I really enjoy chatting with different folks but not with people who believe that they know and it's their job to spread the word. That gets old really quickly (which is my main beef with people on the left). Ideology aside, leftists really believe they are right! — synthesis
words don't show up to give that feeling a verbal dress. — No One
haha , why is that? come on , a short answer maybe? — No One
Why is it when a fair number of people on this forum disagree in a conversation, they assume that it must be the other person's fault? — synthesis
What are True Natures — No One
Underlying purposes of all goals of all humans is to achieve happiness. So according to Lao Tzu this is the best way to achieve happiness. — No One
I am glad that you have raised the topic of the subconscious because I do feel that many discussions about consciousness don't go into enough focus on the subconscious. — Jack Cummins
So, I am asking what does thought tell us about the nature of personal identity and about the underlying source of consciousness? Do thoughts help to explain the nature of consciousness? — Jack Cummins
Do you agree that , there are some goals that are good for you than some other goals.... — No One
The constant social change didn't begin till the industrial age really. Where it will end up no one knows (or so I flatter myself who hasn't figured it out yet). — EricL
As an example, there were many "peaceful" protesters that saw fit to destroy other people's person and property last summer. — synthesis
If you are exercising your rights, you must do it in a fashion where you are not infringing on others' rights. This is a fairly basic concept. — synthesis
Where some see coincidence others see consequence. Seriously though, they probably helped to simulate interesting and good quality topics. — praxis
Yes, pragmatism; good thing. — Bitter Crank
It's interesting that property is not listed, and yet at the time the document was written, property was secured by governments even where it meant that the other inalienable rights were alienated. — Echarmion
To this day your rights to life, liberty and especially the pursuit of happiness are sharply circumscribed by the state's protection of property. — Echarmion
Tramsofrm people's mindset to Logic!! With its actions to push people think logically and make them understand that this is a total selfish thing to do for their own profit at the end! To fight hyprocrisis — dimosthenis9
How wonderful to have people like you who can set others straight. — synthesis
With rights come responsibility. — synthesis
What should be the primary purpose of a government? — Marigold23
This is the bible story that, even more than Job, popularises atheism. — unenlightened
There should be one word in the English language for rights and responsibilities because they are a package deal. — synthesis
I think you should just go with the flow for the next year or two at least, Daniel. Let's face it, your intellectual life is currently a dog's vomit and your philosophical consciousness is a toilet. One thing that even the cat at home knows is that you won't find any magic answers in Athens or anywhere else, because enlightenment comes from within, if indeed it ever comes. — alan1000
He has always been our Marxist rabble rouser with the credentials and experience to stand behind it — T Clark
I lately haven't been as interested in rousing the rabble on behalf of Uncle Karl as I used to be. Old age, I suppose. I haven't felt the desire to participate in discussions as much as I used to. Old age, I suppose. Hey -- now that I have it, old age is a good excuse for doing and not doing all sorts of things. — Bitter Crank
I'm hoping someone would be willing to offer some tips on comprehending and critically engaging philosophy, not the history, but the theory and development. — Mark Sparks
You can find my recording of it here. — thewonder
”This City is so horrible that its mere existence and perdurance, though in the midst of a secret desert, contaminates the past and the future and in some way even jeopardizes the stars. As long as it lasts, no one in the world can be strong or happy. I do not want to describe it; a chaos of heterogeneous words, the body of a tiger or a bull in which teeth, organs and heads monstrously pullulate in mutual conjunction and hatred can (perhaps) be approximate images.” — Narrator, The Immortal by Jorge Luis Borges
Far away in the heavenly abode of the great god Indra, there is a wonderful net which has been hung by some cunning artificer in such a manner that it stretches out infinitely in all directions. — Francis H. Cook

One day, I'm going to need to say this, and hopefully, if my memory won't fail me, I'll simply quote you! — TheMadFool
Now that being said, secondly, maybe we can agree that, since the goal may be different, we can not judge inductive reasoning by the bar you presume. Can we simply say that there is better and worse reasoning? That generalizing without examples, taking everything to be like one thing, etc., is just doing a poor job of inductive reasoning? — Antony Nickles
They show that their conclusión is probably true (for practical purposes). Of course one may doubt that through sceptical arguments like the problem of induction, but nobody can go through their normal everyday life without acting as if some beliefs were more likely to be true than others, using induction. This does not apply to most other beliefs “justified” by circular reasoning or some fallacy such as appeal to authority, or ad populum. — Amalac
My mother laughs when I speak about paper books, and there are many people who don't wish to use anything other than paper books. — Jack Cummins
I am also aware of some people who keep books more as objects on shelves than to read them, although this seems a bit odd to me. — Jack Cummins
But, I do believe that Kindles are a revolution in reading, especially being able to carry around a whole library, unlike carrying heavy books. — Jack Cummins
That's a good Woody Allen joke, by the way. — thewonder
You were insinuating that I was a waffle, which is clearly an insult.
Found in the forum wild, in reply to Banno.
Glorious. — StreetlightX
I think that reading at an exceptional rate lets you pick out certain concepts to create an understanding of rather quickly. It teaches you how to be quick witted and inventive. The experience, however, is somewhat manic. — thewonder
I think that the diverse areas of psychoanalysis are fascinating. — Jack Cummins
I, now, tend to read texts fairly slow with kind of a lot of deliberation. — thewonder
