Question 1 - It is my understanding that physicists have concluded that matter and energy can be created from nothing. — T Clark
Clearly you have never owned a pet. Or if you did you paid no attention to it. My experience is just ordinary cats and dogs, but they figure things out, sometimes difficult things, sometimes quickly! As to logic, what logic? Aristotelian categorical logic, with syllogisms? Mathematical logic? Rhetorical logic? So many kinds. Maybe they use animal logic. And how do you think if you don't use some sort of logic?
Or maybe you just mean they do not reason as people do. That seems intuitively reasonably, but maybe it isn't. At some level, I think all reasoning must be essentially the same, if not at the same level or degree. — tim wood
I think you're on to something, here. In your sentence you attribute something; the word you use for what is attributed is truth. What, exactly, is that? What do you mean? How can truth be attributed if it's what you say above? I recognize this is just ordinary usage, but the whole point of this thread is to examine these ideas, to part the curtains of ordinary usage, to see if there's anything behind them. — tim wood
Really? All the books in the world contain zero truth? All the speeches, before they're spoken? And as well my thoughts, and everyone else's, barren of truth? You're stuck on truth as a speech phenomenon, and that sounds like a bespoke definition for sure - a perfectly god one, as far as it goes. But tell me how it's not begging the question in this discussion. — tim wood
But what you do hint at is the aura that goes with, "That person speaks the truth!" This is exactly not simply agreement that P is true. Indeed it does not even say it! For brevity's sake I'll just refer again to Gurugeorge's post. There's an element of revealing/"unconcealing." And this leads to Heidegger, which path I'm content to gesture to, but am not especially eager to travel. — tim wood
Let's try this. I concede the accuracy of all your points, so far as they go. If you say truth goes no further, then I disagree. On the other hand, if you catch a glimpse of the possibility of there being more to truth than just the several trueness of some spoken propositions, then we can continue. But near as I can tell, you have defined us into a dead end. — tim wood
Truth is in the mind - check. It is related to reason - um, hm, provisional check. How are you defining reason, here? Reasoning is dependent on language. For true propositions, sure. But maybe just here is your problem (lol). I think most folks acknowledge that animals reason, many manifestly so. But where does that put you? (I.e, animals have language, or animals don't reason.) — tim wood
But why not truth as primordial to language? Maybe "primordial" is too fancy a word, perhaps "underlying" is better. — tim wood
Consider: do you have experiences that cause in you a reaction of judgement and then of action (or reaction), all prior to any articulation? Certainly after the fact you can verbalize them, but maybe not entirely. — tim wood
Another example occurs to me: at dinner there's something disgusting on your dinner plate. Do you need/use either of language or reason to react to it? Again, after the fact, sure, but that's after. — tim wood
Interesting. Seems to me that at least you are saying what a mode of being is not -- i.e., habits. — Moliere
You are greatly puzzling me. What do you think enforcement of rules is if not the application of punishment for breaking them, whether that punishment is a temporary salary cut, being fired, etc. Rules are enforced precisely when punishments are applied for breaking them. The existence and application of punishment is enforcement. — Agustino
No it doesn't indicate that. Again, you're jumping to conclusions. It only indicates that enforcement is not sufficient to get you to follow laws. — Agustino
In any case, you're not talking about education, but rather how to get people to believe something. Propaganda has the same aim, and I doubt you'd call that education. Brute force, as I have stated before, is the least effective way to get someone to obey, which is why it generally is used last, when all other methods have failed. — Agustino
Knowledge and education can be sources of power, as can money. Again, power doesn't have only one form. What you fail to note is that power constitutes the ability to get people to do something. There are multiple ways of doing this: one is brute force, another is propaganda, another is manipulation, another is education, etc. — Agustino
I haven't said this. This is exactly the bullshit that you do. I said that authority, laws, etc. don't exist unless they are enforced. — Agustino
For example, I make them do what my boss wants them to do. You have to understand that getting people to do something doesn't necessarily have to align with my will. — Agustino
I said that authority, laws, etc. don't exist unless they are enforced. — Agustino
I've told you that you think very naively, precisely because you think power functions univocally, and the same means will be used regardless of circumstance. But that's not true. If I'm a politician, I can force someone to drop out of the race, and let me run in their place, if for example I have access to sensitive information on them. I won't be able to do the same in a personal relationship. Obviously. Power doesn't function the same way across the border. — Agustino
I've defined power in this case as having his orders followed. He can get his orders followed, therefore he is powerful. — Agustino
No, I haven't said it's just that. In fact, power has nothing with making people do what YOU want, only with making people do something. — Agustino
What "vast body of material" are you referring to here? — John
I assume your contempt for statistics is related to your belief that today's scientific consensus on global warming is wrong. — T Clark
I suppose I'm a phenomenalist. By that I mean that whatever can be experienced is a phenomenon, of some kind, whether cabbage, onion, justice, unicorns, or dragons. I buy the Kantian notion that we have a hard time grounding phenomena anywhere but in perception. — tim wood
At the same time I find the world as I experience it seems to be consistent with phenomena as I encounter them. — tim wood
That is, there is an entire phenomenology prior to language. Yet it seems to me that you're stuck at language - if there were not a world prior to - primordial to - language, then how would language have anything to talk about? I am not too interested in where the word "onion" comes from, or if indeed we have any understanding or knowledge of onions before we encounter them. Once they're part of our phenomenal world, I simply take it as given, and uninteresting, that they existed before we knew they existed. — tim wood
Your truth, then, appears simply a verbal truth, a consequence of definitions and well-formed propositions. If that's all there is, then truth is a pretty dodgy concept - not even a concept but a rough idea not thought through. — tim wood
I'm coming around to seeing that truth is a quality of experience. It's not proved; its judged. (Once judged, it's fair game for your kind of critical analysis, if that's appropriate, and all kinds of things can be said, true or false, depending on the criteria.) — tim wood
The reason I asked how the OP thinks that people "submit" to science is that I don't believe the average person has much interest in, or understanding of, science; so I am struggling to make sense of the idea that they are somehow mysteriously in submission to it. — John
Certainly not! Do I agree that being an onion is what makes an onion an onion? Yes. Because the onion always already was an onion. The word for this that comes to my mind is "primordial." The onion-ness of the onion is primordially part of the onion. — tim wood
Nonsense, sez I. The truth of "A cow is in the barn," is a function of whether or not a cow is in the barn. To shave this a little closer: We could understand the question this way: "Is there something in the barn and if there is, is it a cow (or something else)?" — tim wood
Losing a pile of cash is very relevant. He may not have money to feed his family if he loses a pile of cash. — Agustino
Maybe if he took the money, or part of it, from the wrong person, he may even get shot. Or a competitor may arrange to have him killed. Or the government could get him in jail for not adequately following certain laws. — Agustino
Then tell me, why is he laughing at the judicial system? — Agustino
Who said it is only an illusion of power? I've defined power in this case as having his orders followed. He can get his orders followed, therefore he is powerful. — Agustino
Well it is true that the fair-weather friend also likes the arrangement, otherwise he wouldn't be doing favours for the rich man. Of course he's also profiting from it, but he doesn't get to decide on what gets done. Rather the rich man tells him do this, and he just does it. — Agustino
Yes, obviously they should want it the least in the sense that it can be dangerous to themselves and their families. But they should want it the most in the sense that if they don't want it, someone worse than them will. So if you have the necessary capacities, you should try to rise to the top to prevent someone worse than you from doing it, even if doing so will put you and your family at risk. — Agustino
Nope, I didn't say power has to be enforced. Please read again. — Agustino
The law only exists when it is enforced, and it can only be enforced by the powerful (naturally). — Agustino
Really, you're asking quite naive questions it seems to me... — Agustino
The owner may die in the office from obesity and a sedentary lifestyle too. So what? The owner may die in a car crash from all the travelling he has to do, etc. etc. There's risks with everything in life so don't bullshit. The worker also doesn't necessarily risk serious injury or death - it all depends on the job. — Agustino
Why don't you tell him that money can't buy him power? — Agustino
So long as you can order them to do something and they execute it, then you do have power. — Agustino
Right, but nobody has any doubts about that. Governing society requires the use of fair-weather friends since most people aren't that moral to begin with. So leaders always have to make good use of these people in order to successfully govern a society. Their energy, greed and lust has to be channeled in productive directions. — Agustino
I don't understand why you say I'm bashful, but to answer your question, power is influence and capacity to direct the march of society - capacity to set the rules. — Agustino
There's only some people who can handle power morally, and they should as per Plato, want it the most. — Agustino
The law only exists when it is enforced, and it can only be enforced by the powerful (naturally). And when the powerful are immoral and corrupt, then you're fucked, if they happen to put their eyes on you. — Agustino
Power doesn't mean loyalty. Loyalty is, or can be, an important aspect of power, but it's not the only one. — Agustino
Power means the capacity to decide on the direction of society, to influence others, and/or the capacity to guarantee (or not) property and other rights. — Agustino
Do we do this again? So, if as you say meaning is a relation between things, what sort of things is it a relation between? Words and...? — Banno
Being a worker is "100% risk-free". being a business owner or investor means it's possible for you to lose more $$$ than you invested. — Question
If the investment goes bad, the entrepreneur loses. The worker gets his wage. Simple. — Agustino
Yes he does have it easy. He takes no risk - if the project goes bad, he still gets paid at the end of the day. — Agustino
The only unnatural sense of value that can be attributed to money is when money is seen as a means for facilitating hedonism. If someone uses their wealth in order to sit on a yacht, then yes, that is immoral and unnatural. — Agustino
All smart people should be using money to make more money, since money is one of the levers of power, and we all know, that if good men don't rise to the top, then the bad will rise to the top, and everyone will have it bad. — Agustino
The entrepreneur assumed the risk, bought the mine — Agustino
Who else should take the biggest cut? The miner? The miner had it easy. All he had to do was take the gold out. His pay was fixed. Whether he did an average job or a fantastic job - he still got paid. The entrepreneur didn't. He absolutely had to make it work. — Agustino
Are you kidding me? Most entrepreneurs out there fail. Even those who succeed, they fail more times than they are successful. The personality that is required to be a successful entrepreneur is very very different than the common personalities generally found around the world. — Agustino
It is impossible to know if the amount of knowledge you have is sufficient to accomplish a goal, without attempting it. — MonfortS26
How could I predict your behavior without having first observed it? You first behaved some way for me to interpret and then use that interpretation to make future predictions of your behavior. If I had never observed your behavior, I wouldn't be able to make a very good prediction. I'd just be making an educated guess of your behavior based on my experience with other people. — Harry Hindu
It seems like you're finally coming around. Predictions of some outcome has a causal influence on your actions. Different predictions can produce different actions. — Harry Hindu
How do you explain how the same behavior can produce different interpretations, which in turn produce different predictions of the outcome? — Harry Hindu
I know you think that, but I just don't know why you do . . . — Terrapin Station
It doesn't seem to be something we could move you away from without a lot of work. — Terrapin Station
I find it interesting that the experience of interacting with MU and John has created this prediction in my mind that their same nonsense will be repeated in any future interaction with them. — Harry Hindu
In it he uses a phrase: "Modes of existence", in particular to designate what both having and being are. — Moliere
Change can logically obtain with two events that have no causal connection to each other and that aren't states of some other thing. — Terrapin Station
You're just not following along very well. — Terrapin Station
Change can logically obtain with two events that have no causal connection to each other and that aren't states of some other thing. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, it seems like you don't really get the fundamental concept of a thought experiment, as you're wondering how it could obtain in the real world. — Terrapin Station
How is that not asking for a cause? You're asking what the mechanism would be, what would trigger it, etc. — Terrapin Station
No, it's not natural for human beings to follow moral codes and laws when they are provided. That's precisely why we have to use harsh punishments to get them to follow the laws. If you removed the punishments, you'd see that naturally - without the use of external force - human beings would not comply with moral codes and laws. — Agustino
Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. It's perception that makes the difference, not thought. — Agustino
For one, try answering that question that followed right after that one.
What is it that makes you learn to do things and not others? — Harry Hindu
Second, thinking and learning don't necessarily correlate. You can think of imaginary things, or just colors. What are you learning there? — Harry Hindu
Don't you learn by experience - like the experience of doing certain things and observing the results? — Harry Hindu
As I have already stated, the consequences in your head are predictions of the consequences, not the consequences themselves. Who would ever say that ALL the consequences in your head exist out in the world? It seems to me that if determinism, then only one consequence exists outside your head, which may or may not be one that is predicted in your head, which explains why your sometimes fail to predict the consequences, which ironically are the ones you learn the most from. — Harry Hindu
Right. so it's not a change on your view, because we specified that there is no third thing, that it's acausal, etc. I just want to confirm that on your view, it's not a change. Would you say that 9:31 to 9:32 is the same then? — Terrapin Station
Right, so on your view, 9:31 obtains, it disappears and 9:32 obtains in its place--that's not a change? — Terrapin Station
Why do we need to have laws if morality is the natural condition? To me, the very fact that we have laws and punishments for breaking the law suggests that the human being is not naturally moral, but requires external pressure and force to be kept in check (the law + its enforcement). — Agustino
A particular language is artificial, but the capacity to speak a language is not artificial. It's natural for human beings to communicate verbally through some sort of language. — Agustino
Well this has been pretty much settled already. The tabula rasa perspective is nonsense as shown by Plato (anamnesis), Kant, and modern biology. The mind comes with a pre-established neuro-biological structure which determines its capacities, tendencies, and possibilities. I don't much like Pinker, but this book is good on this subject, to put you up to date with some of the modern developments of biology and the social sciences. — Agustino
Reading is not experience of the world for the simple reason that when you read, you're interacting with second hand information, which may be inaccurate - the respective author may not have perceived fully or completely the matters that he's describing - or if he has, he may have failed to adequately or completely convey them. — Agustino
That's why the greatest philosophers in history have been, first and foremost, keen observers of reality, and only secondly readers of philosophy. Take for example Plato, Aristotle, Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein to list a couple. Their insights came not from what they read, but rather from their own observations - that's why they were geniuses, because they perceived deeper than others before them had perceived. Their own insights enabled them - taking for example Schopenhauer - to synthesise Kant, Plato, and Eastern wisdom into something completely new. — Agustino
So look - the purpose of philosophy from the very beginning was finding wisdom in order to live the best life possible. — Agustino
