(3) should be "we're not really thinking about the world." — RogueAI
Oh my god! - WHAT report card? This is apologistic nonsense. Where I come from anything above 50% is considered a ‘pass’, but that’s honestly beside the point... — Possibility
Every countably infinite subset of the continuum that has an upper bound (happiness = 10) has a least upper bound (sorrow = 0). Which would make a potential midway point (neither happiness nor sorrow) = 5. A score of 5.53 would therefore be positioned closer to happiness than to sorrow. I can’t believe I’m having to explain this... — Possibility
free time left over — Metaphysician Undercover
Keep that horse running wildly my love! Let's ride the untamed horse of reality without a damned saddle, without the bridles! Jippiyajay! — EugeneW
I think it would be better to say that instead of not thinking the people are wilfully ignorant — I love Chom-choms
bit simplistic too. — Ansiktsburk
People think they want ‘happiness’ but really they mean that they want to do something ‘meaningful’. The sense of satisfaction gained from struggling, failing and overcoming (even for months/years) is far better than a dull slovenly ‘happiness’.
The journey and all that. Common phrase likely because it is true that we enjoy the act of doing something more than the actual achievement. — I like sushi
Once upon a time, there was a wise Zen master. People traveled from far away to seek his help. In return, he would teach them and show them the way to enlightenment.
On this particular day, a scholar came to visit the master for advice. “I have come to ask you to teach me about Zen,” the scholar said.
Soon, it became obvious that the scholar was full of his own opinions and knowledge. He interrupted the master repeatedly with his own stories and failed to listen to what the master had to say. The master calmly suggested that they should have tea.
So the master poured his guest a cup. The cup was filled, yet he kept pouring until the cup overflowed onto the table, onto the floor, and finally onto the scholar’s robes. The scholar cried “Stop! The cup is full already. Can’t you see?”
“Exactly,” the Zen master replied with a smile. “You are like this cup — so full of ideas that nothing more will fit in. Come back to me with an empty cup.”
”Happiness” seems a bit too simple to describe the OP. And even if one talked about happiness, dividing it into subjective OR objective seems a bit simplistic too. We do have our own feelings and experiences, shared and polluted by the other, by all kind of puclic opinions and sentiments — Ansiktsburk
They did ‘badly’ according to whom? An academic standard? What does that have to do with happiness? If the highest possible score was 10 (infinite happiness) and the lowest possible score was 0 (infinite sorrow), then anything above 5 would be, ON BALANCE, more happiness than sorrow. It’s not that complicated. — Possibility
For any two distinct members of a linear continuum, there exists a third member that is strictly between these (Peirce). The third member in this case is the relative position of the thinker - closer to ‘happiness’ than to ‘sorrow’, according to your data. — Possibility
error in conceptualisation — Banno
is the OP true? For you? For me? — Ansiktsburk
Possibility does this by sidestepping the question and saying something that looks like it means something but then seems utterly incapable of offering any ‘verification’ for their pretend point … because there isn’t one.
They have probably read too much Heidegger, Foucault or Derrida. Or nothing other than one of those. — I like sushi
According to this data, it doesn’t — Possibility
triadic relation — Possibility
Turns out you were correct! — I like sushi
Depression is feeling extremely low for no viable reason. — I like sushi
I cannot cure our ignorance. — I like sushi
“The amount of evil, on balance, exceeds the amount of good.”
This assertion is based on an assumption that ALL thinking about the world is reducible to either a positive or negative relation (of the thinker) to just one quantifiable quality of the world. — Possibility
This data you provided as ‘evidence’ would suggest the opposite to your premise - that our relation to the world is, on balance, more positive than negative. So, it seems you are contradicting yourself - despite your apologist-style attempt to reframe the data. — Possibility
You need to make the case that this true. You seem to be appealing to a form of common sense - that this must be how people would feel about the world. Nevertheless I know plenty of people who have every reason to think all is hopeless and yet they are cheerful. — Tom Storm
This describes moral judgement, which is a particularly affected, reductionist mode of thinking - among many other ways of thinking about the world. — Possibility
Definitely planning. Minute, precise, meticulous, checked and double-checked. — Wayfarer
Luck?! What's that? — Your local EP
Neither can come first — Banno
The word "disprove" is incorrect to use here. — L'éléphant
The old Testament reports a "father" who treats his old Testament children different than the New people. In the OT he had husbands cutting off their wives' hands and being ordered not to feel compassion. Just saying — Gregory
Your question was lost in the rush to mediocrity. — Banno
Atheism is not an assertion of lack of a deity. It is simply a lack of belief in it, no different than a lack of belief that my mailbox will spontaneously explode tomorrow, despite lack of hard evidence that it will not. Not sure what the official word is to describe a belief in the unreality of a god. — noAxioms
Three miracles:
1. Birth of Universe.
2. Birth of Life.
3. Birth of Consciousness ("in flesh", I do not tell about transcendent God here). — BohdanZ
does it? :smile: — BohdanZ
no, talking about Chesterton, he wrote fiction literature, personification is a term from literature theory here, not from philosophy. — BohdanZ
The old Testament supports slavery
well, real people have bodies also . — BohdanZ
Disprove? Is there proof for dualism? You don't disprove something that never itself presented proof for its existence. I don't think any of the dual philosophers had presented proof. You either reject it or accept it. — L'éléphant
one of the design engineers who was throwing up with stress — Wayfarer
