I often try and explain things to you, in particular, which is often greeted with 'you haven't answered the question' or 'you're not able to explain yourself'. — Wayfarer
It must be the end of time. The only answer is that the first cause was caused by the last effect. Time is circular. The first cause was the Big Bang and that was caused by the last effect; the Big Crunch.
So this version of the Prime Mover has no logical holes in it and it addresses the old chicken and egg problem. — Devans99
Many physicalists argue that reality can be explained by physics, and if physics cannot explain the totality of reality at the present time, it will in the future, as the science of physics advances. Here at TPF, that is often cited as the premise of physicalism, when supporters define "physical" as that which is studied by physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. I imagined we were both looking at the same triangle. My idea <this triangle> referenced it. My words, "this triangle" expressed my idea, and so, via that idea reference the same triangle.
It seems that you have a very hard time understanding me because you keep thinking of strange interpretations of what I say. As a result you raise non-issues far removed from the topic. I am wondering if you are doing this purposefully, and if it is worth my time to continue. — Dfpolis
Terrapin - Do you believe everything we know about anything (health, math, logic, ethics, etc...) is all subjective? — chatterbears
From what Terrapin is suggesting, everything we know about anything, is completely subjective, — chatterbears
If you read above this, there's your example. As Dingo already mentioned, not everybody abides by their feelings in regards to what they describe as "wrong". One person may base an immoral action on whether or not it is an illegal action. Legality is separate from what the person feels, because their feelings do not make the law. Somebody separate from them, makes the law and dictates how the law works. At the metaethical level, yes, they are subjectively assessing the law as a good basis for what is right and wrong. But their normative and applied ethical stances, DO NOT hinge upon what they feel. — chatterbears
One day, the law could say. Gay Marriage is illegal. That person would now think gay marriage is immoral because it is illegal. The next day, Gay Marriage could become legal. That next day, the same person would now think gay marriage is moral, because it is now legal. — chatterbears
It does, but mediated by the elicited concept.
Since there is no triangle to point to, I said "this triangle" to be clear. — Dfpolis

Ok, I understand the way YOU view those instances but that isnt what you said, you said “everyone” whether they “realize/admit it or not”. I think you can say that about morality being based on some kind of subjectivity/feelings, but it is erroneous to apply that to everyone in all moral instances. As we just discussed, some people are not actually doing that. — DingoJones
Do you agree it is natural to experience fear of the unknown? — Athena
The stranger is unknown and this can result in fear, right? — Athena
Under what conditions is this not true? — Athena
How on earth could you construct a continuum? It requires us to construct an actual infinity of possible positions for particles to occupy. — Devans99
That's paradoxical. It works ok in the mind but not in reality: If I have a real line length 1 mile, it contains more information than a real line length 1 centimetre. But if they are both continuums then they both contain the same amount of information. Which is impossible. Which is proof by contradiction that continuums do not exist in the real world. — Devans99
The physicalist assumes that these activities could be described by physical description if the sciences advanced to that point. But the fact is that the physical descriptions of these activities remain incomplete. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why not? — Wallows
It is not a universal concept. It is a particular concept. It is not the thing itself, but a formal sign referring to a specific thing. — Dfpolis
In The Self and Its Brain Popper cites biologist J. B. S. Haldane's argument (later retracted) from 1932: "...if materialism is true, it seems to me that we cannot know that it is true. If my opinions are the result of the chemical processes going on in my brain, they are determined by the laws of chemistry, not of logic." He traces the argument even further back, all the way to Epicurus: "He who says that all things happen of necessity cannot criticize another who says that not all things happen of necessity. For he has to admit that his saying also happened of necessity." ** — SophistiCat
Right. I fully recognize that someone might have something like "It is wrong to initiate nonconsensual violence" as a foundational moral stance, and then they might say, "Murder is the initiation of nonconsensual violence Therefore it is wrong to murder" on top of that, where they're reaching "It is wrong to murder" as a logical/rational extension or implication of their foundational stance.Well when you said “how I feel about the behavior in question.” I took that to be your feeling in the moment, rather than your feeling when you decide the foundations of your ethics. — DingoJones
1. If science cannot verify the existence of X, then the best evidence tells us that X does not exist. — vulcanlogician
I didnt suggest you should, just that you shouldnt make an erroneous claim about the mechanism “everyone uses, whether they realize/admit it or not”. — DingoJones
Why would you support a rape victim? — chatterbears
You keep going down to the base level (level 1) when discussing these issues . . And if you say you don't have one, then maybe you need to read a bit more about ethics and the 3 tiers of an ethical system (metaethics, normative ethics, applied ethics) . . . But clearly you still have an idea in your head that governs your ability to discern right from wrong. . — chatterbears
I assume you apply the same logic to mentally disabled people, who have the same intelligence level as animals. (depending on how far they are on the spectrum). — chatterbears
When we judge that A is B, it is because what evokes the concept <A> is identically what evokes the concept <B>. For example, when we judge <This triangle is equilateral> — Dfpolis
Thus, the copula "is" betokens identity — Dfpolis
affirming identity of concept source — Dfpolis
So, the explanation works, because in the actual case, the relevant concepts are all evoked by the same event — Dfpolis
Ethics/morality is relative. — BrianW
Of course.Again, how would you respond to your daughter/friend/family member who has just been raped. Would you be supportive? — chatterbears
"That's just the way he feels about interpersonal behavior." That's certainly true, but my feeling about it wouldn't be based on the rapist's feeling about it. My feeling about it is my own disposition, a factor of how my brain works, etc.Or would you say "if he felt right in his action to rape you, that's just his interpersonal behaviors."
What I am trying to get at here, is you must have some sort of mechanism you use to differentiate a good action from a bad action. — chatterbears
You may (or may not) believe rape is a bad action, because of Reason A. — chatterbears
I could say you have a ridiculous stance by refuses to take any stance at all in regards to having a normative perspective. — chatterbears
So if your son/daughter/friend/relative/etc.... committed murder, and told you about it, you would just say, "Ok no problem. Just make sure you don't get caught because you may encounter social repercussions." - Or what if we changed it from murder to rape? If your son/daughter/friend/relative/etc... raped somebody else, and told you about it, you wouldn't tell them it was 'wrong' to do? — chatterbears
Would you tell them, "Well, there's no such thing as right or wrong. — chatterbears
I won the lottery in a possible world. — Wallows
