Comments

  • Which is the bigger threat: Nominalism or Realism?
    Society is not a thing, though, complex or otherwise. It's just a name for a concept.NOS4A2

    Likewise energy is a number. It's a physical construct. It's not a thing.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender
    And let's consider some hypothetical 46,XX/46,XY person with an equal number of XX cells and XY cells, ambiguous genitalia, and either bilateral oviotestis or streak gonads. Are they male or female?Michael

    Neither. With the overwhelming majority of humans, there's no ambiguity.
  • What is faith
    I agree. There isn't enough evidence to conclude that the Israelites were sea people.

    The Sea Peoples were diverse. The Peleset are among those that we're pretty sure were sea peoples.
  • What is faith
    Was there ever any community of Israelites in Egypt? So no Joseph then?BitconnectCarlos

    The archeological record doesn't show that there was.

    If the Israelites were the Sea People, then why did they need to invent a story about Egypt? They have their own history. Why not just tell their own story of arriving by sea instead of passing down a complete fabrication?BitconnectCarlos

    They couldn't read or write, it was a chaotic time. One of the tidbits I mentioned was the appearance in Egypt of a word that looks like Israel. So maybe not slaves, but sea-faring invaders.

    I mean, if you look at Americans who've been here for a couple of hundred years, they're apt to have no information about how they come to be here. It would have been the same for the early Israelites.

    I would agree that there is no evidence of a large-scale Exodus, as described in the Hebrew Bible, where millions of people are said to have escaped Egypt. Numbers in ancient sources are notoriously unreliable.BitconnectCarlos

    There's just no record of a community of Israelites in Egypt.
  • What is faith

    You've probably read that there's no evidence that there was ever a community of enslaved Israelites in Egypt. If you're interested in what we know about the emergence of the Israelites, check out 1177 BC by Eric Cline. There are some intriguing archeological tidbits that suggest that the Israelites may have been among the so-called sea peoples.
  • What is faith
    Which period is he referring to?BitconnectCarlos

    The end of the Bronze Age.
  • What is faith
    This moral question has been resolved, but in Abraham's day (2000 BC?), it wasn't.BitconnectCarlos

    I like Heath Dewrell's view (partly because I think he's right) that child sacrifice probably wasn't part of the deep history of the Israelites. The laws against it are probably related to the rise of a child sacrificing sect, possibly influenced by the Phoenicians. This would have been around the reign of King Ahaz.
  • Which is the bigger threat: Nominalism or Realism?
    I'm hoping someone can point me in the direction of those who see realism as a threat, and we can continue this ancient battle on an even footing.NOS4A2

    The realism you're referencing is really a type of idealism, right? It holds that platonic objects exist in some sense. Peirce is saying that a universe without ideas is a dead universe where nothing matters. It's a universe that can't break your heart because it's just swirling dust.

    The reason Peirce is wrong to say that nominalism is a threat has to do with the way the psyche works. Morality is inextricably tied to the forces that give rise to identity. With everyone you meet, you're consciously or subconsciously assessing who they are relative to you, and they provide the stimulus from which you gather up who you are, what you want, what you need. This activity develops out of innate capabilities, so most people don't have any choice but to be practical idealists, no matter what their philosophies may be.

    I think the exception to this is psychopaths. Though they tend to be highly intelligent, they can't make sense of what everyone else refers to as an "inner world." They can't explain their actions, as if they don't have enough of a sense of self to conceive of motive. Everyone else may see motives in their actions, for instance the crazy guy who buries women's heads in his backyard, each one facing his bedroom, appears to want women to see him in bed. But he can't answer the question: why did you do that? He lives in an entirely nominalist world. But there's no point in worrying about his philosophy, because it's being driven by underlying hardware problems. The only hope for him is death.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender
    Psychiatrists do not classify gender incongruence as a psychosis. Unless you have studied psychiatry you are not qualified to have an informed opinion.Michael

    There's a growing number of detransitioners who say that transitioning was an attempt to cope with trauma. It's very common for detransitioners to claim it was too easy to access gender affirming care, and that people should be carefully screened and councilled, especially if they already have mental health issues.

    These issues should be addressed without the aggressive activist commotion.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender
    People should use the bathroom that matches their gender identity - but that's just my opinion.EricH

    :up:
  • What is faith
    I totally get that it's unconfirmed, but perhaps we could say that the sourcebook has some degree of credibility to it?BitconnectCarlos

    I don't see what's at stake here. Why would it make any difference?
  • What is faith
    It's tedious. And we all know the game plan.Banno

    Oh well. :grin:
  • What is faith
    Do we have reason to believe so? Does the claim in the book count for anything?BitconnectCarlos

    All we have is the information that a 13th king is listed. It's unconfirmed.
  • What is faith

    If it's you claiming the kings list is correct, yes, it's a baseless assertion.
  • Donald Trump (All Trump Conversations Here)
    Basically Netanyahu is also an American politician, so well can he handle the US.ssu

    Maybe Finland could work on getting a Netanyahu for themselves.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender
    I get you in terms of the U.S., but I'm trying to work out on what one could consistently base an objection when biological sex and gender have no necessary connection because they are based on different categories of reality and gender is technologically mutableBaden

    I don't think a social construct has to have some "consistent base" other than community buy-in. If people require a person to have male biological sex in order to be a "real man" then biology is part of their gender construct. Their attitudes don't have to be logical.

    Does it mean that objectors want anyone regardless of their biological sex to get arrested if they look too masculine? That, as I said, is inconsistent with wanting to protect biological women from encroaches on their space by biological men because it discriminates on a level, the physical, that now has no necessary connection to the biological in practice and so the objection could be applied to biological women as well as biological men.Baden

    I'm not sure what you're saying here.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender

    I think the problem is that for many, biological sex is a component of the social construct of gender, and I think it's pretty clear that this is true for the majority.

    Since gender is a social construct, and therefore fluid to some extent, we might imagine a point where the idea of gender changes so that biology is no longer a part of it. We aren't there, though. The best an activist can do is demand that we should be there.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender
    I may be mis-understanding him, but Harry seems to be very concerned. I'm not.EricH

    You don't care one way or the other? :up:
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender

    So you're saying it's a human right, not yet a civil right. My guess is that the issue will remain in flux for the next couple of generations. Where I think the government should act now is in researching successful and unsuccessful transitions so that people can make informed choices. States should decide how they want their public facilities used. Private facilities (like at a private school or coliseum) will probably be made available in a way that pleases the majority of the population, because that's how capitalism works. It probably won't ever get to the point of establishing civil rights, and that view is coming from pessimism about the outcome of trans activism.
  • What is faith
    I doubt people choose to imprison themselves in a hellish frame of mind.praxis

    Happens all the time.
  • Disambiguating the concept of gender

    Are we really concerned about where people relieve themselves? Or are we really discussing whether the process of transitioning actually changes a woman into a man?
  • What is faith
    - Let's say you have a book that contains information on an ancient people. It contains a list of rulers dating back 1000 years. We can confirm the list dating back 500 years, but the evidence starts to become less reliable after that. Does the record in the book count for anything, or would we consider the claims in the books to be baseless beyond 500 years?BitconnectCarlos

    I think what the academic community does is build a collection of speculations that changes as new archeological data emerges. This article about the Sumerian kings list talks about how attitudes change over time.

    -Let's say you were up with Moses on Mount Sinai. What would need to transpire for you to become a believer?BitconnectCarlos

    First of all, I'd be mind-blown because I thought Moses was mythical. Coming to believe in a theistic divinity would require a shift in worldview for me. I doubt I would allow that. I'd explain events according to the view I have until I reached a dead-end and then stop and say I don't know what's going on.
  • What is faith
    Karma - means the same. In Buddhism, there's no Supreme Deity handing out rewards and punishment but there are hell realms all the sameWayfarer

    People can become stuck in a hellish frame of mind, but it's not punishment. It's a self imposed prison. It comes down to the things a person is telling themselves.
  • What is faith
    The irony is that theists justify their judgment upon others based upon concern for their souls. You offered a similar concern for the souls of theists but from an atheist perspective.Hanover

    We were talking about why theists might develop a negative tone when arguing with atheists, thinking it might be because of afflicted faith. Tom suggested it might be from pent up frustration about the state of the world and imagining that atheists are responsible.
  • What is faith
    I do fear divine judgementWayfarer

    Really? Why?
  • What is faith
    Speculating: I think some theists believe they have read all the right philosophy and theology and have many of the answers and that modern secular culture is debased and decadent. They're probably angry about the state of the world, and when they encounter people with views they've identified as the cause of contemporary troubles, they lash out.Tom Storm

    I hadn't thought of that. That makes me feel sympathy.
  • What is faith
    That would be a friendly sort of discussion though. I was responding to this:

    We see this happen here all the time, as people are often accused of bad faith because dogmatic atheists and theists tend to perceive persecution, ill intent or hostility in any form of dissent.Tom Storm

    Why would a religious person enter into a discussion on a philosophy forum and become angry and insulting? I don't think it's to bounce ideas around. In Jungian terms, it's some kind of complex: a tangle of jagged emotions. There's probably a brewing crisis of faith, looking out at humanity wondering how to make sense of it. Just speculating.

    isn't it a bit rich for theists to seek out a place where there will be a lot of atheists, then complain that there are too many atheists?

    Just plain rude.
    Banno

    :lol:
  • The News Discussion

    Yep, I think I did.
  • The News Discussion
    but something seemed off about it.Hanover

    that was pornography
  • The News Discussion
    Plumbers, for example, I saw were over 95% male. There are instances where women just don't want the jobs.Hanover

    Who in their right mind would want to be a plumber?
  • The Myopia of Liberalism

    For the UK and the USA, the alternative to religious freedom was having communities tear themselves apart in sectarian violence, so it was a matter of cultural survival. Not all communities have that problem. Is religious freedom really a core principle? Or just attached to the economic/political agenda?
  • What is Time?
    So even the “succession” of object-object time isn’t as fixed as it seems. It raises fascinating questions about whether time is a fundamental feature of the universe or a mental construct tied to consciousnessAreeb Salim

    Again, how do we sync our actions if time is a product of consciousness? Maybe we're telepathic?
  • Our choices are never free from determinants, constraints and consequences
    I guess they overlap.

    Will:
    the faculty by which a person decides on and initiates action.
    "she has an iron will"

    control deliberately exerted to do something or to restrain one's own impulses.
    "a stupendous effort of will"

    a deliberate or fixed desire or intention.
    "Jane had not wanted them to stay against their will"

    the thing that one desires or ordains.
    "the disaster was God's will"
    google dictionary
  • What is faith
    We see this happen here all the time, as people are often accused of bad faith because dogmatic atheists and theists tend to perceive persecution, ill intent or hostility in any form of dissent.Tom Storm

    Maybe religious people seek out environments where they can argue with atheists to help exorcise their own faithless demons?
  • Should we be polite to AIs?
    V6JQVFc.jpeg
    AI says thank you
  • Our choices are never free from determinants, constraints and consequences

    I think willing comes from a worldview where there's God's will. It's just an animating force that causes everything. If you have your own will, that's kind of precarious because your will might be in conflict with God's will. This would show up in battles such as the ones involving Joan of Arc. It happened that the opposition started wondering if they were fighting against God's will, so they quit. The devil is an image of primal defiance to God's will, so Christianity can have this very passive, accepting, loving vibe. In Fear and Trembling, Abraham is held up as an image of a person whose will is entirely fused with God's will. It's kind of terrifying.

    Anyway, this sort of thinking was challenged by Aquinas. He suggested that the universe is like a clock set in motion by God, but that God doesn't tend to every little thing that happens. This helped start Europe on the trail of deleting divine will from their thinking. The idea of God's will survived, but in a more dubious form, for instance if someone says the death of a neighbor was God's will, some might be comforted, some might think God is an asshole.

    With the deletion of God's will from physics, the idea of a deterministic world emerged, but people kept all the wondrous supernatural things formerly attributed to God for themselves. We're willful and creative. In fact, these are things that some people greatly admire. This is a central theme in Nietzsche's stuff.

    I guess the outcome is that human will is supernatural at the edges, it is specifically about making things happen, and it's potentially cause for alarm (although as I mentioned, being fused with God is not all rainbows either.)
  • Currently Reading
    The Lathe of Heaven -- Ursula Le Guin
  • What is Time?
    The passage of psychological time is the same for all of them.MoK

    They sync because they're listening to the same music. They're experiencing time.
  • What is real? How do we know what is real?
    However, it's a big topic and as you say, peripheral to this thread, so we might leave it there.Banno

    :up: :up: