Thing' is a word that barely belongs in the philosophical lexicon (with the exception perhaps of Heidegger's analysis of the term), so I don't know what you're driving at. And I am unapologetic about my scorn of the intellectual dishonesty and philosophical miseducation of which you sow in spades, no matter how politely or conciliatory. I couldn't care less if you believe in voodoo dolls or the ghost of Christmas past, but if you diminish and cheapen a field I hold dear at every point with your half-truths and philosophy-by-allusion-and-Google-search, you can expect to be called out on it. — StreetlightX
Would each person be isolated or would they inhabit, via an avatar of some sort, every other person's virtual world? In other words, will they be networked? — oysteroid
In my view, such a life would be pure fluff, like living in a kitsch painting, empty of real and substantial life, completely hollow and superficial. It would be strictly masturbatory. Despite all appearances, a deep desolation would permeate everything. — oysteroid
So what would be the point in leaving the real world? — oysteroid
Or, is your body a package which is discardable without loss of “YOU” — Bitter Crank
Are you your body, or are you something apart from your body? — Bitter Crank
One could define "wrong" (in a very general way) as that which causes harm to someone, directly or indirectly. As well as the factor of timing mentioned above, there are other factors. What is the likelihood of someone being hurt? How many people could be hurt? How badly and in what way? If not people being hurt, how about the chance of an animal being hurt? Or property damaged? — 0 thru 9
If this is beginning to sound like a courtroom argument that one might hear in a criminal trial, perhaps that is to be expected. There very well may be absolutes (right/wrong, good/evil) somewhere in the universe. And these absolutes or ideals may be perceived by some people to some degree. One could perhaps imagine a world where the "absolute/ideal" realm (cf. Buddhism's Two Truths or Plato's Ideals) are completely perceived, understood, and followed by everyone all the time. But for now, we live in a relative world, full of ever-changing circumstances. Where in the best case scenario, people are trying to discern the ideals present in a situation and act in harmony with them. — 0 thru 9
Both judgments such as "murder is wrong" and "one ought not to murder" are how one feels about behavior. — Terrapin Station
I don't think that it has ever been suggested that a 'gaze travels' or that anything 'travels out' from the ear to the source of sound. So why would the fact that this doesn't happen constitute a problem? — Wayfarer
For as this ought, or ought not, expresses some new relation or affirmation
To say something is morally wrong is to say it ought not to be done. — Wayfarer
Do you want to claim there is a problem with saying that 'morally wrong' means 'not to be done'? — John
The statement that "one ought not do wrong things" is practically a tautology. You can query whether a particular action is wrong, but asking why wrong things out not be done is like inquiring into whether all bachelors are unmarried men. — Aaron R
I'm just speaking from my experience, that's how I imagine such a thing. I picture in my mind, a person with a saw, going and cutting a tree. Then I tell myself seventy times. And to imagine this, seventy times, I try to picture 70 in relation to other numbers like 60 and 50, but this seems somewhat vague. So I picture seven in relation to one by counting in my mind, and tell myself ten times that. Then I picture ten as two groups of five. Now I can imagine ten groups of seven, and this is the number of times that the person cuts trees. In this way I can avoid picturing the person cutting a tree seventy times. — Metaphysician Undercover
To answer the question: nothing. — Benkei
It is completely against our survival in evolutionary terms and looks like an aberrant disorder of the mind that serves no purpose and is completely backward to procreation as a species. For if everyone was a transgender and/or gay that would mean no one would have babies (assuming IVF does not exist). — intrapersona
1. Is it ever ok to remain skeptical of an "absurd" conclusion to a clever argument even when one can't pin-point the exact flaw in the reasoning? — Aaron R
What is the world independent of us? — Marchesk
I wouldn't press that darn button mate. Just leave the world as it is, it's already great. — Agustino
I don't think that is objective idealism; it is more like Berkeley's view that the Universe continues to exist in God's perception, in the absence of other perceivers. — Wayfarer
And from this idealist statement it can only follow to be skeptical of the existence of other minds. What would keep you from taking that last step into solipsism? If you are skeptical of the existence of the forest without experiencing it, then you must also be skeptical of some other mind in the forest (essentially being part of this forest), for a sound to occur. — Harry Hindu
Idealists who haven't taken that last step into solipsism are inconsistent in that they claim to believe in the existence of things they have never experienced (other minds) while not believing in things that they have experienced before but aren't experiencing right now (trees). —
(there is a brute distinction between a sound and a visual). — Harry Hindu
Do they really? Could you point me towards the poll that was taken? — Michael
They are deliberately targeting blacks because cops get promoted according to how many successful busts and convictions and courts are more likely to convict a black man. — wuliheron
Blacks rioting in the streets and executing cops is the only viable way they have of making the war too expensive to continue. They already tried the peaceful approach and look what's happened as a result. — wuliheron
We always experience blue when a particular wavelength of light strikes our retina. If it didn't then we'd never be able to make heads or tails of what it is we are experiencing. — Harry Hindu
No. Sounds only exist in the mind. Vibrating air molecules are located within the world and sound is a representation of those wavelengths of air molecules. Just as colors don't exist out in the world, they only exist in the mind as representations of wavelengths of light. We don't see wavelengths of light, nor hear vibrating air molecules. If we did, that would be direct realism. We don't, which is why indirect realism is the case. —
As I explained, our sense of touch is more direct than our sense of vision because we physically come into contact with the object when we touch it.
"According to the ACLU’s original analysis, marijuana arrests now account for over half of all drug arrests in the United States. Of the 8.2 million marijuana arrests between 2001 and 2010, 88% were for simply having marijuana. Nationwide, the arrest data revealed one consistent trend: significant racial bias. Despite roughly equal usage rates, Blacks are 3.73 times more likely than whites to be arrested for marijuana." — wuliheron
Direct Awareness of Material Objects
Before considering whether a case can be made for the second direct realist thesis, we need to look a bit further at the first thesis. How are we to understand the claim that we are “directly” or “immediately” aware of material objects? Here there are at least two initially plausible things that a direct realist can say. First, contrary to what a representative realist view might seem to suggest, our perceptual awareness of material objects is obviously not, at least in ordinary cases, arrived at via anything like an explicit inference from either beliefs about or awarenesses of subjective entities such as sense-data. On the contrary, in most ordinary situations, it is material objects and situations that are the primary and usually the exclusive objects of the perceiver's explicit awareness and thought, with no hint that this awareness has been arrived at via any sort of transition from anything else. Second, as Searle and others have argued, there is an obvious and intuitively compelling way in which perceptual experience seems to directly present physical objects and situations. Direct realists have sometimes spoken here of “openness to the world,” a locution that suggests the way in which such objects and situations seem to be simply present in their own right in experience. The direct realist need not deny (though some have seemed to) that sensory experience somehow involves the various qualities, such as complicated patterns of shape and color, that sense-datum or adverbial views have spoken of, nor even that the perceiver is in some way aware or conscious of these. His point is that whatever may be said about these other matters, from an intuitive standpoint it is material objects and nothing else that are “directly before my mind” — and that any view that denies this obvious truth is simply mistaken about the facts. — SEP
Now, "the Earth exists" is a sentence. It follows that if there are no sentences, it cannot be true. So to find a situation in which it's not true, we suppose that the planet in this situaiton is as it was before thre advent of language. Since there are no languages, there are no sentences, and a fortiori no true sentences. So, in this situation, "the Earth exists" is not true. — The Great Whatever
No, it isn't. That's why I'm telling you that you're arguing against a straw man. Direct realism is still perception. You're presenting it as if direct realists are attempting to eliminate perception from their theory of perception. They're doing no such thing. — Terrapin Station
The process is analogically like light entering a camera and creating an image on film. — Terrapin Station
Why is it that you can't see anything, transparent or not, when there is NO light and why you see such vividness and detail when there is plenty of light? Why does the level of detail and vividness seem to correlate with the level of light in the environment? — Harry Hindu
It's my contention that (B2) is not only what's functionally going on with talk about transparency and "see-thoroughness," but that that's what people typically have in mind with "see-thoroughness." And thus it's my contention that arguing against anything else is arguing against a straw man. — Terrapin Station
When I talk about stuff like this, my intention isn't to follow the conventions of any discipline as a set of social practices. I'm a physicalist or "materialist," so I'm going to believe that there aren't separate domains in ontological terms. — Terrapin Station
When we dream, remember and so on we don't see anything, we imagine things. — John
The indirect realist believes/assumes his representations are accurate depictions of the external world. Your argument only works if you believe representations are not accurate.
— dukkha
If the indirect realist believes that then their position is no different than the direct realist's who does not deny the veracity of the scientific model of perception. — John
If objects were represented by perception then it would follow that there must be originals that are being represented and this is an incoherent idea. — John
You can fit your head into the cosmos, but you will go insane if you try to fit the cosmos into your head. ;) — John