The existence of evil is insufficient to disprove the reality of an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent God. However, by itself, this does not justify the belief that there is such a God. — aletheist
That is, if there is a philosophical underpinning to higher education, it's instrumental rather than value orientated. Cry as we might about that, it ain't going to change soon. — Baden
Whether I'm fine with anti-realism depends of how that's defined. — Sapientia
We can do so in accordance with an objective categorisation of colour. If it is so-and-so, then it is red. — Sapientia
We can do so in accordance with an objective categorisation of colour. If it is so-and-so, then it is red. You just reject this categorisation, as it seems you must in order to conclude that objects do not have colour and that colour isn't real. — Sapientia
The colour of the object is perspective dependent. From one perspective it is points of different colours, but from another perspective, it is mixed wavelengths. — Metaphysician Undercover
Fair enough. How does the fact that we've imported primary qualities into the definition of secondary qualities affect this distinction? — Benkei
Fair enough. How does the fact that we've imported primary qualities into the definition of secondary qualities affect this distinction? — Benkei
1.Why must the perception of an object's colour and the [actual] object's colour be the same? Or, why can't I say the grey in that picture appears red to me? By insisting I cannot say this, are you saying I'm lying? — Benkei
2. Why shouldn't I incorporate what we scientifically know about "red" into the definition of "red"? — Benkei
3. Why shouldn't I apply a descriptive definition to "red" to my experience? — Benkei
4. Is this just a matter of definition/semantics? If I define red as what I experience as red unless it turns out that a spectrometer tells me it isn't because it does not have an emphasis of wavelengths between x and y, then by definition the strawberries aren't red. — Benkei
5. What is red? (e.g. what's your definition). — Benkei
hey just want to pass their fucking class. Haha. You following? You're not going to convert these people to your particular brand of bullshit by telling them they aren't pursuing enlightenment properly or they haven't been "bit" yet. If someone asks a question about a philosophy course in college, you just need to answer the question... you don't need to beat them over the head with your philosophical zealotry. — Carbon
That's assuming general relativity provides us with an accurate model of things at this scale. But we can consider that the concept of "event horizon" is evidence that general relativity doesn't provide us with an accurate model. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's what I'm getting at with a lot of this: I think you and a few others on this forum have a disastrous tendency to conflate this sort of glamorous image of "the philosopher" with modern academic philosophy. The latter simply does not fit with the former (and probably hasn't for several centuries). Creating "lovers of wisdom" is not the job of academia, universities don't get accredited for that. It's idealistic! It's maybe fun and creative to think about all the exciting and amazing things philosophy can do, but that's not why people go to college. As educators hired by our respective universities our job CANNOT solely be creating really "wise" students who "get it" and are "enlightened". — Carbon
eah, Kant always seemed to me to be engaged in a purely apologetic exercise that went nowhere. I was never taken in by him. — The Great Whatever
I don't know if 'foot' would be a possible body-part to genuinely feel you are identified with, but I don't see a reason to exclude it either if, in fact, body-part identification is something you learn from the culture you're born into. — Moliere
How does my experience of being a human, in a world, emerge from individual particles (that have experience as part of their nature). Is my conscious experience physically located throughout the particles within my brain, only some of them, or is it an emergent entity and exists somewhere else entirely? — dukkha
Is there a difference between determining something and objectively determining something? Clearly I can determine it, and so can you, since we already did. — The Great Whatever
If they thought that, then clearly they're wrong. — The Great Whatever
But that's not true at all. For example, I can say 'I bet/hope that painting is beautiful – so I hope someone gets to see it!' and this makes perfect sense, even knowing no one has seen it. But for this to make sense, it has to have been beautiful independent of anyone's seeing it. In fact, that's why we want to go see it, because it's beautiful. — The Great Whatever
I think an individual can see whether an object is beautiful by beholding it, but that the object is beautiful doesn't mean that their beholding it makes it beautiful. It already was; they just saw that it was. — The Great Whatever
think an individual can see whether an object is beautiful by beholding it, but that the object is beautiful doesn't mean that their beholding it makes it beautiful. It already was; they just saw that it was. — The Great Whatever
I'm not sure what you mean. — The Great Whatever
But what if he just replied, 'I don't believe this map is accurate?' — The Great Whatever
Or what if he just said 'I don't believe my eyes reveal objects independent of them?' — The Great Whatever
Is there a difference between there being a truth to the matter, and an objective truth to the matter? Claiming there's no truth to the matter would seem to commit one to saying nothing is tasty, which is wrong, since plenty of things are. So you must have something else in mind. — The Great Whatever
don't know, because I've never tried fruitcake (that I can remember). — The Great Whatever
I'm just pointing out that that's an odd belief, and I'm not sure how to convince you otherwise. — The Great Whatever
What is more objective than looking at something and seeing that it's beautiful? Aren't all methods of inquiry in some sense observational like this? — The Great Whatever
Do you always think you're wrong, or there's no fact of the matter, juyt because someone disagrees with you? People have different opinions, that's perfectly common. — The Great Whatever
No; whether the object is beautiful is. Of course, I can often tell whether an object is beautiful by seeing (etc.) it. — The Great Whatever
Why would the culture's opinions matter? Just because someone has an opinion that p, doesn't mean that p. No? — The Great Whatever
Uh, I don't know. I would have to know what song you were talking about. — The Great Whatever
Really? What are those methods? — The Great Whatever
Shouldn't you look at (or otherwise experience) the thing itself, to find out if it's beautiful, rather than asking or observing whether people find it beautiful? — The Great Whatever
So, is the idea that if people defend different sides of an issue, there's no objective truth to the matter? — The Great Whatever
'm not sure about this. It seems to me that certain things are beautiful and others less so, or not. Isn't this a kind of realism about aesthetics? Certainly I don't think my beholding them makes them beautiful, rather I appreciate that they are (and others can too). — The Great Whatever
think the moral realism/anti-realism debate can be approached in a different angle: moral realists typically believe moral truths can be discovered — darthbarracuda
