowledge do not have a good track with feelings and comforting thoughts....
I don't deny we all do it.....I only point out that philosophy has nothing to do with that.
You can call it superstitious excuses or religious ideologies but Philosophy is an exercise in frustration. The comforting feeling of understanding things is only a side effect not the main goal of Philosophy...or better it shouldn't be.. (well we can argue its the main motivation behind our efforts). — Nickolasgaspar
I was raised as a Christian and we celebrated Christmas. Now I'm an atheist. I still bring a tree into my home during the holiday season, but I don't do it to celebrate the birth of some man that claimed to be the son of a god. I do it because it is fun for me and my family. So it's not a religious ritual. — Harry Hindu
Yes, and though statistical tests can be used to suggest fishiness (maybe you accidentally manifest a pattern), they never prove genuine order. A fair coin can come up heads 50 times in a row. Unlikely, but possible.... — jas0n
does God flip coins — jas0n
So, the basic idea is that science has two components:
— Agent Smith
If you are interested about the components of Science or its nature in general the following lecture is the best you can find.
Systematicity: The Nature of Science
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYK7uhQ_QCk — Nickolasgaspar
Do you think that's a good thing? You know, evolutionarily...?
— Agent Smith
Hell no. It’s game over for a species that depends on toilets that flush, energy, food and lighting at the click of a button or app. — apokrisis
I can only make sense of it as a description of our nature, how we do science/philosophy. We look for reasons (exploitable relationships between entities). Curious George. The assumption that a reason for an event can be found is at least implicit in our looking for patterns in which to include it — jas0n
