So then at least some things in nature do have reasons for happening? — Agustino
The strange thing though is that Nature is a lot more perfect than you imagine it to be. That's what's really surprising. It's not the mistakes of nature, which are so rare in comparison to what it gets right. — Agustino
Do things in nature have reasons for happening as they do? For example is there a reason for your heart pumping blood around the body? — Agustino
I see quite the opposite! Nature is fantastically well organised and developed, quite the opposite of clumsy and inefficient. My gosh, I wonder how you can even claim that Nature is inefficient. Just imagine how every day your body does thousands, if not millions of tasks that are needed for your survival, and it does them perfectly and in harmony most of the time. Sure there are errors, but the errors are the exception, not the rule. Nature is so beautifully organised, that one is moved by merely regarding nature towards worship of the divine. — Agustino
I agree, but listen to this. You don't have a natural desire for JUST sex, and if you don't clarify what this desire actually is, and how it relates to different parts of your psyche, you'll never figure out what will fulfil you, and what you actually want. Most people don't even know what they want. So the irrational indulgence of sexuality is just as bad as its irrational repression. The point is that you need to figure out what will satisfy your sexual nature as a human person. — Agustino
Are you purposefully misinterpreting what I wrote? There's nothing wrong with having sex for pleasure, so long as at least one of its essential aims isn't frustrated. And no, this doesn't actually take a massive amount of discipline and will power. The fact you think it does only demonstrates that we live in an age that is excessively promiscuous with regards to sexuality, and where people have been led to think that it's some crazy amount of self-discipline and willpower that is required to abstain from immoral sexual behaviour. — Agustino
No that's not the aim of sex. I've explained a billion times why not. Nature did not give you sex to satisfy an urge. Rather it gave you an urge to satisfy what? Procreation and intimacy. — Agustino
That's a problem for many people, and it leads to a lot of unhappiness. They should deliberate about it and consider it. — Agustino
Just like pleasure isn't a valid end of eating, so pleasure isn't a valid end of sex. A valid end of sex is what is essential for sex, what sex is aimed at. It's aimed at reproduction and intimacy, the same way eating is aimed at nutrition. Simple. — Agustino
I know that I know nothing
Is this really a paradox?
A. Yes
B. No — TheMadFool
A thought I find especially interesting is that the memes and their behaviour could be explained via the theories of biology, such as evolution and survival of the fittest. — BlueBanana
↪unenlightened You may be interested in this.
— Agustino
Yes, I was. — unenlightened
In this article it is stated that, “Simply put, hedonism says that your well-being is fully determined by your pleasures and pains..."
So if killing people is pleasurable to a serial killer then his well-being is increased by killing people, and, therefore, his killing people is morally good? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
One does not have to wear shoes to exist. Right now I I'm not wearing shoes. — Rich
And the opposite is also true - a good man is one who most benefits his woman, not himself. — Agustino
It's a biological response that is culturally and psychologically mediated. — Agustino
I am skeptical of this. Yes, it does have a basis in biology, but that doesn't play as big of a role as we're often made to think it does. — Agustino
Sexual attraction occurs largely because other people are attracted to the person in question. — Agustino
Exactly what it says? :s — Agustino
Yes, beauty is more general than sexual appeal. Also sexual appeal can be elicited in ways that are independent of beauty, but rather dependent on social standards. — Agustino
I'm suggesting that the pregnant body of a woman isn't meant to be beautiful — Agustino
The beauty or ugliness of a woman will probably have at least something to do with her racial make up. Would one be a racist for saying so? Or a sexist? — Bitter Crank
You used Harry Potter twice in a sentence, so Harry Potter must exist in some way, shape, form, constitution, state, etc.--even if it is only as symbols on a piece of paper, computer screen, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
History is a story. If there is no one there to hear or tell stories, there is no history. — T Clark
But if Harry Potter does not exist, how are we able to talk about Harry Potter? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Looks ugly to me, does that make me sexist and/or racist? — Heister Eggcart
If women weren't vastly inferior to their male counterparts in almost every sport, we wouldn't have gendered sporting events in the first place. — Heister Eggcart
Bu bu but Geospiza, some women are "airbrushed, photoshopped distortions of reality". — Bitter Crank
The sport was so much less competitive and developed when they had that match that the genetic disadvantage wasn't so hard to overcome. (there wasn't this massive pool of stand-out male specimens training for life and competing for millions). — VagabondSpectre
I can tell you his statements were made in earnest. Tennis has very very competitive cultures which surround them, and while this is a part of where the "controversy" originates (the human desire to competitively compare and contrast, and the resulting dilemma when the top men are compared to the top women), it's also why there is such a clear divide in the first place (concerning tennis and soccer specifically). — VagabondSpectre
Pair-bonding species tend to have low sexual dimorphism and "tournament species" tend to have high degrees of sexual dimorphism. — VagabondSpectre
Yes, but those depictions certainly did not mean to illustrate beauty. The pregnant woman's body is not supposed to be beautiful, but rather nourishing, protective and other qualities. That Serena picture actually wants to tell us that she's proud of her body - as if anyone gave a damn. She is indeed quite smug, and the idiots are paying money for this. — Agustino
Are you suggesting that he has some hidden motivation for pointing out the difference between male and female tennis athletes?
Are you suggesting that his statements are somehow improper because of his motivations?
It's uncontroversially true that male athletes have a rather large advantage in just about any sport which requires physical strength to play at a high level. — VagabondSpectre
Williams photo was done by Annie Leibovitz, a very well known and well regarded photo artist. — Cavacava
I'm not saying that. I'm disagreeing with your claim that my suggested consistent evidence is confirmation of McEnroe's claim. — Michael
I don't have any problem with anyone having whatever opinion they do. There's simply no reason to put much weight on it (well, unless you're betting on a game and the person has a good track record so that their predictions have a better than random percentage of making you some money). — Terrapin Station
Yes, but not confirmation of McEnroe's statements. So, contrary to your claim here, that "the best thing we have to assess the claim is evidence that is consistent with the claim" is not "confirmation nevertheless". — Michael
Anything that doesn't refute a claim is consistent with a claim. Consistency isn't sufficient for confirmation. — Michael